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October 29, 2025 • 163 mins
Wednesday - Are you ready for a 9-1-1 system run by A.I.? Would you buy a new car without an AM/FM radio? Animal House with Christin and Petey the Opossum from the CARE Foundation. Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell on public funds for schools that do not accept all students. Rauce Padgett updates us on Good Sauce and leaning into Halloween. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Bridgements or advertisers.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
You are now listening to The Jim Colbert Show on
Real Radio one oh four point one.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Dad.

Speaker 4 (00:15):
That's all right, guys, if we go on a Wednesday
edition of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much
for tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every
single day. We do have a good program for you
this afternoon. We'll get you caught up what's happening in
the world. Dou will do that around three twenty with
JCS News fourclock hour Stacked Animal House. Christen Berber joins
us from the Care Foundation. Scott Maxwell from The Orlando
Sentinel will join us as well for Focolock Coward's Trivia

(00:37):
six o'clock. We'll do you heard it here. First four
opportunities for you to win one thousand dollars. Welcome to
the program. I'm Jim to my love, my lovely very
dangerous co host Miss deb Roberts. Hello that great ed
producer Jack Brudshaw. After four oh seven nine six four one,
text us seven seven zero three one. Find it's easily
on social Instagram, Facebook, at the Jim Colbert Show, on Acts,
just at Jim Colbert Show, and of course all day

(00:58):
every day at Jim Colbert Lot This where you can
check us out on YouTube get involved with our question
of the day. If you'd like to send a talk back,
you could do that as well. It's easy and free.
Just grab the iHeartRadio app, go to Real Radio and
use that Mike to send your comment over to Jack.
Your three o'clock keyword is credit C R E D
I T. Go to Real Radio dot fm and send.
Then I'll for your chance at one thousand bucks credit. Guys,

(01:21):
is your three o'clock keyword?

Speaker 5 (01:23):
Good luck?

Speaker 4 (01:23):
We hope you win for sure.

Speaker 5 (01:24):
Yeah, it's been a little dry around.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
Yeah, I'd like to get some winners. How many weeks?

Speaker 6 (01:28):
Jack?

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Two weeks? Lifting this after this week? It's two weeks.

Speaker 7 (01:32):
So you got two and a half weeks, two and
a half weeks left, Mike November.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
Yeah, I'm not doing all right today. But is this
weather okay? For everybody? It is dialed up nice and
weather's night high seventies. Yes, the air.

Speaker 5 (01:44):
I'll be having the heat on Friday. Oh yeah, yeah
in the car loving that. Give me like that? Jack,
I can't help it.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
Okay, So let's talk I love you man. Yeah, let's
talk TV. Per a second.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
Oh now, even having a day and or a night,
I've had a lot of signing going on today.

Speaker 4 (02:04):
It's just, you know, it's one of those days. Sometimes
days are light, some days are medium, and somebodys are heavy.
This is a medium heavy day. It's just is your flow. Yeah,
you know you expresho a little week today. Dudes have
a flow. It's flowing.

Speaker 5 (02:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
Okay, it's one of those life you know, just life,
that is right, That's just how it is. Sometimes it
gets on you a little bit. We have a lot
of stuff going on in our lives. So, uh, it's
just one of those things.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
What is it the the Native American proverb the soul
wouldn't have rainbows if the eyes didn't have tears.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
Oh yeah, for sure. Not tearry quite there, but uh yeah,
just no, no, no, it's just just stuffed, dude. Just stuff
just gets overwhelming sometimes. You know, it's just stuff. Everybody
out there kind of I'm sure realizes that. I mean,
you have their own stuff, Yes, that's true. Right, everybody
has their own package that they carry around with them.
And you know, this one today just gotta come. Bleaks
are things in it, that's all. No big deal. But

(03:03):
I will tell you something that happened last night that
I think you guys are gonna find kind of interesting.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
You figured out how to turn off the subtitle.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
No, no, I did not. Yeah, it'sult today that most
kids are watching shows with subtitles, Like the millennials in
zoomers especially right are watching the subtitles.

Speaker 5 (03:20):
They we are, Yeah, because of this the second screen action?

Speaker 4 (03:23):
Is it really?

Speaker 5 (03:24):
You know, they're not listening, but they might look up
and still be able to see the dialogue that second
screen thing or in your case, Jimmy, because I think
you say, you have both your phone and maybe your
eye your laptop there, so your your triple screen.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
Yeah, yeah, sometimes they do triple screen it. Maybe that's
one of the things in the bag. Right. Well, last
night I saw something that I I will tell you.
So I've been watching all these TV shows for a
long time, and the network TV shows are one thing,
the streaming system TV shows with the streaming service TV

(03:58):
shows or another. Have you seen the first episode of
Welcome to Darry yet?

Speaker 5 (04:04):
No.

Speaker 7 (04:05):
I watched Weapons last night and I saw the promos. Unfortunately,
I saw the promotes during my movie because I get
the lowest tier HBO that interrupted the movie four times
with commercials no one than anything, which is so FRUSTRATINGBO.

Speaker 4 (04:25):
What did you think about the movie? I loved it
was was I correct in saying that was a really
unique take on that genre of horror? Absolute, really unique
modern take on the idea of a witch. I know,
I enjoyed it.

Speaker 7 (04:39):
I enjoyed not only that the format in which they told.

Speaker 4 (04:42):
It right, exactly right, very interesting movie. If you haven't
seen Weapons Jedi, I strongly suggest a check. And the
thing is it's it's a room divider. You don't hear
a lot of gray area reviews on Weapons. I thought
it was great.

Speaker 7 (04:56):
But you know, but being Halloween week Friday, my wife
and I are watching the Substance.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
Yeah or you are? Oh yeah, so were doing on
that Friday. We thought about watching it last night, ironically,
and we said, well, we're not really you know, we're
not in the mood for Gore. So we decided to
watch Welcome to Darry which is the first episode of
the new series on HBO Max based around the IT
character from Stephen King.

Speaker 7 (05:25):
And you couldn't log in HBO. You don't know how
to get to HBO.

Speaker 5 (05:31):
It was far more terrifying than you expected.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
Watch it. I will say this, yes, I'll say this.
So seeing the True Blood, watched four seasons of American horror,
all the shows that use the stuff to really draw
you in on that fat I've never seen a first
fifteen minutes of television that represents that show. It is

(05:58):
so un believable that you can't. My wife and I
watched it with our hand over our mouth. The first
fifteen minutes of that show are I don't I couldn't
tell you what it was on the air. It's that graphic.

Speaker 5 (06:18):
It seems like they're trying to outgraphic each other. It
seems like, I'm sure there's a great story, but if
you have to watch the first episode, the first fifteen
minutes through your hand, I'm not so sure. I want
to indulge in the rest.

Speaker 4 (06:30):
I'm begging that somebody that watched this show, because I mean,
the episode's only been out since Friday, I think is
when it started and drops every Friday. That's the HBO
Max thing. There we go, they drop them on Friday,
so we have to wait for Friday for the next episode.
I beg anybody that saw the first episode of Welcome
to Dary to call in and support or deny what
I'm saying that they could not believe the first fifteen

(06:53):
minutes of the show. It is that unbelievably graphic. I've
never seen anything like it. Now, look, here's the thing.
It doesn't base itself in the same realm as the substance,
because with the substance, it's you know, it is the
body horror thing, and you're kind of building into that.
The unique idea of the Welcome to Dairy or the

(07:14):
It world is is the fact that you don't know
when you're in it or not in it. Do you
understand what I'm saying. I've never seen them, so it's
like a dream, right, So you never understand you have
real life characters in a world where there is a
you know, a mystical paranormal thing happening as well around
this clown thing. But you never really know when you're

(07:35):
in the clown world or when you are in the
real world. It's kind of like working in radio no,
because when you're in.

Speaker 5 (07:42):
The clown world, it's always the clown world.

Speaker 4 (07:44):
You don't know when the real world and the clown
world overlap.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
Sure, you know your last meeting bro.

Speaker 4 (07:50):
I'm telling you you've never seen anything like this. You've
never seen anything like this. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (07:56):
People are texting in at seven seven zero three one
and saying, whole first fifteen minutes are insane.

Speaker 4 (08:03):
Absolutely crazy, dude. And the last one of these texted
and said the last last fifteen minutes are bad as well.
Nothing like that first team. Nothing in the world like
that first fifteen minutes.

Speaker 5 (08:15):
Good. So it's thirty minutes out of an hour long
show that's nothing but horrible gore.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
Well it's not a horrible gore, but I mean it's
part of the story. I guess.

Speaker 5 (08:22):
Oh, somebody just texted a uh detail.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yep.

Speaker 5 (08:28):
That always happens.

Speaker 4 (08:29):
Man, Robert, how you doing, buddy?

Speaker 3 (08:32):
Oh good?

Speaker 8 (08:33):
Here yourself?

Speaker 4 (08:34):
Not too bad? Did you do that first episode to
Welcome to Darry Yes? I did. Would you think?

Speaker 5 (08:41):
Man?

Speaker 4 (08:41):
I will tell you I am an absolute fan of
horror movies and gore, and but that is being craziest first.

Speaker 9 (08:49):
Episode I've ever seen any show.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
The first fifteen minutes, like you said, the last fifteen minutes.

Speaker 4 (08:55):
My sixteen year old son was watching the watching the
wh Us, and he just had his little like not
things buddy, appreciate your call. I really do. After it
went off the air, we actually said to ourselves, what
what what did what just happened? Like what did we
just watch? And now I cannot wait to see the

(09:18):
second episode because it's like the America. I've seen four
four seasons of American horror story. And like Deborah said
when I when I first said that, you know the
first thing, you are correct. I think a lot True Blood,
a lot of those shows tried to kind of out
gore or out like, well.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
It's hard to compare true Blood. I mean that that
series is how old now, I mean that would seem
pretty innocuous compared to what's out there today.

Speaker 4 (09:42):
But even with Dexter, even with some of the killings,
with the Dexter thing, you're like, oh my god, you
know that's that's that's pretty out there.

Speaker 10 (09:48):
Man.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
That stuff seems like Doctor Sue's. Compared to what we
saw last night, it was crazy.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Now.

Speaker 4 (09:56):
Man, I have to tell you, I was just like, Okay,
I mean I get it. You're trying to get you know,
you're trying to get people to watch, and you're trying
to set the tone for what the series is gonna
be like, but damn, where do you go from here?
Where do you take it from there? I'm gonna terrified
of where it may go after this.

Speaker 5 (10:10):
Not even Game of Thrones started with the Red wedding
right exactly, and at least they don't build up exactly.

Speaker 4 (10:17):
God, oh Maddy, I don't know where that's the one
thing was like, what do you do from here?

Speaker 6 (10:21):
Right?

Speaker 4 (10:22):
I don't know, man, But we'll be giving you updates
on Welcome to Dary if you haven't seen it yet,
oh man, for Barri yourslf. Accordingly, that first fifteen minutes
is like a rocket ride, dude, it is. It's like
getting it. It's like the first thing, the only ride
you've ever ridden is the Teacups and then you get
on that damn Hult coaster thing. That's like, that's the transition,
like go for mister Rogers to Exorcist, you know, unedited?

(10:47):
All right? Four our seven nine four one text us
at seven seven zero three to one. I got a
lot of stuff to talk about this afternoon. Of course,
we'll have Animal House Chris and Burford, and today from
the Care Foundation, Scott Maxwell a really enlightening piece about
school vouchers that we'll go over today as well, but
your brother stuff as well. Deb What do you have
for news?

Speaker 5 (11:06):
Well, we're gonna talk about Florida's Lieutenant governor touring Mount
Dora after seventeen inches of rain washes out Rhodes. What
service the Velusia County Sheriff's Office is using AI for?
And dictionary dot Com selects the word of the year,
and parents of middle schoolers. I'm sorry, but we're gonna.

Speaker 4 (11:27):
Talk about this life. What is happening?

Speaker 5 (11:33):
Last time I did that, someone texted and said thanks.
Now we're gailing in the backyard and a back seat
and that's all they're saying.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
You know what it's like. It's like life right now
has a substitute. Like you remember how you acted when
a substitute teacher came to class? Yeah, you lost your mind,
did whatever you wanted. It seems like we have a substitute.
Like we're just doing whatever we feel is cool. We're
eating pancakes for dinner.

Speaker 7 (11:53):
I think that's a really good analogy to where we
are right now.

Speaker 5 (11:57):
Ye, sir, feel like that. And the substitute isn't even.

Speaker 4 (11:59):
Qualified right seven seven zero three one year three like
Youward is credit that's c R E D. I t
slide over to real Radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance have one thousand dollars back in
the sack with Debz News and more of The Jim
Colbert Show.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Jim Jam Jam be Reeves.

Speaker 11 (12:18):
I honestly think that the reason why uh more of
my age group millennials.

Speaker 10 (12:24):
I hate that tag.

Speaker 4 (12:25):
I feel eighty.

Speaker 11 (12:27):
But I think the reason why they're reading more subtitles
is because the giant boom in anime and if you
don't understand Korean or anything, the only way you're can
watch it subtitles.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
That's a good point. See back ad call buddy. By
the way, No, you're not an animal for locking pancakes
for dinner.

Speaker 5 (12:49):
I was, just, of course, not people.

Speaker 4 (12:52):
That's all the things I send that for a segment.
A couple of people like, hey, hey, hold on, breakfast
for dinner is awesome. It is nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 5 (13:00):
It feels like you're doing something naughty.

Speaker 4 (13:01):
All right, seven seven zero three one. That's how you
text us, We have it open, ready to go, always
wanting to hear your comments. Also, your three o'clock keyword
is credit cr D. It slide over to Real RADIOFM
and send that away for your chance at one thousand
dollars credit. Guys, that is your three o'clock keyword. Good luck.
We hope you win. I'm Jim Jack is right over
there and deb has your news.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
It's time for JCS news. Wow, this guy kind of
put his name on everything.

Speaker 3 (13:28):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim Colberg.

Speaker 5 (13:32):
Show and JCS news is brought to you by that
mortgage guy Don. Hurricane Melissa is now offshore of eastern
Cuba and in the Atlantic Ocean as it heads toward
the Bahamas. American Peter Kong, who is stuck in Jamaica,
says he's still waiting on word from a friend after
losing contact.

Speaker 12 (13:50):
They were saying that the roof, there was a leak
in the roof and water was coming in and then
I guess power or something went out to service went out,
and we have he said, been able to contact him
at all since that.

Speaker 5 (14:03):
Yeah, the storm is going to move across the southeastern
or central Bahamas today. Of course, Melissa brought devastating flooding
to Cuba after slamming Jamaica yesterday. Hurricane experts say Melissa
is the second strongest Atlantic hurricane in recorded history. It
also tied the record for the strongest Atlantic hurricane to
make landfall. Unbelievable. When you remember the destruction of Hurricane Andrew,

(14:26):
that was a Cat five with one hundred and sixty
five mile for our winds. Melissa came on shore as
a Cat five with one hundred and eighty five yeah
for hour winds six plus yeah, yeah, the lowest. I
was thinking of doing that.

Speaker 4 (14:39):
The tie for the lowest pressure ever recorded in modern
history for a hurricane. And you knew it was bad
when you woke up this morning. You didn't immediately see
photographs of Jamaica. Absolutely, That's when I knew it was bad.
When I woke up this morning, I went online and
I was like, I expected to see, you know, some
of the aftermath of what happened, And there were no
photographs coming out of there until late this afternoon, or
until around two o'clock this afternoon. That's wh And you

(15:00):
knew it was gnarly.

Speaker 7 (15:01):
Yeah, that's our fourth box video today is some Jamaican
aftermath now Jim dot com.

Speaker 5 (15:07):
Check it out on there. Melissa's wins havesins died down
to one hundred miles per hour, making it a Category
two storm. And in the wake of Hurricane Melissa, Kasimi's
vice mayor and community leaders are hosting an emergency donation
drive tonight to provide urgent relief, essential goods, long term
recovery as support to Jamaica. Vice Mayor Angela Edie says
the driver will be held at Solid Rock Community Church

(15:29):
in Kassimi at five pm. Alianza Center is also helping
to mobilize resources, community partners, and long term support. The
good news is Central Florida is getting its first real
taste of fall this weekend. Today's high in orlandos seventy
nine degrees as a fall front moves in. And that
fall front, by the way, is our big friend right now,

(15:51):
because that fall front is it's draping down across the
state of Florida, is what's keeping all of Melissa's rainbands
completely away from the state.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
Absolutely.

Speaker 5 (15:59):
Forecasters temperatures are going to fall to their lowest points
so far this season. Morning lows are going to be
in the forties and fifties on Friday. Keep that in
mind as you get the kids ready for trick or treating.
They won't need the jacket, but you might.

Speaker 4 (16:11):
The next two like literally the next ten days of
whether it's going to be absolutely.

Speaker 5 (16:15):
Absolutely gorgeous and good news if you're in Lake or
Brevard Counties, rainfall will be limited. Speaking of Lake County, Florida,
Lieutenant Governor Jay Collins took a little tour of Mount
Dora this morning after torrential rain washed out roads and
flooded home Sunday night. Of course, more than seventeen inches
of rain fell in Mountdora, more than nineteen inches in

(16:35):
nearby Eustace. Collins also toured Eustace this morning. You know
that Donnelly Park road collapse. Yes, turns out that hole
is one hundred and twenty five feet long and forty
feet deep.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
Wow, it's a chasm.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
It is a chasm. It is a chasm. So f
DOT is working to repair those damaged roads in Brevard
and Lake Counties. It's teaming up with local governments to
speed up the process. The goal is to build stronger
and more resilient infrastructure than will with stand strong storms.
Secretary Jared Produce says they want to help communities return
to normalcy as soon as possible. But again, you know,

(17:08):
you think that you get the chance to prepare for
Hurricane Milton, have enough bottled water on hand just in
case you get a boiled water alert or plan for detours.
And then it just rains on a Sunday night and
you wake up to like it's post apocalyptic. It's the
craziest thing to see the Lieutenant governor standing under the
sign that you just went under on Friday making a

(17:29):
trip to publics, not knowing you're not going to drive
that road for several months, if not a couple of years.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
Yes, it's crater.

Speaker 7 (17:36):
Remember the weather report was, you know, rain showers on
and off throughout the deck.

Speaker 4 (17:40):
Yes, exactly what Earlier that morning, shees, what's the weather
supposed to be like today we're going to work outide.
I'm like, it's supposed to a drizzle around two o'clock literally,
and it did.

Speaker 7 (17:48):
My wife and I were on our way to see
Sunday morning coming down Joseph Martin said, Henry Depot and Sanford,
and she's like, you want to bring an umbrella.

Speaker 4 (17:54):
I'm like, nah, we want. I mean, what could possibly happen?

Speaker 5 (17:58):
Chris, was, you know, of course working the craft fair
which was going on a mount door. I mean thirty
five thousand people on Saturday because they're like, well, that
weather's going to be gnarly Sunday, and he's like, you know,
they're supposed to get some sprinkles about one two o'clock.
You know, okay, sprinkles ye. Florida Democrats are urging Governor
Ron de Santas to declare a food emergency as the
federal shutdown threatens Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP benefits. Nearly.

(18:24):
As we said before, nearly three million Florida residents could
lose access to food aids starting Saturday, and that includes
more than one and a half million children. All forty
three Democratic state senators said in a letter to the
governor the state should unlock emergency funds to support food
banks and keep families fed. DeSantis has not responded to

(18:44):
the request, but earlier dismissed the shutdown as quote DC
theater end quote. We've got something coming up though, or
we're going to be helping collect food donations. I believe
it's coming up on Friday, November seven.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
That is corrected to feed a than.

Speaker 7 (18:57):
We're partnering with our friends at Fox thirty five in
their care force and all food is being raised for
the One Heart for Women and Children ahead of the
holiday season. All proceeds supporting Central Florida families facing food
and securities. And we have the details and a list
of needed items on our website at real Radio dot

(19:18):
FM slash help cool.

Speaker 5 (19:20):
Yeah, help fill up that truck. Speaking of the governor,
Governor DeSantis is taking aim at hiring and tenure at
Florida's public universities. At a news conference at the University
of South Florida and Tampa, DeSantis announced tenured professors will
now face performance reviews every five years. The governor also

(19:40):
ordered an end to the use of employees who require
H one B foreign visas at state schools and canceled
over thirty three million dollars in diversity related grants. The
changes are part of Florida's ongoing Doze audits, which evaluate
efficiency and spending across the universe city system. All right,

(20:01):
another school note flyer promoting a Turning Point USA club
at Fletcher High School in Duval County du vall is
drawing concerns for gun related imagery and I can't imagine why, Okay,
what happened? Yeah? The flyer shows a teen holding a
sign okay that reads quote nine millimeter beats nine to

(20:24):
one to one every time, end quote, and includes other
political messaging.

Speaker 4 (20:29):
What's it supposed to mean.

Speaker 5 (20:32):
That it's easier to solve your problem with your nine
millimeter than calling nine one one.

Speaker 13 (20:36):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (20:37):
I see, I see what you're saying. In other words,
I don't even bother calling the cops. Just handle it
yourself kind of scenario. And who's signed? Is this?

Speaker 5 (20:44):
It's a Turning Point USA club at Fletcher High School,
that's it.

Speaker 4 (20:47):
Yeah, near Jacksonville, right, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (20:49):
So district officials say, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, that
flyer was not approved and the school is now working
to quote revise it.

Speaker 4 (20:57):
There you go.

Speaker 5 (20:58):
Some parents and students say clubs like this don't belong
on campus. Disappointment for the family of a TV reporter
killed on the job in Orange County because they're dealing
with the legal setback. Dylan Lyon's family's federal wrongful death
lawsuit against Charter Communications was dismissed without prejudice on Monday.

(21:19):
Lyons was working for Spectrum News thirteen two years ago
when he was shot to death while covering his story
in Pine Hills. Literally sitting in his news truck when
the killer basically walked up and executed him in front
of his cameraman exactly. His family claims Charter Communications didn't
provide Lions with the kind of training that could have
kept him safe. His family is seeking over one and

(21:39):
a half million dollars in damages. The Orlando Sentinel reports
they have until November tenth to refile the suit.

Speaker 4 (21:46):
Yeah, I kind of thought that would happen. Yeah, I
thought that was a shot in the dark there, because
I don't know what they expected them to do, you know,
I mean you were Yeah, I don't know what you know.
I mean, so many other we've talked about this before,
like so many other people also put themselves in danger
for their job. I'm not sure what they wanted the
company to do to protect them from a psycho murderer
who was walking around and shooting people in.

Speaker 5 (22:06):
The street and just you know, and strangers. Well, he
killed a nine year old girl and a couple of
other people. Yeah, exactly. I don't know what kind of
training he could have received that that would have allowed him,
unless it would to carry a gun, and I don't
know that.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right.

Speaker 5 (22:21):
And Miami jury is considering putting a double murderer back
on death row. Lebron Dennis was initially sentenced to death
for the fatal beating of his ex girlfriend and Miami
Hurricanes football player Marlon Barnes back in nineteen ninety six.

Speaker 4 (22:37):
Every time I stepped on the NFL field on Sunday afternoon,
I always pointed to the sky because I played for
him in my heart.

Speaker 5 (22:45):
That's Barnes's best friend, roommate, and teammate Earl Little, who
broke down while giving his victim impact statement. He played
in the NFL from nineteen ninety seven to two thousand
and five with the New Orleans Saints, Cleveland Browns, and
my beloved Green Bay Packers. The re sentencing hearing comes
after Florida made modifications to the death penalty law remember,

(23:06):
and Dennis's sentence was commuted to life. The defense has
taken over the trial, introducing mitigating factors like sex abuse
from Dennis's father. Florida has executed its fifteenth death row
inmate so far this year, and like I said yesterday,
we still have two more to go. The Lusia County
Sheriff's Office credits a new tool for increased efficiency an

(23:28):
AI system called AVA has been handling non emergency phone
calls for the last couple of months. Oh no, really,
I didn't know how I felt about this, But apparently
asks callers the same questions a dispatcher would, and if
it considers the call to be an emergency, the call
is then redirected to nine to one point one. The VCSO

(23:52):
says AVA has successfully handled what percent of all non
emergency calls?

Speaker 4 (23:57):
I bet this is going to be a horrifying number.
Forty five forty percent of the call?

Speaker 5 (24:04):
Forty five percent? Okay, the Vlusia County Sheriff's Office Jack
says AVA has successfully handled this percentage of all non
emergency calls.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
I'll help you, seventy five.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
How about ninety eight? Over ninety eight percent of all
non emergency calls? Oh, look at that. There goes another
job replaced by AI.

Speaker 4 (24:25):
Wow. You wonder about when that thing's going to hallucinate
and if it does, what a thing to have AI do,
like handle calls from me even though they're non emergency. Still,
I mean, it's kind of wild.

Speaker 5 (24:35):
But again, if it considers the call to be an emergency,
it will be rerouted to nine one one. Keep in mind.
Just yesterday we did the story about a kid who
had a bag of Dorito's, crumpled up the bag and
put it in his pocket, and they thought it was
a pistol. Yeah, the AI gun detection system had cops
throwing him on the ground and cuffing him before they
realized it was just human error.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
They are human. We have a story about someonel County
employing AI for something a little bit later down the
road as well.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
All right, Well, Sheriff Mike Chip would tell Spox thirty
five that AVA is not frustrating to use, and it
makes dispatchers better and more accurate.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
Right, and in order your Wendy's for you if you're like.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
Yeah, I would think it would be frustrating if you're
a dispatcher, Well yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:17):
I mean right. Also, I mean even if you don't
want like I mean, I guess if you wanted information
and you were calling hoping to speak to somebody, it's
just running through a set of you know, not pre
program but set questions. Is it going to be efficient
enough to answer all the questions? I guess ninety eight
percent it's actually not doing that bad of a job.

Speaker 5 (25:34):
It's doing a really great job, but I you know,
had forgotten that hallucination aspect that you brought up. Yeah,
and in terms of life or death, that's not when
I want a hallucination to happen.

Speaker 4 (25:44):
And that's why this is, you know, the non emergency thing.
That's I think that's why. I mean, they're not answering
nine to one one calls. I can imagine that, Oh
my god. But it still seems like they're really putting
a lot of reliance on AI or something would give
be a very sensitive scenario. You don't call the cops for.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
Nothing, exactly, you know, exactly all right, If you're in
the market for a boat, might I suggest the Fort
Lauderdale International Boat Show, which is back.

Speaker 4 (26:07):
Got over one thousand boats and water hundreds more in
the convention center on the land of Hiema, so there's
more products on display this year the end of the four.

Speaker 5 (26:16):
In form of Boat Shows, President Andrew Doule says this
year there are seven sites showing off all kinds of vessels,
from paddle boats to super yachts. He calls it the
world's largest boat show now and it's what year.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
Man had thing's been going on a while. I actually
went a couple of years, So, yeah, I did. It
was unbelievable because you walk around there and you're like,
why am I here? Like what am I doing here? Yeah?
I mean, I mean I couldn't even afford like a
twenty footer, much less one of these one hundred and
fifty foot boats. I think it's thirty years thirty one.

Speaker 5 (26:49):
Sixty six now sixty six year and it injects about
one point seven billion dollars into the local economy and
supports nearly one hundred thousand dollar jobs.

Speaker 4 (27:00):
I think it's one of the biggest in the world.

Speaker 5 (27:01):
Is Yeah, and it runs through Sunday. My cousin is
going to be a yack a yacht captain, so I'm
sure he'll be out there chilling around for clients.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
I remember talking to someone when I went to the
one and got it was probably in the early mid nineties,
early nineties, right before my radio career started. I went
down and I cannec tell you, I don't even remember
what for, but I remember talking to somebody who worked there,
and they said, this setup for that thing is a
blanking nightmare because you're wheeling boats into a auditorium and

(27:30):
some of these boats are you know a million dollar
boats and they have them on like these runners where
they're dragging them through a room to set them up
so people, you know, perspective buyers can come check them out.

Speaker 5 (27:38):
You don't want to be the one.

Speaker 4 (27:39):
Oh man, you have no idea. And then the protection
to keep them people from ruining these boats. Even a
small scratch can be one thousand dollars. Well, I mean
they won't let you wear shoes, so you have to
make sure you have good socks on because anytime you
walk on the boats, even the small fishing boats, really
no shoes, no marks. They can't have any marks.

Speaker 5 (27:57):
Well that's true, because who wants to buy a marked
up boat? You're black bottom shoes exactly exactly all right.
Barvard County residents hope they have finally seen the last
of a problem crocodile. FWC caught a croc on Monday
and Satellite Beach after it killed a golden retriever near
South Park Drive. Neighbors say it's the same croc that
had been relocated three or four times before in the

(28:20):
last few years. In fact, I think I read this
croc was even relocated to like the Key West area,
and it still found its way up to Bervar. Well,
that's crazy, one man tells Wesh two. It has no
fear of humans and it was just a matter of
time before something bad happened. The FWC says the croc
is now in permanent captivity because again federally protected species.
They can't just go use a bank stick on it.

(28:42):
Bankstick and other animal news. You know it's Florida. There
we go, queue the air, we go. Get about your
system a year.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
You're the one who started it. What are you talking about?
All right, that's your brain works.

Speaker 4 (29:00):
I'm convinced. I'm going.

Speaker 5 (29:04):
Thanks Jack, you got it all right. An encounter with
a duck is the subject of a lawsuit against SeaWorld Orlando,
Orange County. Hillary Martin sued the theme park Monday over
an incident seven months ago. She says she was riding
the Mako roller coaster when a duck flew into her,
knocked her unconscious, and caused permanent injuries and mental suffering.

(29:24):
As is the case, Martin is seeking fifty thousand dollars
in damages. She claimed SeaWorld created a zone of danger
by putting the ride over or near a body of water,
which created a higher risk of bird strike.

Speaker 4 (29:37):
Here's a new ride name Zone of danger.

Speaker 5 (29:40):
Zone danger or bird strike.

Speaker 4 (29:43):
There's another one bold to talk about today. We may
get into it a little bit later. How do you
how do you assue a theme park for what happens?
How do you do that? Because if I got sungbody mosquito,
they didn't do enough to keep the mosquitos out of
the park while I was enjoying.

Speaker 7 (29:57):
Myself, because they'll do the calculus. Okay, le, so let's
offer this. And then she says, thank you.

Speaker 4 (30:03):
Got pooped on my bird and it really scared me
and I tripped and fell. Ye, how did they not
know the bird was gonna poop on me?

Speaker 5 (30:10):
There you go, jesus, me me, me, me me throw.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
It out of throw it out?

Speaker 7 (30:13):
You got to hit Remember with the with the an
Epic Universe that the rollercoaster was the young man who died,
But then someone else said, yeah, I got injured on
that too, and then that that was quickly settled, and.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
Oh yeah, we haven't heard anything more about that lawsuit.
And then finally I.

Speaker 10 (30:30):
Know he died six out of it. I just bite
on the highway. I just bite on the highway.

Speaker 4 (30:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (30:41):
Dictionary dot Com named the viral slang term It's word
of the Year six seven. The term doesn't have a
clear meaning, but some have taken it to mean so
so maybe this or maybe that. Dictionary dot Com describes
it as brain rot slang that is.

Speaker 4 (30:57):
Quote just brain rot, all of it, this brain song
that they just played, brain rot.

Speaker 5 (31:02):
Purposely nonsensical and all about being in on the absurdity
end quote. The origin of the term is also unclear,
with some saying it originated with the song I just
played Rapper scrill Is twenty twenty four song du dute
six seven dude six seven brilliant. I felt really old
just even saying super brilliant. Well, either way, that concludes
your JCS news.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
Six seven. Yeah, now I understand. I remember as a
kid when adults would say stuff that we were doing
is stupid. I get it. What a better way to
get on the stop? I now get it? Yeah yeah, yeah,
oh that is.

Speaker 5 (31:40):
That's a brilliant way to get them to stop.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
Teachers are doing it. That's why teachers are doing it. Guys.
It's like, oh, well, okay, that's right, Yeah, it's cool anymore,
all right? Seven seven zero three to one. That is
the texting service. You can text us anytime you want.
Credit is your three o'clock keyword, slide over to real
radio out of him and send that off for your
chance at one one thousand dollars. Back in a second
with more of the Jim color.

Speaker 14 (32:02):
Show, asking in Jim Colvert and Crew. I just want
to give out a little p s A about AI.

Speaker 3 (32:21):
Uh.

Speaker 14 (32:21):
Students in schools are now using AI to record their
teachers and then using the AI to make the teacher
say whatever they want even though the teacher didn't say it.
And it's getting a lot of people in trouble. So parents,
parent your kids please, like you're supposed to keep track
of what they're doing. It's getting a lot of people

(32:42):
in trouble with this AI.

Speaker 5 (32:45):
Shucky, Duggy, smack smack.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
You know what I'm saying, Doug, I.

Speaker 6 (32:54):
Love our listeners.

Speaker 4 (32:55):
They should keep a jug of salt water next next
to every desk and every school and the instant somebody
does that, Just bring your phone up and just drop
it right to the bottom of the salt water. Yeah,
and you can. You and your mom and dad can
come get that after school to be right there at
the bottom burbling.

Speaker 5 (33:12):
So Mom, and dad walk in and act absolutely worse
than their child every day.

Speaker 4 (33:16):
Exactly. Ask you for the eight hundred for the phone.

Speaker 5 (33:19):
Right exactly, I'm reporting you.

Speaker 4 (33:21):
All right, welcome back to the Jib Goldberg Show at
AL Radio one four point one. I'm Jim. There's dem
Jack is here as well. Yeah, yeah, Seminole County. I
just read a piece today and uh, you know, and
by the way, you said, we had a bunch of
text coming in saying that using the AI system over
in Blush County is pretty frustrating.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (33:40):
I mean, if you're in a situation like you know,
what is non emergency anything that isn't criminal, like maybe
a trespassing or you.

Speaker 5 (33:47):
See someone you know, kind of loitering around your neighborhood.
It's not an emergency, but you want to put that
person on the police, you know, the press officers radar.
You know, it's absolutely terrible. Eva's very frustrating to use.
Oh my god, I've had AVA before and she's annoying,
A hung up on her. The AI system is a
crappy system.

Speaker 4 (34:06):
So let me ask. So there we were there a
bank of operators handling those calls beforehand, like would have
been one or two or three or four operators to
be more than one. Right, Yes, So what we're saying
is they've replaced all of that call center with AI.

Speaker 7 (34:22):
Well, I would guess during any transition like this, they'd
have a human monitoring what the AI was doing.

Speaker 4 (34:28):
Yeah, but how would they do that though? I mean
to listen in on the call and yeah, third like
a third phone, and just hear, hear what it's doing,
and just interject. If the AI doesn't ask the question
or answer the way it's supposed to be answered, you
would you would just kind of interject, high officers, so
and so here I can see that AVA isn't getting
you where you want?

Speaker 7 (34:44):
How can I help you type thing? I'd say the
first part of that, yes, not the second part. I'd say,
just you know, whatever the reason for interrupting the call.
You know the emergency listen responders are on their way.
I need you to keep calm.

Speaker 4 (34:59):
I need you to And by the way, that's more
prevalent than ever now with these automated call and answering systems.
I don't know if you've noticed they there is no
option to get through to a representative anymore. It used
to be when you pick that thing up, or when
somebody would pick up, go hi, this is so and
so and so on, and so you would just immediately
start saying representative because you don't want to deal with
the system and go through the questions that are just

(35:20):
wasting your time. A person can't answer a question immediately
and then you could be on your way, but that
isn't how it goes, and you know, and that's to
me what sucks. It's just a it's a time suck.

Speaker 7 (35:31):
I can't believe how many times I'm going through an
automated system and the reason I'm calling is just not
on the menu, right, yeah, So it is like for
our other you know, please hold for a representative, and
then you find out your way's like eight or ten minutes,
which usually isn't that bad, but you know, then you
think to yourself, well, should I have just stayed on
the system? You're like no, because what you had to

(35:52):
ask would have eventually led to you where you are now.

Speaker 5 (35:54):
Which is why I love when they say, well it's
eight to twelve minutes, but we can call you back.

Speaker 4 (35:59):
It's like awesome, Oh you choose that, Oh yeah, oh wow?

Speaker 5 (36:02):
Iause rather than sit there and be tied to the
phone for eight to twelve minutes. I'm gonna go do
my thing and just make sure I keep my phone
volume up. It works, it does, It works a lot.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
You know why that works for you guys? You don't
forget stuff like I do. Yeah, No, that's not the problem, Jack.
The problem is this. Yeah, yeah, sure, call me back,
going back to work, back to work, phone rings, stupid scammer.
Oh and then I just hung up on the phone
call that I've been waiting for because I forgot eight
minutes ago. These douchebags told me they're gonna call me

(36:32):
back with the answer I needed.

Speaker 5 (36:33):
Oh, it's like looking at a living goldfish.

Speaker 4 (36:36):
It is, really it is.

Speaker 5 (36:37):
It's got the you got the memory of it.

Speaker 4 (36:39):
Just when I focus, routes a certain way and it
doesn't route like that once I've want you to. When
I've done something, I just pass it off and like
that's done. You know that that part is achieved. Let's
move on to the next goal. And I totally forget
that I'd set that up. Like, you call me back
and I look over. I'm like, I'm not ticked. Yeah,
you're not getting me today. Double. I turned the phone
upside down, then realize and then then I see the message.

(37:01):
And when I see voicemail, I'm like, oh, you are
so stupid. But yeah, man, those thing's never offer the
ability to get right to a representative anymore. But anyway,
simonol County, our friend over there, Dennis lay May, is
a great guy. The sheriff there, they have a AI
employed in a completely different way. It unveils this AI
system predicted to predict deadly drug threats before they hit.

(37:25):
So this is actually kind of unique. What it does
is it scans, uh, it scans health alerts I guess
throughout the entire state every few minutes. In other words,
if there is a batch of cocaine or pills or
something that were laced with fentanyl and they were caused
they were causing a certain problem, you know they were,

(37:45):
they would be able to get to kind of go, hey,
you know, we've had six cases over in Hillsborough County
that look exactly the same overdoses on this kind of thing.
There must be like a bad batch over there. So
they're able to release information to say, hey, look, you
know this is the issue. There's bad drugs out there,
you know, so beware and they say, it really comes
into play fight when EDM comes into town, you know,
because kids are looking for, you know, for EDM drugs,

(38:08):
right X and molly and stuff like that, which also
could be lace with other drugs. So if there was
an outbreak of people who had pills that were not good,
that's one of those things where you could say, you know, hey,
look everybody, you want to make sure that you're very,
very careful because we've our AI has shown that in
this particular area, there's some bad drugs out there, and
that's one of the things are doing.

Speaker 5 (38:27):
Donate the sandwiches with the brown ascid.

Speaker 4 (38:29):
Yeah, yeah, whatever the case may be.

Speaker 5 (38:31):
Right, do you remember that from Woodstock?

Speaker 13 (38:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (38:32):
Yeah, sure, yeah, yeah, you weren't there. It's called the
drug Yeah, it's called Drug Alert AI. It was announced
that Seminole County Sheriffs, alongside Sheriff Lima and Project Overdose
CEO Andre Bailey, the system used machine learning scan statewide
drug data and real time including toxicology screenings, e M
S calls, arrest records, and street level intelligence, then issues

(38:56):
alerts when dangerous substances emerge. That's a really really good
use of that technology, and I mean, he's on the
forefront of that stuff and always has been. One of
his whole things when he got into office was is
to make sure that Simonel County had as few opioid
desks as much as possible, and created that entire program
that really kind of kept you in there. It's almost
like a housing program, rehab kind of thing. And they're

(39:16):
powered by the Sheriff's Apartment, which is brilliant, very cool.
It's cool to see them use AI in a way
that where it isn't trolling teachers, right.

Speaker 5 (39:26):
Are frustrating your non emergency phone calls.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
It says a Project Overdose confirmed the system had already
generated its first statewide drug Track alert is what they
call it after oh Man car fentanyl, which is fentanyl
with the word car in front of it, which apparently
is one of the most lethal synthetic opioids ever identified.
Was I was detected in multiple Florida counties, including Orange

(39:51):
and Seminole County. So they wanted to make sure that
everybody kind of understood, hey, be careful because this is
even the fentanyl thing.

Speaker 5 (39:57):
This is, yeah, fifty times stronger than the sentinel thing.

Speaker 4 (40:00):
This is back in the day. The data they would
use to do stuff like that would be six months old.
This in this situation, it's hours old. So they're able
to really, like in real time, make sure that people
are safe out they're trying to party a little bit
and don't get the wrong stuff, and they're party turned
into you know, the worst kind of party.

Speaker 5 (40:15):
I mean, I know they can track it. I don't
know if they'd be able to stop it.

Speaker 4 (40:19):
I don't even think it's about stopping it, you know,
obviously they want to, But what they want to do
is warn people who are out there like in that mode.
Like you know, with any of the any big convention
or any big party comes to town, better be a
concert or something like that. That's exactly what would happen is,
you know, they would send that alert out and make
sure that people are around that area, whether it be a ballgame,
the Bowl games come to Center Florida during the New Year. Yeah,

(40:41):
that they would understand. Hey, look, you know, just gotta
be careful if you're out there shopping for stuff. There's
some gnarleag stuff out on the streets. Be very careful,
you know. And it's almost like an interjection in between
the deal. You know, again, You don't know how many
people are going to pay attention to it, but it
may you know who knows? All right, four us seven
nine one six four one. You can always text us

(41:02):
at seven to seven zero three one. Back in a second.
We'll do Animal House right after this.

Speaker 15 (41:11):
Have you helped a cob and the company its concrete? Mike,
you know one thing I don't worry about. There's Ai
taking my job. Let me see that computer come out
and four concrete.

Speaker 1 (41:25):
You'll That's all I got say about that.

Speaker 4 (41:29):
No, dude, I see those machines laying contrary down scorting
it out there.

Speaker 5 (41:34):
Pretty good, Mike oh Man.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
All right, seven seven zero three one. That's how you
text us or four o'clock. Keyword is cash, c as
h go to real radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at a thousand bucks. Guys, cash
is the word. Go get that money. We hope you
win for sure. Welcome back. I'm Jim Jack is right
over there, and Deb has Animal House.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
She likes the fuzzy, three, feathery, tough and scaly for
Animal House.

Speaker 5 (42:03):
And Animal House is generously brought to you each and
every week by personal injury Attorney Glenn Klausman over a
klosm in law. We'll tell you how you can get
in touch with Glenn at the end of Animal House.
But now please join me in welcoming back. Kristin Burford
from the Care Foundation. Yeah, and PD, the oh possum, oh.

Speaker 4 (42:25):
Oh man awesome is not my favorite. I'm gonna be
honest with you.

Speaker 5 (42:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (42:29):
They're so important though.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
And I understand how important they are. That's not the point.
That's not the point. But when she said, did you
bring your animal with you? You have a little bowl
there and you reach down and then just grab something
and pull it up, and it started screaming, it's squalored.
It did not it did, It wasn't. This thing was squaloring.
And then she pulls up a forty pound possum.

Speaker 6 (42:54):
He's healthy.

Speaker 5 (42:54):
He's not that healthy. He is healthy. How old is PD?

Speaker 6 (42:57):
PD is actually just over a year old.

Speaker 5 (43:00):
You're kidding. Wow, I didn't realize that. You can see
pdal on our Jim Colbert YouTube channel Jim Kuilbert Show.

Speaker 4 (43:07):
I think it's the tail.

Speaker 5 (43:08):
Is it the tail?

Speaker 4 (43:09):
I think it's the tail that does it.

Speaker 5 (43:10):
The hairless tail.

Speaker 6 (43:11):
That is one thing that makes them so special though.
From that. Yeah, the prehencil tail.

Speaker 5 (43:17):
So it is a true prehensile taille it is.

Speaker 6 (43:19):
Yeah, they can't grab things with it, but they hang
from it.

Speaker 4 (43:24):
Yeah at all.

Speaker 5 (43:27):
No, definitely, not not at all. But Kristin, I know, normally,
under better circumstances, we would have had you in today
to talk about your Fall Festival, which normally you hold
around this time of the year each and every year.
What is it care Foundation's biggest fundraisers.

Speaker 6 (43:42):
It's our once a year big fundraiser yep, where we
invite the public in. They can come see all the animals.
We do, food trucks, we do, all kinds of special things.
Vendors have animals to pet, things like that.

Speaker 5 (43:54):
So this year, unfortunately, Now, how long have you been
in your brand new facility.

Speaker 6 (43:59):
We've been there since six Oh wow, okay, so but
we've been in Orange County for thirty years next year.

Speaker 4 (44:06):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (44:07):
And for some reason, m for.

Speaker 6 (44:10):
Some reason, all of a sudden, the county asked for
an event permit and then when we submitted all the
paperwork they wanted, it wasn't good enough and they denied it.

Speaker 5 (44:20):
So that means there is no Fall Festival this weekend.

Speaker 6 (44:23):
Nope, there is not. So we're still trying to work
out all the kinks and jump through the hoops that
they require and everything else. So, but we've been doing
the same thing.

Speaker 4 (44:32):
For or crazy and they had no explanation on what
happened or why they still change or no, they're.

Speaker 6 (44:38):
Trying to figure it out one thing, one person says another.

Speaker 4 (44:42):
Wow, so a bit of a run around a little bit.

Speaker 5 (44:46):
Yeah, yeah, I think you're being very kind about it
right now.

Speaker 4 (44:49):
But we don't want to run any other situation that
they know it coming in the future. You don't want
to cause a situation where you know they're not going
to work with it at all. But it does it
doesn't you know, something sounds amiss or something sounds like
you know, a lot of balls were dropped on one
end because something has been going successfully for thirty years
with no legislation. Change should not be a hurdle to
having an event that would raise money for your foundation.

Speaker 6 (45:12):
Correct. Yeah, it's probably over a five thousand dollars loss.

Speaker 4 (45:16):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (45:16):
Which what makes it even worse is the start of
this weekend. It's getting cold, right yeah, yeah, and we
have tropical animals that need heat, lamps, that need running water,
last year we actually had two months of electric bills
that were over one thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (45:34):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (45:35):
So suffering this loss, it's pretty obscurred. It hurts bad.

Speaker 5 (45:40):
Well, we do know one thing we have here in
central Florida, and that is a really close community of people.
I love the way you handle Pead by the tail.

Speaker 6 (45:48):
Well, I know Gim's not fond of him, so and.

Speaker 5 (45:52):
Jack is hoping you'll let pd go. It's a people
run towards gym.

Speaker 6 (45:55):
There are drinks over here too, and I'm sure Pete
would like to wash down that little tree.

Speaker 4 (46:01):
Well, pet will get punched in the face if such
a head.

Speaker 5 (46:04):
Come on, yeah you would. How can people help you
since they're not going to be able to come in
and check out the it may not be a fall festival,
but they can certainly come for tours.

Speaker 6 (46:14):
We're hoping, we're hoping that doesn't change.

Speaker 5 (46:17):
So all of that is up in the air right now.

Speaker 6 (46:19):
Everything is up in the air. Yeah, So we're just
trying to figure it out there. There was one thing
they requested that they said we should be doing yearly,
and I've never heard of it thirty years and they're
just now bringing this up to me. So we're going
through that paperwork, and then there's something about first I
was told zoning, now I'm told building, And you know,

(46:40):
all our enclosures for the animals are built according to FWC,
the state standards. They're the ones that know what these
animals need, and we are on top of it. We've
never had a problem, and all of a sudden we
have to go through a whole nother division of people
we don't know.

Speaker 4 (46:55):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (46:56):
Yeah, so yeah, we're looking for donations. So if anybody
wants to go to our website, you can help us
out there and you can see the kind of animals
we have. Yeah, almost two hundred.

Speaker 5 (47:07):
Now somebody to text us at seven seven zero three
one and stead Apparently we haven't vetted this, but a
new ordinance to control outdoor events.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
Possibly somebody said somebody, would there be more than one
hundred people there? Yeah, somebody said something also about if
it's more than a if they expect more than one
hundred people, there's a permitting thing that is required as well.
But again, these are just people in the public. We
do not know if this is accurate, but they'res giving
possibilities of what could could have happened.

Speaker 6 (47:34):
Yeah, well I wish.

Speaker 4 (47:35):
Still they would. They should have told you, I mean,
you know this is what it comes up. I mean
they easily could have said, hey, look, you know there's
been a change. You know, this is a permit now
you now need to have this event, so make sure
you do that before it comes up, so you don't
have any issues.

Speaker 6 (47:48):
And we're happy to abide by all that. If we
were told soon enough, and you know, we just this
this was a slap in the face basically, and you know,
very unexpected.

Speaker 4 (47:57):
What would they do if you just went ahead with it.

Speaker 6 (48:00):
I don't know, but I don't want to test it.

Speaker 5 (48:02):
Yeah, yeah, because most likely they would shut you down.
You could potentially face fines or whatever. Yeah, but give it.
Give everyone the website where they can go to.

Speaker 6 (48:11):
It's the Care Foundation, all one word, thecare Foundation dot
org RG.

Speaker 5 (48:16):
Okay, And then do you have like an Amazon wish
list that folks can do there or just to donate
now button, just.

Speaker 6 (48:21):
To donate now button. We changed our website builder and all,
and I we've still got to do the wish list
and everything. But if anybody's interested, they can contact me
through the website and I can send them a wish
list or whatever. So, but yeah, money is essential because
of the upcoming coal to the winner.

Speaker 5 (48:41):
Well, and that you're a five. You're nonprofit organization, you're
about his nonprofit you can get Yeah, exactly. You're not
the FWC, right, you're not receiving state funds.

Speaker 6 (48:50):
We know they're happy to dump things on us occasionally,
but no helpe otherwise.

Speaker 5 (48:55):
You mean just dump the animals, but not the money.
It's happened, Yeah, yeah, exactly, But that turns out that
you are also a great resource for the state. But
how about new volunteers. Could folks still sign up to
volunteer with you?

Speaker 6 (49:06):
Yes, we need new volunteers. We've had several could volunteers
that have gone to college, right, and a few that
have had family issues come up and one of a
couple of them have moved and things like that. So
we definitely need volunteers. So if somebody finds themselves with
a day each week, one day a week that they
can come out, we'd gladly train you.

Speaker 5 (49:27):
What about teenagers that are maybe looking to go into
zoology or biology.

Speaker 6 (49:32):
Yeah, yep, we do them as well, and we have
taken some high school students also that are trying to
go for the bright futures. Oh cool, So they can
maybe even get like credit hours or something like that. Yep, Okay,
So there's still some opportunities for the community to come
through and help the care Foundation, even though you can't
you know, couldn't do your fall festival this weekend. But
keep us up to data and let us know how

(49:53):
the permit process is going and if and when you've
been able to reschedule it. Oh god, I'm hoping we
can reschedule.

Speaker 5 (50:00):
Is there anything that folks maybe listening right now could
drop off to the care Foundation. By the way, you're
located in.

Speaker 6 (50:05):
A popka, right, we are in a popka.

Speaker 5 (50:07):
Things like towels, maybe old reptile.

Speaker 6 (50:09):
Lamps, We've got We've got all that stuff.

Speaker 5 (50:11):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (50:13):
Yeah, anything like dog or cat food, whether it's canned
or kibble. We go through a lot of that. Trail
mix is one of the fun things that the animals
get once in a while, but it's a little more expensive,
so we don't buy it very often. No punkins, please.

Speaker 4 (50:27):
Yeah. By the way, I just I just wanted to
see how easy it was to donate, So I just
donated one hundred dollars while we're sitting here and you
guys talking. So just to show you how easy it is.
While these guys were having that conversation, I went to
the care Foundation dot org and click right through. The
donate button is easy to see. You click there, you
put your information in, put your card number in. I
donated one hundred dollars in two minutes.

Speaker 6 (50:49):
I did you know what you get for one hundred
dollars a hug from PD.

Speaker 4 (50:55):
Let's double somebody else up. But anyway, that's how easy
it is. And by the way, they even have I
chose the highest domination they had, but it could be five, ten,
twenty bucks. You could write a number and if you'd like,
but you click right there and just click right through.
It's a piece of cake. Like I said, I did
it while I was sitting here, so it's right there.
That's the Carefoundation dot org.

Speaker 6 (51:15):
We also have a monthly which the people that donate monthly.
I mean it could be two dollars, it could be
ten dollars, and that helps out so much with just
the monthly bills. And like we it sounds funny, but
the most expensive animals on the property right now are
all the monkeys and the exotic birds. Their food is
not cheap yea, yeah, a ton of it.

Speaker 5 (51:36):
Yeah, you've talked before about monkey biscuits.

Speaker 6 (51:38):
How much you know they're just tooking number eleven. Oh,
I said we'd never have monkeys. Now I'm up to eleven.

Speaker 4 (51:45):
It's not one of them crazy herbie monkeys? Is it
the one?

Speaker 5 (51:48):
No?

Speaker 6 (51:48):
No, no, we stare clear of those.

Speaker 4 (51:51):
Did you see the video from Silver Glenn?

Speaker 16 (51:52):
I did?

Speaker 4 (51:53):
How crazy was that that was?

Speaker 6 (51:55):
Would have loved being there and seen.

Speaker 4 (51:57):
That national news. It made everywhere, the CBS, inc. It
was on USA today. Uh, the AP had it.

Speaker 5 (52:05):
I saw it on Instagram.

Speaker 4 (52:06):
Jack.

Speaker 5 (52:06):
Did you happen to see the video of monkeys literally
raining down over the river?

Speaker 6 (52:11):
No?

Speaker 4 (52:11):
Yeah, yeah. They climb up for those trees and they
jump down the springs, and if you're there at the
right time, they do it all in unison, So it
literally looks like it's raining monkeys.

Speaker 5 (52:19):
Yeah, because they're crossing from one end of the river
to the other. It was a little scary because they
got a little close to the boat.

Speaker 6 (52:24):
It's amazing, but it is kind of scary a little bit,
especially if you work with monkeys and you know, monkeys.

Speaker 5 (52:30):
I mean, even Jane Goodall said they were not her
favorite animal because they're too human like real quick though,
this is the time of the year when everyone is
being told to take their old pumpkins to animal rescues
into farms. We're fine, okay, so what we're good.

Speaker 6 (52:46):
Have already had pumpkins and yeah, and the pigs are
punkined out.

Speaker 5 (52:51):
Okay, so everybody's had enough.

Speaker 6 (52:52):
Kise yep, okay, we're good on punkins.

Speaker 4 (52:55):
It's an old meat loaf.

Speaker 6 (52:57):
Yeah, we could do a meat. Sure, Pete would love
a meat.

Speaker 4 (53:00):
You guys haven't left over in front of Margarita.

Speaker 5 (53:05):
Oh, it sounds like Jim just invited pe d out
for dinner.

Speaker 1 (53:08):
And it does.

Speaker 3 (53:08):
It did.

Speaker 4 (53:09):
How can I tell you's damn good though he sat
there pretty much the entire day. All these other dogs
and cats would bring in here, roll them around like
crazy people. This thing's that right there.

Speaker 5 (53:16):
Somebody just texted us at zero zero our seven seven
zero three one rather all caps, FYI that rat is adorable, sweetheart.

Speaker 6 (53:26):
It's a cat I just found on the side of
the road.

Speaker 5 (53:28):
Exactly, just with a really long hairless tail. So again,
it's the care foundation, all one word dot org. Can
they go there to sign up to volunteer as well
as to donate.

Speaker 6 (53:37):
Yeah, just my phone number is the one that's on
all the information. Just call or text me and I'll
get you set up.

Speaker 4 (53:44):
Cool.

Speaker 5 (53:44):
So let's let's I know the community is going to
come through and help you get through these early cold
nights and then hopefully, you know, you'll be able to
finish out the work with the you know, Orange Counting
the permitting process and as soon as you get that
event rescheduled, let us know.

Speaker 6 (53:57):
Yeah, it's just so disappointing because we've done things with
the Orange County Sheriff's Department. We're on call with Orange
County Animal Services, Like if somebody this is another thing,
if somebody has a stink in their yard and they
don't know what it is or they think it's venomous,
hit me up. The counties will give you my number.
So I do a lot of things. We work with
harbor house, work with all kinds of county things, and

(54:21):
it's just, yeah, disappointing.

Speaker 4 (54:23):
He he's coming for you, Jim as say, we are
we rolling the bathroom nice with because music. He's gearing up.

Speaker 5 (54:30):
I feel for breaking and as always Animal House. Thank
you Kristin put mccare foundation keep us updated, christ and
we appreciate that of course. And as always, Animal House
is brought to you by Glenn Klasman over a Klosmon Law.
So if you've been in a car, truck, motorcycle accident,
even a slip and fall, just a couple of reasons
why you should be calling Glenn. One. Glenn doesn't pass

(54:53):
you off to a case worker. Glenn is going to
handle your case so much so he's going to give
you his personal cell phone number and then pick it
up when you call. Just a couple of reasons why
year after year he's voted super Lawyer and legal Elite.
He truly is an animal lover and a friend of
the show. So if you've been in any kind of
an accident, give him a call four oh seven nine
one seven seventeen eighteen, or check them out online at

(55:16):
Klosmanlaw dot com. That's k l a U S m
a N Law dot com.

Speaker 4 (55:21):
Four oh seven nine four one text us seven seven
zero three one. Your four o'clock keyword is cash c ash.
Go to Real Radio dot fm and send that off
for your chance at one thousand bucks or Budy. Scott
Maxwell from The Orlando Sentinel is next. Welcome back to
the Jim Culbert Show right here on the wonderful Real

(55:43):
Radio one oh four point one. Your four o'clock keyword
is cash C A S H. Get over to Real
Radio dot FM and send that away for your chance
at a thousand bucks. If you're playing the game, phone
on phone up, answer it when it rings, even if
you do not recognize the number, or even if it
says no caller ID, you got to pick that up.
That's how they tell you you've won.

Speaker 5 (56:05):
Take the change.

Speaker 4 (56:06):
I'm Jim. There's dead Hello. Check is here as well. Yeah,
every single Wednesday around this time we have had a
good friend Obra. He writes for The Orlando Sentinel. You
can read his columns Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. Give it
up for sweet Heat the truth dragon, mister Scott Maxwell.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Yeah, how are you, sir?

Speaker 4 (56:28):
Uh doing well? How are your friend? You froze solid on?

Speaker 9 (56:31):
Well you say that, Jim, you're doing well, But I
your voice and your intonation makes me wonder because I
have to tell you. As I came in, Uh, Jack
had a look on his face that looked like maybe
a dog had taken a radioactive dump right on his
keyboard or something.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
So what was there anything interesting happening during your break?

Speaker 4 (56:54):
There?

Speaker 1 (56:54):
Sir?

Speaker 4 (56:55):
There's a possum in here and uh and I had
to I basically had to poor pure alcohol in the
desk here to make sure that nobody gets possum diseases,
which I don't even know who they are. But he
smeared himself all over this counter. We had to get
that cleaned up.

Speaker 1 (57:09):
Now, what does the possum do leave behind?

Speaker 4 (57:14):
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I don't want
to know. I don't want to smell. I know that
possums actually have a unique situation. They can't get rabies
because I believe there is it too cold or too
hot their blood their blood's too hot.

Speaker 5 (57:28):
That I don't know. I just know that they can't
get rabies.

Speaker 4 (57:30):
Yeah. I think their temperature, their body temperature is too
warm for rabies to live, or it's too cold. It's
one of those things. But they cannot get rabies.

Speaker 9 (57:39):
But but as I understand that the glamorous life of
a top rated radio host in Orlando, it includes dumping
bottles of purell h to get up possum.

Speaker 4 (57:50):
Yeah, biggest rocks are in town.

Speaker 7 (57:52):
Possums have a lower body temperature than most other bad metals,
which make it difficult for the rabies virus to survive.

Speaker 4 (57:59):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (58:00):
Well, you know what I will say this.

Speaker 9 (58:01):
I may not be entertaining or that informational, but I
will never leave any body fluid.

Speaker 4 (58:07):
I appreciate it.

Speaker 5 (58:08):
Don't make that problem.

Speaker 4 (58:09):
That's great. That that's greatly appreciated. Just another great attribute
of yours.

Speaker 1 (58:14):
That's right, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 4 (58:16):
Very good. Hey, buddy, I this morning, as I prep
for the show, one of the things I do, obviously
is when I know you're gonna be calling in, I
go and read the piece that you written that day.
A lot of times that you will write them. You'll
have another piece comes out a little bit later that afternoon,
and we can kind of mix and match which ones
that we want to talk about. I thought your piece
today on vouchers for schools was absolutely poignant, and really

(58:38):
we were almost you know, I know that we haven't
spoken about this, but weren't we both kind of waiting
for a situation to happen like happened. I mean, didn't
we kind of know this was coming. We just didn't
know when or where. But here it is.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
I think that is fair to say.

Speaker 9 (58:52):
I think we also didn't think that the people who
would be sort of in my estimation, making fools of
themselves at this point in time do it so blatantly.
And for background, for background, if you don't mind me
setting us up a little, Sita, there are a lot
of issues that come in my mind when you start
using public money to fund private schools.

Speaker 1 (59:13):
And I am a Christian.

Speaker 9 (59:15):
I sent my kids to early years to a private
Christian school with our own money, I might add, because
that's the way I think you should do it. But
there are problems when you start giving public money to
private faith based organizations because not all of them accept everybody.
Some of them only accept people who think the same
way they do. And we have written at the Orlando

(59:36):
Sentinel for damn near a decade about dozens more than
one hundred and fifty schools, for instance, that take public
money but will not accept all members of the public.
Some will not accept students who are gay, some will
not accept students whose parents are gay, some will not
accept kids with disabilities. They are actual written policies that

(59:56):
say you have to be able to stand on your own.
You cannot have things like autism or Asperger's disease if
you want to attend their faith based schools. In those cases,
it's not because they're you know, they're ideologically opposed to disabilities.
They just don't want to serve students that take more
you know, cost and teacher and time to teach, and

(01:00:18):
they have the luxury of doing so. The federal law
says faith based organizations are exempt from things like the
Americans with Disability Act when it comes to handling Uh, well,
not not all aspects, but at least when it comes
to teaching students. So we've written about all of the
problems that happen when people don't, particularly Christian schools, get
this money and won't accept all of the tax paying

(01:00:39):
public who fund their bills. But nobody has cared, nobody
has given one wi for a decade. Who's in charge
until last month when they learn that it turns out
Muslims can also run private schools with vouchers, And now
they got a problem.

Speaker 4 (01:00:57):
Yeah, a big problem, right, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:01:01):
Started Yeah, it was started by the uh, sort of
the Freedom Caucus in Congress, which is sort of the
hard right group and includes Locally it's got folks like
Byron Donald's and Greg Stube, but nationally it's like Chip
Roy and they they found out there was a school
school in Tennessee that has uh that's run by Islamic moms,

(01:01:25):
and they just flat out said, we.

Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
Believe in choice, but we don't believe. I got trouble
even state that sentence.

Speaker 4 (01:01:33):
Right, Yeah, yeah, we believe in choice.

Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
Our choice, yes, our choice and so uh.

Speaker 9 (01:01:40):
Then apparently the folks in Florida went, oh, hell.

Speaker 1 (01:01:43):
You don't think any of them. Damn Muslims are running
schools in Florida, do you.

Speaker 9 (01:01:47):
Well, yes, sir, they are, because that's the way choice,
universal choice. They literally call it universal. It's anybody can
use it. And they're about a dozen schools in Florida
that get taxpayer money to teach. And all of a sudden,
now they're throwing out things like sharia law and sympathies
to terrorism as a fig leaf to say they want

(01:02:09):
to end the practice of letting Muslims run vouch your schools.
I don't know any possible constitutional way they would be
able to do that, but they share seem book determined.

Speaker 4 (01:02:19):
Can I tell you to me, it goes beyond that.
I can't even understand constitutionally how they can even set
the voucher system up and deal money to schools because
they're faith based alone. That to me, and by the way,
no regulation. Some of these teachers, uncredited, uneducated, they you know,
just some of them are complete travesties. And a couple
of them is shut down in the middle of semesters,

(01:02:39):
stranding students with nowhere to go. It's just a complete nightmare.
And by the way, this is nationally. It's not even
just Florida. This program sucks everywhere.

Speaker 9 (01:02:50):
There are problems everywhere, but Florida is the leader in this.

Speaker 1 (01:02:54):
We were the first to go sort of ball to
the wall.

Speaker 9 (01:02:56):
And say anybody can use them for you don't have
to be poor, you don't have to have a disability
for any reason. You can take it, and you are
right there are great. I should say this because people
always say I went to a Christians school and it
was good. Absolutely. I just said that the first thing
I said. I sent my own kids there when they
were very young. There are a lot of faith based
schools that do a great job. People know, schools like
Bishop Moore that have a great reputation. But those schools

(01:03:19):
existed long before this fly by night voucher system came along,
and all of a sudden, all these people, some of
whom are grifters, would basically say, oh my god, you
mean I can get eight thousand bucks a kid if
I claim I'm running a good school.

Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
And then what I'm gonna do.

Speaker 9 (01:03:31):
I'm gonna tell every one of these parents their little
angels who are flunking out of public school are suddenly
straight A students once they start going to my academy
and a strip mall right next to a drug testing lab.

Speaker 11 (01:03:43):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
These are actual things.

Speaker 9 (01:03:45):
Some of them, as you pointed out, absolute financial disaster.
Some of them have literally shut down in the middle
of the school year. Like kids show up to the
school and the schools no longer there. Say what you
want to criticize public school, It ain't ever gonna happen
that you're going to send Johnny to four great and
fourth grade.

Speaker 4 (01:04:01):
Is done in fourth Grade's not gonna be there waiting
for him.

Speaker 9 (01:04:05):
That ain't gonna happen. And then there's what they're teaching
these kids. I mean, most public schools have standards. They
have to teach, for instance, truth. We've gotten hold of
some of the curriculum that have all kinds of crazy
lesson plans, some that say, you know, segregation in.

Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
The South wasn't really that bad.

Speaker 9 (01:04:22):
We read some that said slavery, some of the slaves
kind of enjoyed being slaves.

Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
They earn lots, learn lots of good skills and things
like that.

Speaker 9 (01:04:29):
Seen pictures they talk about man and dinosaurs were frolicking together.
There's actually a picture of one of these books of
two men and long pants and button down shirts and
there's a pronosaurs.

Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
Behind them, and this is a biology textbook.

Speaker 4 (01:04:44):
They didn't. They just make a move in Florida to
incorporate what is that guy, he's a talk show host
or radio host.

Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
Praguer.

Speaker 4 (01:04:52):
You, yeah, Dennis Prager. Praguer you They want to inject
some of preger U's teachings into public schools. And when
you some of that stuff, you literally laugh out loud
at how awful and uneducated it is, unscientific on everything,
but it fits their curriculum, so they're gonna spit it
at them.

Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
You are absolutely right.

Speaker 9 (01:05:13):
In fact, I did a column a few years ago
about Prager. You and it's just what you said. It
would be funny if it wasn't scary. One of the
videos I looked at was one where Prager was trying
to basically rehab Columbus's image. And you know, we can
have whatever discussions you want about you know, people are
not all good or bad.

Speaker 1 (01:05:30):
But they were trying to make the case that Columbus
was good.

Speaker 9 (01:05:32):
And it's this little cartoon Columbus and this kid's like, hey,
but weren't you a big part of the slave trade?
And Columbus is like, but we didn't kill them, and
the little kids like, oh, thank you, Columbus.

Speaker 4 (01:05:44):
And hey, somebody sends us a question. I think it's valuable.
We'll ask this says, you think Muslim schools are going
to gay kids or kids with different beliefs. Naw, they
shouldn't be allowed to teach Muslim religion at all in
the US. Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:05:59):
Wait, this is the right And these are people I
may not be understanding their caller correctly, but are they
arguing that Muslims shouldn't be able to keep gay kids
out but Christians should?

Speaker 4 (01:06:10):
Yeah? They're What they're saying is is you're taking shots
at Christian schools for not allowing gay kids and then
saying that the Muslim schools are taking the vouchers. Do
you think that Muslim schools would allow gay kids as well?

Speaker 9 (01:06:20):
Oh no, let me be crystal clear as I was
in the peace, I don't believe any school that discriminates
or indoctrinates should be taking taxpayer money to run a
school that does not accept all taxpayers. For one, You're
also right that it's not constitutional. The way they've gotten
around it is the court ultimately ruled, in my estimation,

(01:06:41):
it's unconstitutional. The court ultimately ruled that they are not
giving the money to schools. What they argued is that
they're just giving the money to families, and then the
families decide to give the money to the schools.

Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
So we've talked about legalized laundering before, that's what this is.
So they say the families get the money and the
schools don't get it.

Speaker 9 (01:07:00):
Bottom line is many of these schools could not exist,
would not exist without this public money. They get the
majority of their money way, and you know, we've also
we found, as you mentioned, would you open one of
these private schools, there's no regulations. You don't actually have
to be a teacher. And by that, I mean you
don't have to have a teaching degree. You don't have
to have a degree at all. Our reporters found that

(01:07:21):
there were teachers and I'm putting air quotes around that
at some of these schools that had not graduated from
high school teaching high school.

Speaker 4 (01:07:29):
Sweet. Sweet. And by the way, in any public school
in Florida, you have to have a certificate that has
to be REGI doesn't have to be rebooted every few years.
You have to go through a program to make sure
that you're still up to snuff on what's being taught.

Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:07:45):
And the way they would get around it is they
would say every teacher, including it about your schools, has
to have a certificate like a public schools teacher would,
or have a special quality.

Speaker 1 (01:07:55):
And that special quality might be smiling, real nice and
the kids.

Speaker 4 (01:08:00):
I don't have a hey, look look, look I don't
have a degree, but I can juggle.

Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:08:05):
Yeah, and and and the other problem that we've talked
about is a lot of the complaints we've heard come
from the parents themselves.

Speaker 1 (01:08:12):
They they send their kids to these.

Speaker 9 (01:08:14):
School because they heard other parents say, oh my god,
everybody's a straight a school.

Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
At you know, at Winter's World.

Speaker 9 (01:08:23):
School for the Gifted, and then they send their kid
there and then they take some standardized test and they
get like a four out of one hundred, and they've
lost two years of school.

Speaker 1 (01:08:32):
Sometimes they go back to public schools. Uh.

Speaker 9 (01:08:34):
We've had parents that send them place to the state
that said, I thought them, so, this was okay, but
then what took my kid?

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
And it was a lunch lady who is a teacher.

Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:08:44):
Wow, the cafeteria worker was the one that was teaching
my kids. And they said, that's what choice is all about.
If you don't like it, you choose to take your
kids to another school. The argument I make is no
other public funding.

Speaker 1 (01:08:57):
Works like that. Yeah, we don't give people food stamp money.
We don't give them five hundred dollars and say.

Speaker 9 (01:09:01):
You know what, blow it on whatever you want, whether
it's Jack Daniels and nerd string candy. Taxpayers are supposed
to get something for that dollar. Uh, And that money
for school should be a quality education.

Speaker 1 (01:09:13):
There is no, virtually none of that being here.

Speaker 4 (01:09:15):
Scott. When you go and when you when you go
to apply to get a voucher, do you have to
tell them what school it's for and tell them.

Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
I don't know if you have to tell them what
school it's for. What there is is a lift. The
state basically approves all the.

Speaker 9 (01:09:28):
Schools that you can spend it at, and I we
have not ever seen a school that was not approved.

Speaker 1 (01:09:33):
Actually that is not completely true.

Speaker 9 (01:09:35):
I just remembered another whackad story that you you remember
because I remember you talked about it. Uh, there are
a handful of occasions where a school has been shut
down in about three years ago, two or three years ago.
Do you remember when Ron DeSantis got in his head
that Park Maitland, which was just relatively prestigious school. What
do you mean, what may be secretly run by the

(01:09:56):
Chinese communists?

Speaker 13 (01:09:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
Yeah, what do you mean relatively? I mean i' outside
of Lake Highland Prep and like Master's Academy. I think
it's right up there with one of the more expensive,
elusive or exclusive schools in the city.

Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
It has a very good reputation.

Speaker 9 (01:10:10):
But Desanis and his education department found some documents. That's
found you know, some of their or corporate leadership was
based in time China. So he said they were basically
run by comedies and they took Part Maitland off the list.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
So at least last I checked, that's one of.

Speaker 4 (01:10:25):
The very few.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
You can still take your kids.

Speaker 9 (01:10:28):
Your kid to these strip Mull schools, that's to drug
testing labs, but you cannot take it to Park Maitland
because that's Chinese comedy.

Speaker 4 (01:10:35):
Yeah is part I don't think is Park Maitland faith based.
I don't even know if it's really faith based or
not yet. Maybe it's not.

Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Maybe, at least of my knowledge, it is not.

Speaker 4 (01:10:43):
Maybe that's the rule problem.

Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
I don't.

Speaker 9 (01:10:46):
I don't, I don't. And here's the thing, Jim, I
don't think this is complicated. I don't think this is complicated, even.

Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
For people of faith. I've had people who are die
hard Christians.

Speaker 9 (01:10:56):
Who say, you know what, if I want to send
my kid to a Christian school, that's what I should
spend my money on.

Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
That's not what public money for is.

Speaker 9 (01:11:03):
But if the state is going to say any people
of faith can run schools, then guess what any people,
if any faith can run a school, Jewish, Muslim, him,
do Christian or anything else except now in Florida. And
it's not just James Zuthmeier. He's the state of the
attorney general. He's the one leading the charge of Florida.
As soon as he said I don't want this Muslim

(01:11:23):
school to get about your money, though, Agriculture Commissioner Wilton
Simpson he piped right up that said the same thing.

Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
So now it's a race to defund muslim Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:11:32):
Well, you know, somebody just texted and said it's mostly
democratic lies. Look, I would tell you anybody to text
the show with stuff like that. You're welcome to google this.
I mean, it's got a forty year journalist who has
a lauded career. It would only cause himself harm to
come on the air and lie about stuff like this.
So you're welcome to google any of this stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:11:50):
Please go.

Speaker 4 (01:11:51):
We're begging you to do it.

Speaker 7 (01:11:52):
He followed up with prove it, and I said, read
any one of his articles.

Speaker 4 (01:11:56):
They're well sourced.

Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
There was a story on the front page today that
I mean.

Speaker 9 (01:12:03):
And by the way the wallmakers are saying it themselves,
I mean, we we have quotes where we said, hey, uh,
these Christian schools don't accept gay students, and they say
that's what choice is.

Speaker 1 (01:12:12):
Then they say what, well, what what about Muslim schools?
And they say no, we're just gonna cut them off.
I mean, these aren't our words. It's it's there and go.

Speaker 9 (01:12:22):
You know what, don't take my word for it, go
google the U Freedom Caucus's Twitter account. The Freedom Caucus
is the one say defund Muslim school.

Speaker 5 (01:12:31):
It's also good lies and because you're a democratic instead
of a Democrat lord.

Speaker 4 (01:12:37):
Yeah. Well Scott, look, man, we always love your call,
and your piece today was great. I would urge everybody
to go to Orlandosentinel dot com and read it. It's
always on that third page, Local and State. It's the
headline Wednesday, Thursdays and Sundays. You can read his columns,
some of the best writing in Orlando, uncovering some of
the most gnarly stuff out there and make sure that
the light gets to hit it. That's what Scott does,

(01:12:58):
and the rest of the crew of the Orlando Cental
as well.

Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
Well. I appreciate it, and I hope the rest of your
week is possible for you.

Speaker 4 (01:13:04):
Thanks, buddy, how a good one. Buddy'll see you soon.
Take care, you got a buddy, all right? Four seven
nine one text us seven seven is zero three one
Back in a second with more of the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 17 (01:13:30):
You're kind of not hard to see what the world
is coming to anyway. Yeah, when you call out Scott Maxwell,
is there anything less than the integrity he applies to
everything and the storied career that he has in journalism. Man,
you gotta check yourself the Doorloha.

Speaker 4 (01:13:48):
Hey, Jimmy, you sir Deborah. Yeah, this is Sam from Lakeland.
He's some stew You ought to try it.

Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
It's good, had it before all?

Speaker 4 (01:14:03):
He joking about it. Can't can't kill that poor animal
to feed your belly. You guys have a great day,
and I laughed my butt off every day.

Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
See ya.

Speaker 5 (01:14:17):
Thank you brought a matt for my gummy nerds.

Speaker 4 (01:14:19):
That would be the ethical carnivore, wouldn't not.

Speaker 5 (01:14:21):
I think it was.

Speaker 4 (01:14:22):
Yeah, thanks for the call, buddy. We appreciate that.

Speaker 7 (01:14:26):
I think it might have made a little more of
a mess in that studio if Jimmy tried.

Speaker 4 (01:14:34):
That's the cleanest that counter has ever been. Poor to
have a bottle of windecks on it. Yeah, alcohol should
have killed everything.

Speaker 5 (01:14:44):
It was just nice singing clean something.

Speaker 4 (01:14:46):
Seven seven zero three one. That's how you text us.
I'm Jim, deb and Jack are here as well. Man,
this taxing service is so much fun when you see
what people text us, wonder what conversations in their private
life are, Like, that's the number one thing I think.
I'm like when you say stuff like that to a

(01:15:07):
complete stranger who talks on the air about a bunch
of things, you know, just a number of different topics.
Our job is to try to be intriguing and you know,
bring stuff to the air that maybe you haven't thought
about before. Maybe you know, parallel with that you have
another feeling about me. I get that one hundred percent. Man,
the texting service, especially that one cat has just been texting.
That's just an amazing litmus test of life to me,

(01:15:29):
which just someone so blunt, someone so stumped in life
they can't get beyond their own.

Speaker 5 (01:15:36):
That that thread right there shows me that, no, it's
actually concerning, because it's like, Wow, you are just one
hair away from just losing your mind over something so simple.

Speaker 4 (01:15:51):
And the thing I get, that's the thing that kind
of kills me is like, opinion, what is your personal
life like? Get personal conversations must be an absolute tragedy
with a cat like that, like where you just can't
even accept the fact like this guy got you know,
Maxwell's been doing this his entire life. You understand. One
of the reasons I don't like getting information from the
internet is they've got nothing to lose. Like I tell

(01:16:11):
people that all the time. What do they have to lose?
You could put up anything you want in that realm.
You can't lose anything, Like unless you say something unbelievably.
You know, out there, no one's gonna hold you to
the fire. Scott does not have that. He doesn't have
that luxury. You know, if he does something stupid, the

(01:16:32):
entire papers integrity is called into question. That's why the
attack on the mainstream media and the legacy media has
been one of the most interesting things I've seen over
the last ten years of my life. It is systemic.
They are they you know, a certain portion of this
country has tried to and really in some instances completely
succeeded in discrediting a large portion of the legacy media. Now,

(01:16:56):
some of the situations that you bring up and you
I hear, I'm like, Okay, you have a point there,
But when ninety five percent of the reporting is perfectly accurate,
it's vetted. These people do this for a living. I
don't understand why there's this big pushback when it comes
to information that if it doesn't agree with you, like
if it doesn't fit the narrative you have in your
life of how things are supposed to be, because somebody

(01:17:18):
in your life is telling you lies over and over
and then you hear truth and you read that and
you go, oh, well that doesn't fit what I'm being told.
What duh? That's the whole point. But that's it.

Speaker 7 (01:17:28):
People realize, or you know, some people realize that if
you tell a lie long enough, it becomes the truth
to some people.

Speaker 4 (01:17:35):
Unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (01:17:35):
Man.

Speaker 7 (01:17:36):
Just today the January sixth, as they try and whitewash
the history of January sixth too, DOJ members are were
fired because they referred to it as a mob and
a riot in their paperwork.

Speaker 4 (01:17:52):
So it's that's just the bea. I mean, they've they
fired a bunch of people who Jay six and now
they're going after the people who were on the panel.
And again I have ears and eyes like I watched
every minute of that happened. I watched every minute of
people going to that air. We were live on the air,
and I'm like, I'm like, uh, well, I mean I
saw it. You can gaslight me and say that was
this or was that? Uh, but I mean I saw

(01:18:13):
what happened, so I mean, I don't know, man. It's
just it's a bit of a drag sometimes when you
look over and you see people who are you know,
we're not trying to change your opinion. No one said
you should feel this way or you should think this way.
We're just giving you information that we know for a
fact has been looked over and vetted and reported and research.
I mean, we know that for a fact. Scott would
never come on the air and say anything like that.
He would, let me tell you what kind of person

(01:18:34):
he is, just so you know, behind the scenes, he
would never do anything to put us in jeopardy like
that's how that's what kind of person is. He would
never do any of that for the sake of putting
us in jeopardy. He would never do it. Even if
it furthered his own career to make him a multimillionaire,
he would never do it. It's just not part of
his character. I've known it for years.

Speaker 5 (01:18:52):
All I can say is bless your soul, sir.

Speaker 4 (01:18:54):
Yeah, yeah, I wish are the best of your all right.
Four seven nine six one o four one. You can
always text us seven to seven zero three one. We
have another keyword for you coming up at the top
of the hour. A little bit later in the program,
we'll have ross pageant on if I Know What's happening
in good Sauce this week. We'll also have some trivia,
and I think we have some pretty good prizes as well.
We'll take a little break here in a second, I'm

(01:19:14):
want to come back and talk to you about a
tragic accident that I guess could happen to anybody enjoying
a time off. I'll tell you what that is here
in one second. You're listening to Jim Coulper show. Unother
keyword for you right now.

Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
Hey, culvert crew, I got a question for Jimmy.

Speaker 18 (01:19:33):
Yes, I am not a cigar smoker, but my step
son is and he likes church Hills. I was able
to get a box of church Hills pre embargo from
nineteen fifty eight, Oh my God, from Cuba, and I'm
wondering what is the best way for me to store
them until Christmas? Being as I do not have a
humid or thank you.

Speaker 7 (01:19:53):
I think the best thing to do is keep them
in my place. I disagree with that. I have a
feeling you might not have to walk out with the
same quantity as you walked in.

Speaker 4 (01:20:05):
Yeah, you just leave them at my spot, dog, I
got you, I got you. I'll take good care of them.
I promise they'll get most of them back.

Speaker 12 (01:20:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:20:14):
I gotta tell you, man, when you're talking about a
box of cigars that special, you may want to invest
in just a small and human or they're really not
that much. I would leave them in the box, maybe
even take them down to one of the Corona locations
and just ask well those guys that they can keep
them for you and a spot until they're ready. I mean,
I wouldn't take any chances with a box of cigars
like that. I mean, we heard what Jeff was talking about.

(01:20:35):
The numbers on some of those pre embargo cigars. You
remember that, Jack, Yeah, I don't remember that. The prices.
I know it was up there. Yeah, a few hundred
dollars apiece, up to a couple thousand dollars apiece. But
a human door, I don't know. Are there hacks around that?

Speaker 18 (01:20:52):
Zip?

Speaker 1 (01:20:52):
Look bad?

Speaker 4 (01:20:53):
Orange peel? Yeah, well, I got you. Just sort of
my weed in the eighties. Yeah. Yeah, Well, you know
some people like if you don't have human packs or whatever,
you can also do those. And Jack makes a good point.
You can put them in a in a closed space
and put a human pack in there, which is basically
just like that meat pads that they use under chicken. Yeah. Uh.
And they put them in water and they have and
they're in a bag that has perforations in it so

(01:21:15):
it'll let out enough humidity. Yeah, that's what they put in.
They put in packs. When you're taking a bag of
cigars away, you could do that. Some people will just
take a paper towel and put it and soak it
and then squeeze it out and put it in a
plastic bag and then poke some holes in that and
then put it in a spot where it's cool and dry.
You know, you don't want to extreme heat, no street sunlight,
and you want a little humidity. So anywhere that has
a lot of ac in there would be bad. There

(01:21:37):
you go, There you go, all right, welcome back to
the Jim Goldberg Show. Your five o'clock keyword his bank
be excuse me, b A n K. Good, Go to
real radio dot in him send that away for your
chance at one thousand bucks.

Speaker 5 (01:21:47):
Good luck. We hope you win.

Speaker 4 (01:21:48):
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello. Jack is here as well.

Speaker 7 (01:21:51):
All right, guys who likes vacations, I do.

Speaker 4 (01:21:54):
I do too. I love cruising. I think it's a
lot of fun. It's a turnkey, good time. Right, A
story out of Australia. Did you happen to see this
story about each other?

Speaker 13 (01:22:06):
I did?

Speaker 4 (01:22:06):
Yeah, it's crazy, right, I did. The irony of the
story is win. So there's a cruise and it was
a sixty day cruise around all of Australia.

Speaker 5 (01:22:18):
Right, I thought the same thing. You know, It's like
I don't.

Speaker 4 (01:22:22):
First of all, it's not that big. Yes, I think
stopping a lot. It's the Coral Adventure Cruise ship. Uh
and uh. It basically goes around uh Australia sixty day cruise.
UT Tickets cost tens of thousands of dollars for the journey.
And I believe this is for people who are like

(01:22:42):
really outdoors, you know, hiking, snorkeling, diving, you know, coral stuff, fishing. Maybe.
I mean, I think it's really one of those kind
of cruises, right. And what happened was on the very
first stop, Jack the everybody gets off on a place
called Lizard Island. It's about one hundred and fifty five
miles north of Kirns and with fellow passengers from the

(01:23:05):
ship to go on a hike. I don't the sound
of that. She's eighty years old. She's an Australian woman.
This is the first stop stop one on a sixty
day cruise. Lizards get her. The cruise ship left without her,
Oh bummer. And when they came back several hours later,

(01:23:27):
after realizing she was gone, she was dead. Oh no, Yeah,
they had to do a major search operation. They found
her body on Sunday morning. No other details have been released.
It said, Yeah, the woman, who has not been named,
was on the first stop of a sixty day cruise

(01:23:48):
around Australia. Like I said, tickets costing tens of thousands
of dollars. She had joined a group that hiked to
the island's highest peak, which is called Cook's Look, before
she decided she needed to rest. She did not make
it back to the ship, which then departed without her.
It says, Now, incidents are rare, and I'll tell you
I've been on a lot of cruises and it is rare.

(01:24:09):
Because I mean they checked double check, triple check. When
you get on and off the ship. They have a
record of you being off there, photographed the whole nine
yards when you got off, when you came back on
all of that. It's part of the record, it says.
But it says, sneaking ashore or back on board isn't
an option, Like it's really difficult to do that, Like

(01:24:30):
if you try to do it unnoticed, it would be
almost impossible. And you know, they basically don't know what happened.
They don't know how she snuck out of there and
how she got to that spot and didn't come back.
She got tired at the top, the rest of the
crew descended, she stayed up there. She are you saying
she snuck off the ship? No, no, no, she didn't.
She went off the ship, she did the excursion, she
did the right.

Speaker 5 (01:24:50):
Yeah, but then she separated from the group. And so
the cruise line believes that it's probably a natural incident. Yes,
you know, they don't expect any foul play. They are
going to talk to the crew just to make sure
you know, everyone's you know, iseser dotted and teaser crossed.
But they think again, you know, she did say she
needed to rest after this long hike. They may, you know,
they figure maybe she suffered a medical episode while she

(01:25:12):
was up there because she'd separated from the group, there
was no one there to help her.

Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
And she may have I mean, can I tell you
she may have passed either way. I mean, she may
have passed before the cruise should even left. I mean,
that's the thing that really is kind of gnarly about
this is the fact that the boat leaving may have
not had anything to do with her passing away. She
simply could have given it up. And like I told you,
when we were on this cruise to Jamaica just here recently,
for in September, there was a couple that did the

(01:25:37):
Dunge River Fall walk And for people who haven't been there,
you're basically walking up a waterfall made of rock.

Speaker 5 (01:25:44):
Well you you did? What how soon you'll be able
to do anything like that? As the first images come
out of Jamaica.

Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
But what I'm saying is they did it when when
there was an eighty year old man he was I mean,
he had a diaper on because we saw it sagging
when it filled up, and I felt terrible for him.
But he should have never been out there. I mean,
that would have been one of those situations. Had had
the crowd not really taken that scenario over, who knows
where that dude could have wound up. I'm serious, it was.
It was bad. I mean, the whole crew we kind
of made a decision that we were just going to

(01:26:12):
stay behind those two in case one of them fell back,
toppled back, the water got them, or they slipped or whatever.
And the woman was a trooper, she just rolled right up.
But the old man was very feeble. It was very
difficult him to do that, and it was a little
proud as well. So when a lot of people tried
to eventually start helping him, he was kind of not
fighting back, but just as if to say, hey, I

(01:26:33):
don't need your help, but he really needed our help.
And by the about midway, because it's a pretty good hat,
a pretty big it's a pretty good hike up that hill,
about halfway he started kind of succumbing to the fact
that he needed help to get his ass up there.
And actually that last stretch there were two dudes basically
fireman carrying him up the falls.

Speaker 5 (01:26:50):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:26:51):
So it would not it wouldn't be beyond the realm
to get out there on an excursion and not get
back on the cruise ship and time, and by the way,
the boats warn you if you don't get back on
the ship at this time, they will leave without you.
I've been on at least three cruises where people have
been left behind because they didn't make it back on time.
One we saw on the dock.

Speaker 7 (01:27:09):
I think it's easy to underestimate for many, to underestimate
what some of these excursions take out of you. Yes,
you are in a different environment, literally, just your mindset
is in a different place.

Speaker 4 (01:27:22):
Being on vacation.

Speaker 7 (01:27:23):
Maybe you have a little more adrenaline and excitement, and
then you go into this different environment that you know,
you're in a different part of the world. You're not
sure how your body's going to react to that, and
it's you know, you get overwhelmed and then realize, I'm
in a situation here, dude.

Speaker 4 (01:27:39):
They left one of the cruises I went on years ago,
they left a couple on Saint Martin because they went
to the beach, got drunk and passed out and did
not make it back of the ship in time. And
those people had to pay to get to fly to
the next stop so that they get on the boat
from the next stop.

Speaker 5 (01:27:57):
I didn't think the cruise ship was going to go. Oh,
no problem, they bad bender will pay for it.

Speaker 4 (01:28:01):
They do not care, and I don't care if you're
right there, if they pull that game, blink up, you
ain't going nowhere do. They don't ask you you're done.
They're not cool about it because they warn you in advance. Well,
they have a schedule to keep they do, but said
about seven people with torches went to the island to search,
but it was called off around three o'clock on Sunday,
with a helicopter returning on Sunday morning when the body

(01:28:22):
was apparently found. We knew she was dead because they
called everyone back from the search immediately after they found
with a helicopter. No one went to that spot that
the chopper was hovering over until later that day when
police arrived, and they said it was first alerted to
the missing woman around eleven o'clock on Saturday by the
ship's captain. But that's a shame that that happened. And
the boat really is kind of a smaller boat. It's

(01:28:43):
really built for these excursions. When you look at it,
it probably didn't have you know, three or four hundred
people on it, the entire thing. It's just kind of
built for that, those special excursions. So that's a shame though, man.

Speaker 5 (01:28:54):
Yeah, especially since it's the first day of your vacation.

Speaker 4 (01:28:56):
Eighty years old too, you know what. The fact, I
hope that eighty I still have that verve where I'm like,
let's go on the sixty day crews around Australia and
go hiking in storkling and stuff. I hope I still
have that at eighty. You know, I don't think it's
gonna happen. I can barely get out of bed now,
all right, four oh seven nine one six one four one. Again,
you can always text us at seven seven zero three one. Hey,

(01:29:16):
speaking of the hurricane, I was thinking last night, and
you guys hit me with this real quick. Would it
wouldn't it be ideal to be in the direct path
of it? Because wouldn't you want to be in the
eye because isn't that like, Okay, no, think about it
real quick. If you're on left side or the right
side of that, you're getting constant wind, constant rain, constant wind.

(01:29:39):
Right if you're in the direct path of that, when
the eyewall passes, you you have time where there's no
you know, where it's not as bad. Have you ever
been in the eye of one? Remember we had this
happen before. Hey, Charlie, Yeah, you can't get a restspit.

Speaker 3 (01:29:52):
Hey.

Speaker 7 (01:29:52):
Maybe it's twenty minutes, maybe it's forty five minutes, depending
on how fast it's going. Whatever, the closer to the eye,
the strong The winds are strongest around the eye, which
means you are going through the strongest part of the
storm twice yea.

Speaker 5 (01:30:06):
Because then after that eyewall passes, then you get swimming
opposite of direction.

Speaker 4 (01:30:11):
Understand speed understood. But let's say all right, let's look
at it like a clock. Let's say, okay, the center
of the clock were there, right, So you're telling me
it three o'clock is better. Now you'd remember you're getting
it from the You're getting it the entire time. There
is no respite at that point six o'clock or nine
o'clock and three o'clock you're getting hammered the entire time.
But I right on the edge of the eyewall, and
you're getting battered the entire time.

Speaker 5 (01:30:32):
But I'd rather get battered by ninety mile per hour
winds than one hundred and.

Speaker 4 (01:30:35):
Eighty five, And it depends.

Speaker 7 (01:30:38):
I mean, if you are on the eye wall, maybe
that's the worst spot because you're not getting the respite
of the eye itself. But the further out you get,
the winds diminish.

Speaker 4 (01:30:51):
Yeah. Yeah, for sure, there's no question. What I'm saying is,
if you're in the path of the eye, right and
you had the choice to be within the clock, right,
I wouldn't it be that. My thought was, and this
is gonna be stupid thinking, right was, well, wouldn't it
be better to be in the dead center of it
rather than be at three or nine? Because at three
or nine, as the wall passes over, it's always on
top of you, like the entire time it hits you

(01:31:12):
at eleven o'clock, goes past three, and then leaves five
or six o'clock. You're constantly on that eye wall, as
opposed to being in the center, where of course you're
gonna get battered by the wall, but you are going
to get a break and then get battered again. I
don't know, I don't know. I had too many beers
last night, one too many shots of bourbon.

Speaker 7 (01:31:33):
Well, it's kind of like we've been in the eye
of a storm before where you're just like, oh, wow,
this is kind of nice.

Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
Wow, wait you sure this is more comming? Hell yeah,
there's more coming, a lot more.

Speaker 5 (01:31:45):
And in the opposite direction you enjoy.

Speaker 4 (01:31:47):
That's the crazy part.

Speaker 7 (01:31:48):
Yeah, And that is if you think about it, if
you have like trees or something that are used to
win from a certain direction, and then it starts coming
from the other direction after like spending half the storm
fighting one way, right, maybe more of a chance for
you to lose it because it's not just leaning on something.
It's like leaning on something now prying it back the other.

Speaker 5 (01:32:08):
Thay, it's like when you're trying to, you know, giggle
it out exactly or wiggling it making it looser. And
from the earliest images it looks like Jamaica never had
a leaf on any of its trees.

Speaker 7 (01:32:18):
Yeah, we we're going to see a lot more over
the next couple of days. Yeah, and Cuba. I don't
know what we'll see out of Cuba, but yeah, it
can't be good.

Speaker 4 (01:32:27):
And one of the weird things today when they first
started reporting on it is they talk more about Cuba
getting hit and it would it just went over the
left side of Jamaica, like just completely over if you
look at it the eye and was I mean it
was completely And then like this morning, all I read
was edit for Cuba. It's for Cuba, like what happened
at Jamaica.

Speaker 5 (01:32:42):
I think that's the reason why, because somebody knew. Because
we couldn't get any information out of Jamaica. So the
only thing that you could really talk about is who's
going to get it next? Yeah, because it's a matter
of waiting for information to get off the island, all right?

Speaker 4 (01:32:53):
For seven nine four one text us seven seven zero
three one bank is your four o'clock keyword? That's B
eight and gay or a five o'clock here, I'm sorry,
slide over to real Radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Tesla is
making a move that I don't care for it. I'll
tell you what it is next show.

Speaker 16 (01:33:17):
Hey, guys, I hope you guys are doing well. So
I enjoy passing off dumb people. I had walked into
a bar a long time ago, and somebody as soon
as this saw me, said, hey, aren't you one of
those guys that puts a bomb on their chest and
blows themselves up. And my response to him was, nah, bro,
we changed the game. We put in the shoes now
and he got so freaking mad. Thanks bye?

Speaker 4 (01:33:40):
All right, PAINK is your five o'clock You worked b
A n K Real Radio dot FM. Go there and
send that away for your chance of the thousand bucks.
I'm Jim, there's dev here, Good morning. You know this, Uh,
this has come up before, and it looks like Tesla
is gonna be the one to pull the trigger on
this for the first time. It's because I thought that

(01:34:00):
we had legislation to keep this from happening, but apparently
it did not get didn't make it through. You know
what we're talking about it. I can't believe you didn't
see this. That's crazy. What do you think Tesla's doing
in their twenty twenty six Model three and Model y
standard trim packages for twenty twenty six that is way
different than any other automaker that they.

Speaker 7 (01:34:21):
Make it a subscriber service if you want the car
to turn on.

Speaker 4 (01:34:25):
That's funny, but that's about that way already as it is. Yeah, No,
they're gonna they're doing away with traditional AMFM radio. Really, Yeah,
you gotta remember there was an act there called the
lawmakers were pushing for the AM Radio for Every Vehicle
Act to ensure that all cars had access to AM
radio because of emergency information and reliability. Of course, we
hear that all the time here at Real Radio that

(01:34:46):
when hurricanes or other disasters, or like even when pulse happened,
we were on the air like that minute. I mean,
their program directors sent out, everybody put the call out
like the bat signal, and every host from all parts
of Florida came here to broadcasts. As you know, we
would dealt with that as a community so that people
had somewhere to you know, reach out and talk to

(01:35:06):
and listen to. And I know that for a fact
that during hurricanes and during other storms and emergencies that
Real Radio and other radio stations in this cluster are
used as a tool to kind of find out what's
happening in the community. The community leaders know that we
do this, so they reach out to us with the
information as they get it. We're able to pass that
on in real time.

Speaker 5 (01:35:26):
By the way, it's actually the reason why we get
a broadcast license.

Speaker 4 (01:35:29):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, one hundred percent is to.

Speaker 5 (01:35:31):
Prove that we take care of the community. All the
other ancillary stuff comes after it.

Speaker 4 (01:35:35):
And by the way, when you hear shows like early
on Sunday mornings and it's like it's like round tables
and stuff like that, that's mandatory for stations like us.

Speaker 7 (01:35:43):
It's mandatory to have community service programming. That's what we
choose to put on and we run it Sunday morning.

Speaker 13 (01:35:49):
Yah.

Speaker 4 (01:35:49):
Yeah, for sure. Tesla's upcoming twenty twenty six Model three
and Model Y standard trims will reportedly drop traditional AMFM radios,
relying solely on streaming and Blue Tooth Audio. Well that's
a sign of the times. It's just Tesla though.

Speaker 5 (01:36:06):
Well, I mean, you can already be on a mountain
road and you know said subscription service not be able
to even get a hold of Tesla customer service to
help you figure out what's going out, you know, on
with your cars. So good luck with that.

Speaker 4 (01:36:18):
Yeah, you don't have to go far to do that.
I mean, Jack can tell you we were in New
Mexico driving through some of those those deserts out there,
planes whatever you want to call it, and I mean
it's you. You would hit the search button and it
would go from the one radio station all the way
through and come back to that one station because it
wasn't getting anything else and you had no cell service none.

Speaker 5 (01:36:35):
That's comforting.

Speaker 7 (01:36:36):
I was having issues in New Hampshire driving around New Hampshire,
just from the rural area. I don't know what. Verizon
apparently doesn't have towers there. I know they do. Yeahah,
well Man to get more than one bar was a miracle.

Speaker 4 (01:36:52):
It says here that according to Motor Tren magazine and
other media outlets, their twenty twenty six entry level will
not come with either AM or FM radio. They said
Tesla vehicles from around twenty twenty or earlier more likely
to have traditional radio tuners. However, newer models, especially the
standard trims, are the ones that will have the hardware removed.
If this is the case, their customers will have to

(01:37:13):
rely on streaming impaired smartphone smartphone audio to be able
to hear or do what they want.

Speaker 12 (01:37:18):
Now.

Speaker 4 (01:37:19):
Again, for us, that doesn't really matter for us, because
you can stream our show anywhere. As long as you
can get an Internet connection, you can stream real radio
and listen to all that. Matter of fact, a large
portion of our audience does listen to our show via
the streaming service. But really that's not really the thing
that kills me. It's the AM radio part of it
that really kills me, because that is you know, that's
where you know, you really do rely on those signals

(01:37:42):
to bring you news and information when you need it
in moments of distress.

Speaker 5 (01:37:46):
How are they going to get an EAS alert? Yeah,
I don't know, some other words, they're not till jack.

Speaker 7 (01:37:51):
Do they go out on the on the streaming es.
That's a great question. No, and I think our listeners
would add that. I don't think so.

Speaker 11 (01:38:00):
No.

Speaker 4 (01:38:00):
Wow, that's crazy. Well that means that silver alerts or
any of those other alerts, the alerts that you and
I got on our phone. Well, that's a phone thing,
so that it does go out on streaming or it
does go out on stream. But no, they can use
it sell yeah, to sell cellular netw right, Yeah, to
see you the text. That's what we got the.

Speaker 7 (01:38:17):
And there's been a bill like this, it's been lobbying.
You've heard actually a commercial on this station, and every
one of our eight hundred and fifty plus radio stations
by this company has been airing public service announcements about.

Speaker 4 (01:38:32):
This bill over the past year.

Speaker 7 (01:38:34):
Yeah, about encouraging you know, lawmakers to keep AM radio
in vehicles.

Speaker 4 (01:38:39):
Yeah, says here. According to Radio Inc. This move would
make Tesla the first mainstream auto brand to cut out
over the air radio entirely. Somebody said something here that
when you ordered a new car back in the day
that in some cases the radio was an option. And
matter of fact, I know some of the sports cars
that was the case, some of the first corvettes. I
mean it was an option, was like a five hundred
dollars option, because back then it was a big deal

(01:38:59):
to have radio in your car. A spokesperson for the
National Association of Broadcasters told Fox Local that automakers like
Tesla are putting profits above above public safety when they
remove local radio. It says, free local radio is not
a luxury, it's a necessity, especially in times of emergency
when internet based services can be interrupted, which I agree
with one hundred percent. That's why we talk about the

(01:39:20):
wind up radios and stuff. You know, with AM you
just have any any you know, you have the wind
up radio and you can get a signal and you
can hear what's going on, and.

Speaker 5 (01:39:28):
You get them HAM radio operators.

Speaker 4 (01:39:30):
Yeah, it says Removing broadcast radio from vehicles is a
disservice to millions of drivers who rely on these stations
for trusted news, community connection, and emergency alerts. Tesla did
not respond to Fox with a comment. They just did not.
Tesla announced these features on October seventh, the standard Connectivity

(01:39:51):
package and the Tesla comes equipped with Bluetooth so that
drivers can pare content from their mobile device. And this
app more than three hundred and forty senators and House members.
We're supporting a bipartisan AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act.
The bill requires the Department of Transportation to issue a
rule requiring AM radio capabilities to be standard in all

(01:40:13):
new passenger vehicles.

Speaker 5 (01:40:15):
And that's a big push as well by the NAB,
the National Association of Broadcasters.

Speaker 4 (01:40:19):
Sure yeah, it says, prior to the rules of effective date,
manufacturers that do not include devices that can access access
AM radio as a standard equipment must inform purchasers of
this fact through clear and conspicuous labeling, and they may
not charge an additional or separate fee for AM radio access.
In other words, if Tesla has decided to put it
back in, they couldn't go, Hey, you know, we'll put
it back in, but it's going to cost you nuver

(01:40:40):
five hundred or whatever.

Speaker 12 (01:40:42):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:40:42):
They can't do that. They have to either offered or
not offered, it says. According to Edison Research's most recent
Share of ear survey, AMFM radio continues to make up
the largest share of listening, accounting for more than one
third of daily time with audio among those ages thirty plus.
The vast majority of that listening audience listens to am

(01:41:05):
FM radio over the air signals. Have you ever been
in a Tesla testa of one? Did you? Yeah? I
actually I've been in the one that has the X
wing doors, the big dog one. Yeah. They're fun. I
mean they're you know, they're great. I mean, it's a
it's a wonderful piece of engineering. I wanted. I've never
been in one.

Speaker 7 (01:41:23):
I've wanted one for a while, and now it's I'm
glad to see that the like the rest of the industry,
has caught up or at least, you know, not the
amount of sales, but in what I mean. You found
it with the Machi, Yeah, I loved it.

Speaker 4 (01:41:37):
Yeah. And I've been in that yeah. Yeah, the only
drive and that was scary. The only draw you think
I was scary right with my old lady. Good God.
But really the only issue with the EV market, the
reason it didn't take off is the is the range
anxiety and the charging time. If they would have accomplished that,
if they would have even made any effort into making

(01:41:58):
that safer better, I think the EV market would. I
mean it's still there's still companies still investing in it.
I mean Toyota is still investing in EV's ford to
kind of cut back a little bit, but they still
believe there's a giant market for it.

Speaker 7 (01:42:08):
Toyota investing in well, I Toyota doesn't have any evs
right now. Yeah, I think there is that the next
for them because they kind of lean more on their
hybrid because Toyota has been at the forefront of the hybrid, right, Yeah,
that's their whole thing, right, So, and when everyone else
was the EV when I was like chopping for this
car I have now a couple of years ago, it

(01:42:30):
was Toyota just didn't have any at the time.

Speaker 4 (01:42:34):
Yeah. Toyota Electric vehicle lineup includes the all electric BZ
four X compact suv and new models like the c
CHRB EV and the upcoming So they what I what
I remember reading is is that Toyota was going to
jump into this market because they saw it to be
a growing market. Now Ford jumped in feet first at first. Yeah,
and I think maybe got in a little too hot

(01:42:55):
before the market kind of figured out what it was
going to do. But it's the charging stations that really
made the biggest splash for everybody. That's really what put
Tesla so far ahead of everybody else is the charging
stations were very easy to find. Their cars charged quickly.
All of the equipment was really focused toward Tesla, and
they're fun as hell to drive. By the way, if
you've never driven an electric car, I urge you to

(01:43:16):
give it a shot. It is a blast. Yeah, I mean,
whereas gas cars you have to kind of wait for
it to wind up, you know, or you shift gears
or whatever. By that, I that thing that we had
was just you push it. It's just imagine a golf
cart on acid. That's exactly what it was like. Imagine
the fastest, most balls out golf cart you've ever been
in your life. It is that fun. But they're heavy

(01:43:38):
af But that regenerative breaking thing is really interesting as well.
You minute you let off the accelerator. It actually engages
a generator and uses the momentum of the car to
engage a generator that recharges the batteries. Now, it's not
a lot, but it does work. I see that in mind.
Just with my hybrid.

Speaker 7 (01:43:55):
It's like, yeah, when I let off the gas, there's
a little icon that shows me where the power is
coming from. When it's red, it's the gas, and when
it's blue, it's the wheels. Actually, you know, right charging
the battery.

Speaker 4 (01:44:07):
Yeah, yeah, I've said and I'll say it a thousand
times over. I believe the perfect setup for any family
is to have a hybrid and then an all electric.
Use the all electric for a round town or your
commuting car, and then use the hybrid for trips or whatever.
That's the best setup right there. Because Jack, your gas
is how much a month? Less than one hundred bucks? Yeah,

(01:44:28):
it's got to be less than a hundred bucks, I think, right.

Speaker 7 (01:44:29):
I would say go back and forth to there. Oh yeah,
no it is. I think like every three weeks have
to get gas.

Speaker 4 (01:44:35):
So every three weeks, it's how much is the to
fill up? Thirty dollars? Yeah, so every three weeks it's
thirty dollars and my little pickup truck is a little
for cylinder and I fill up, you know, once every
week at sixty bucks a tank. So I'm spending you know,
two hundred and fifty three hundred dollars a month in gas.

Speaker 7 (01:44:52):
I get about five hundred and fifty dollars to a tank. Yeah,
that was the great thing about having the Machi Man.
We didn't have to worry about gas all. We didn't
pay for gas.

Speaker 4 (01:44:59):
For four years, no gas, no oil changes, none of that.
And the other thing people are like, well, what about
the brakes because the thing weighs so much. Well, the
regenerative breaking is what really takes care of that for you,
because the minute you let off the accelerator, the car
starts slowing down, like exponentially slowing down, So you don't
really have to apply the brakes all that much. As
a matter of fact, they're so sensitive you don't really

(01:45:19):
want to touch them a bunch because I mean, you
just tap them and they just I mean you come
to a complete stop. It's crazy fun stuff though. Yeah,
there are a bunch of other companies doing it as well. Yeah,
twenty twenty six, they have some other one hundred percent
evs coming out from Toyota. I remember them making a
big push a few months back, or making an announcement
they were going to do that for sure. A right
four oh seven nine one six one four one. Again,

(01:45:41):
you can always text us at seven seven zero three
to one.

Speaker 5 (01:45:45):
Would you get another one?

Speaker 4 (01:45:47):
I would you know?

Speaker 3 (01:45:48):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:45:48):
And and and again. My wife bought this truck that
she has now and I didn't really know she was
doing it. She just wanted to get out of the
EV because she didn't like the idea of the charging thing,
you know. She wanted to be able to take it
on trips. And unfortunately with the Machi, we did that
trip to Mississippi to basically to Memphis, and it was
a nightmare, like a complete nightmare. You just couldn't imagine

(01:46:09):
it would go that bad. It was that bad. Yeah,
it was as bad as you can imagine, you know,
being stuck at charging stations. We found out how unsafe
it was if you happen to be on the road
and have to charge in the middle of the night
and you have to go to some sketchy places because
you can't get to a major changing or a charging area.
And even then if it's four o'clock in the morning
and at a part of town that you don't really
want to be in, or at a truck stop and

(01:46:30):
you're plugged in the car won't go anywhere. You can't
put it in gear and get away. You're sitting duck. Yeah,
And I just couldn't imagine my wife being out there
in the middle of nowhere, you know, charging her car
at two o'clock in the morning, you know, because it
ran out of charge or she wanted to make sure
it was gonna make it. I mean, we had a
sketchy situation in Atlanta that happened like that. We were
sitting there in a car and d just rolled up

(01:46:52):
on us, windows up in the whole thing. I had
to put my gun on my lap.

Speaker 5 (01:46:55):
I remember you talked about had no.

Speaker 4 (01:46:56):
Idea what people are gonna do. Dudes all hooded up
kind of rolls up on I didn't tap. He was
actually part next to us. But you don't know any
of that. We're plugged in this machine in the back
of a seven eleven when there's no light. Yeah, that's
like I told my Look at my wife, I said,
we're straight up sitting ducts. Just get your valuables out. Now,
let's make this as quick as possible.

Speaker 5 (01:47:13):
Oh, I'll keep my car that stays at the lit
gas station.

Speaker 4 (01:47:18):
Yeah yeah, yeah, But I mean the idea of them
is great. If they are able to conquer that battery
life thing and that charging thing, that will be the future.
I mean, I think it eventually will be the future.
It's just cleaner. It's it's better. It's awesome. They're fun
to drive. They're miracle cars, they really are. The engineering
is miraculous. But man, that charging thing is no joke.

Speaker 5 (01:47:41):
Well, and they're not really good for the environment.

Speaker 4 (01:47:43):
Well because of the battery something.

Speaker 7 (01:47:45):
Yeah, they say, even when you factor in everything evolved
from the precious metals to disposal, it's still fifty to
seventy five percent better. So I guess that's twenty five
to fifty percent cleaner. Yeah, in gasoline. It's crazy because
you know, Bill Gates, you could said m but I was.

(01:48:05):
You know, that's real data, the Bill Gates that I'm
making it up.

Speaker 5 (01:48:08):
No, I'm following. I'm following the listeners lead on some
of I don't agree.

Speaker 4 (01:48:13):
I choose not to believe prove it, prove it, which
one which one don't you believe.

Speaker 5 (01:48:19):
I just felt was saying prove it.

Speaker 7 (01:48:24):
I mean you like, there's people regardless of what you say,
that's all they'll say is fake.

Speaker 4 (01:48:31):
Yeah, I don't believe you, all right? For you know?
All right? Four O seven nine one six one four one.
Uh text us at seven seven zero three one again
you're five o'clock. Heyward his bank, that's b A n K.
Go to real radio dot of hims and that I'll
for your chance of one thousand bucks. Load them up.
It's time for trivia. Let's give some stuff away. We'll
do that next. Do you want to play a game?

(01:48:53):
Should Jim Colbert Show? Trivia is next call.

Speaker 2 (01:48:58):
Now four O seven six one four one S.

Speaker 8 (01:49:04):
My wife and I just got back from Scottstowe, Arizona,
where one day we decided to.

Speaker 5 (01:49:07):
Go hiking up camel Back Mountain.

Speaker 8 (01:49:09):
Well, even though it was one hundred and three degrees,
it's a dry heat, yolos.

Speaker 5 (01:49:12):
He's the moment, you know.

Speaker 8 (01:49:14):
Well, on our way up there, we had we had
to take a couple of breaks, and everybody that passed
us would ask us if we needed help, if we
needed water or anything like that. And while we thought
it was really really nice. It was also a little
bit odd. Well, I get back to Airbnb that night
and I cant google camel Back Mountain and a guy
had died up there two weeks prior.

Speaker 4 (01:49:34):
Oh no, I mean in the inevitably every summer now
out in Death Valley, we hear about people. I mean,
one guy just ran out of gas and died, just
ran out of gas and just had no water, no
way to say it away from the heat. One hundred
and twenty degrees even in the shade, it's like one thirteen.

Speaker 5 (01:49:51):
If you've ever driven through Arizona, New Mexico, the Texas
heading it before you get to the Sierra Nevada, you don't.
You cannot take those things for granted. You cannot because
you can look literally one hundred miles and not see
a single thing.

Speaker 4 (01:50:05):
And by the way, I remember one lady yet last year.
I want to say, like either had a heat episode
stroke and she could still see her car from where
it happened. In other words, she was just only a
few hundred yards away, and the heat just already kind
of overcomer. You begin again, it's one hundred and twenty
degrees out there. It's not safe, all right, Welcome back
to the Jim Colburn Show on Real Radio one or four

(01:50:27):
point one. I'm Jim. There's dead now. Jack's here as well,
and he has the Jackie set all aboard. Check at
chega choo choo cleanly clack clearly quick.

Speaker 7 (01:50:35):
All right, listen up because uh we got some prizes
and maybe something a little uh special today, so let's
get you started. Winner gets to choose and it might
be a pair of tickets for this Saturday to see
fsu versus Wake Forest. If you want to travel up
to Dope Campbell Stadium, we'll give you two tickets for
the game again. That's happening Saturday, November first. Also have

(01:50:58):
a pair of tickets a little for you. This is
Hassan Minaj and Ronnie Chang at the hard Rock Live Orlando.
That is happening November sixteenth. You want tickets, you can
go to hard RockLive dot com search for that show
in Orlando. Ronnie Chang has found the shot Menaj.

Speaker 4 (01:51:18):
And here we go.

Speaker 7 (01:51:19):
Newly added another item. This is happening this Saturday at
the Kia Center. It's a pair of tickets to see
Bert Kreischer Way at the Kia Center. The Machine absolutely
the machine. I've seen them there before. I might be
going to this as well. However, you can win them
here for trivia. And if you're not on the line
for trivia, or if you don't win, because you know

(01:51:40):
gym is pretty tough.

Speaker 4 (01:51:42):
You can always go to Real Radio's instagram.

Speaker 7 (01:51:45):
We are giving away a pair of tickets at a
meet and greet's cool Bert Kreischer after the show that's
on our instagram at Real Radio one oh four one yeah,
or maybe you win it right here on the Jim
Culbert Show.

Speaker 4 (01:51:58):
I gotta tell you, man, when if you ever a
chance to meet Bert Bert Bert, when you see Bert
on TV, he's that guy. That is exactly who Bert
Kreischer is. There is no pulling punches. Bert isn't putting
on for anybody. He is that guy. His shirt will
be off and you will immediately fall in love with
a guy. He is impossible not to like. That dude,

(01:52:21):
is impossible not to like. All right, one, two, three,
four or five, young lady, let's go one oscar? How
you doing hey? How are we going doing?

Speaker 13 (01:52:34):
Good?

Speaker 4 (01:52:34):
Buddy?

Speaker 1 (01:52:34):
How are you a great paradise?

Speaker 7 (01:52:37):
I say, I was trying to think, have we had
an Oscar before I don't remember, don't either, Oscar?

Speaker 4 (01:52:43):
Would you like to I already ask you this? You
ready to play? You're gonna play a little game with
his Oscar.

Speaker 2 (01:52:48):
Let's do it the puzzlemaster or is he the guy
who's currently writing today's game?

Speaker 5 (01:52:55):
That's fine for j s Trivia already done.

Speaker 4 (01:52:59):
All right, Oscar, this is the easy game. But he
got a question here for you have four answers. One
of these answers is a lie.

Speaker 5 (01:53:06):
What?

Speaker 4 (01:53:06):
But if you can find anybody, I'll sendor to Jack.
He's got some cool stuff waiting for you. Are you ready?

Speaker 3 (01:53:11):
Yep?

Speaker 4 (01:53:11):
Here we go, buddy. It's National oatmeal Day. That's right,
National oatmeal Day. Here are three fun facts about oatmeal
and oats and one lie covered in brown sugar and cinnamon. Delicious, gross.
I hate oatmeal.

Speaker 5 (01:53:27):
Goal, it's so good for you.

Speaker 4 (01:53:30):
All right, Budy, we're talking about oatmeal. Which one of
these is untrue? Number one oats are primarily farmed to
feed livestock. Only about five percent of oats grown or
for human consumption. Number two oats is only about thirty
five cents per serving, making them a very inexpensive and
healthy meal. Number three oats were cultivated in China seven

(01:53:52):
thousand years ago. Or lastly, Vermont is the state that
eats the most oats globally. It's Denmark that can soume
ums the most oats. Which of those is a lie?

Speaker 1 (01:54:04):
Let's go with fac number four.

Speaker 4 (01:54:06):
No, that's absolutely true. Vermont eats more oats than any
other state in the US. In Denmark eats more oats
than any other country in the world.

Speaker 5 (01:54:14):
Granola eating hippies.

Speaker 4 (01:54:16):
Yay, very nice. Sor ry two, three, four or five?

Speaker 5 (01:54:19):
Let's go too.

Speaker 4 (01:54:20):
Two right there is Stacy, Stacy, how you doing?

Speaker 5 (01:54:24):
Hello, I'm good.

Speaker 4 (01:54:25):
I love hearing that. All right, Stacy, I've got a
question here. We're talking about oats. Which one of these
is untrue? Number one oats are primarily farm to feed livestock.
Only about five percent of oats grown or for human consumption.
Number two, oats are only about thirty five cents of serving,
which makes them very inexpensive and a healthy meal. Or lastly,
oats were cultivated in China about seven thousand years ago.

Speaker 19 (01:54:49):
I'm going to go with the first one.

Speaker 4 (01:54:50):
No, that's absolutely true. Wow, And that blew me away.
Only five percent of the oats farmed are going to humans.
Most of it is to feed lives. Talk. Okay, did
not know that.

Speaker 5 (01:55:02):
I did not know that.

Speaker 4 (01:55:03):
Either they did three, four or five.

Speaker 6 (01:55:05):
I know it.

Speaker 4 (01:55:06):
Let's go four or there you go. That's Donna, Donna.
How you doing?

Speaker 3 (01:55:10):
I'm doing good.

Speaker 4 (01:55:11):
Glad to hear that. You get a fifty to fifty
shot here, Donna. We're talking about Donna's number one. Oats
is only about thirty five cents per serving, making them
a very inexpensive and healthy meal. Or lastly, oates were
cultivated in China about seven thousand years ago.

Speaker 3 (01:55:30):
I'll go with the first one, and you'll.

Speaker 4 (01:55:36):
Go to the Jackie sack. You're a winner.

Speaker 5 (01:55:40):
Congratulations, Donna.

Speaker 4 (01:55:41):
Let me ask you, Donna, do you believe it's more
expensive or less expensive than thirty five cents per serving?

Speaker 5 (01:55:47):
I think much less.

Speaker 4 (01:55:48):
Yeah, it's fifteen cents. Wow, fifteen cents of serving. You
are a winner to welcome down. You're on hold enjoy
your prize. Fifteen cents of serving.

Speaker 5 (01:55:58):
That's why it's a it's a good, and it's a
dry good. So that's a good thing to keep liking
your hurricane kit. Yep, does it just need boiling water?

Speaker 4 (01:56:04):
It's the sixth most important grain crop in the world.
Oats were cultivated by the Chinese and about seven thousand
years ago. They are about fifteen cents of serving. Some
other things you may not know about oats before we
get to the top of the hour and Ross thoughts
coming up, well, Ross Tagic coming up to talk about
good sauce. What percentage of American households have oats in

(01:56:27):
their pantry? Sixty?

Speaker 5 (01:56:31):
I was going to go much lower. I was going
to go thirty four.

Speaker 4 (01:56:34):
Seventy five percent American household have oats in their pantry.

Speaker 5 (01:56:40):
I would think you'd be one of the only ones
that does.

Speaker 4 (01:56:44):
And I was just like, my son eats them. Oh okay,
Actually I don't even know if my wife eats oatmeal
or not. I know my son does.

Speaker 5 (01:56:51):
You don't have those like little Quaker oat pack.

Speaker 7 (01:56:53):
And so I can't help it when my wife said,
like on occasions when she'll make breakfast, she'll go, hey,
I'm something, I'm like.

Speaker 3 (01:57:00):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (01:57:01):
Oatmeal?

Speaker 7 (01:57:02):
I can't hide the disappointment. No matter I'm.

Speaker 4 (01:57:07):
Gonna say, I got a big bowl of cheese.

Speaker 7 (01:57:08):
I can't pretend yet the oatmeal she gets it's there's
nothing wrong with it.

Speaker 4 (01:57:14):
It tastes fine. She even walnut ten or bananas Walmart.
She makes it great.

Speaker 7 (01:57:20):
But I know, I there's something that triggers in me.

Speaker 4 (01:57:24):
It's the texture, dude. And you know the weird thing
is I could eat cream of wheat and grits, but
I can't eat oats.

Speaker 5 (01:57:30):
For you know, I can't do cream of wheat.

Speaker 4 (01:57:33):
I haven't had a bowl of oatmeal in so long.
I probably should just try it again and see, but
I probably love it. But bananas, walnuts and and brown sugar.
Apparently that is the joint. If you're having a bowl
of oatmeal, that's what you put on it.

Speaker 5 (01:57:46):
Yeah, and now apparently there was well, there was this
thing for a while where you would do overnight oats
where you'd put it in a mason jar with all
of your goodies and then pull it put it in
the fridge overnight and then that would soften up the
oats that you.

Speaker 4 (01:57:58):
Know that's steel stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:58:00):
Oh that takes so long to cut. I don't know
what it is much better.

Speaker 7 (01:58:04):
For you, no, Listen, I talk about Aldi a lot.
Aldi has an instant me that it's fantastic. It's like
flaxy by the name, I would never have purchased it,
so I fed it to me once.

Speaker 4 (01:58:13):
I'm like, wow, this is I can't believe how good
this is. Yeah. Then she showed me and they say,
you know, somebody just text in and said, there are
a number of things I could have put on here.
But oats are very filling, so that means they're also
really good for your heart because they have a lot
of fiber. So it's a good if you're on a
dull if you're on a diet and you want something
to fill you up that also tastes good that you

(01:58:34):
don't feel like you're cheating. It's actually good for your
heart health as well. Oats are a good are a
good suggestion.

Speaker 5 (01:58:39):
Yes, and they also help keep down cholesterol, kind of
clean out that cardiovascular system.

Speaker 4 (01:58:44):
And in the winter, you know, of course, we don't
have to deal with this much here in Florida.

Speaker 5 (01:58:47):
I mean kidding, is only going to be sixty nine
on Friday.

Speaker 4 (01:58:49):
We get well, get a cold blast occasionally.

Speaker 5 (01:58:52):
I expect that a hayo.

Speaker 4 (01:58:53):
But there's nothing in the world like you know, I
can only say this with like cream of wheat. But man,
I remember I lived in West Virginia for a short
period of time and getting a getting a nice piping
hot bowl of cream a wheat before you had to
go out, and the snow was great. What you eat grits? Right?

Speaker 5 (01:59:07):
I love grits. It's the same thing cream of wheat.

Speaker 7 (01:59:09):
I don't do cream and wheat. I don't do grits,
but I like cream of wheat. But my grandfather used
to have it. But then you'd put butter and sugar
on it, So I think you know. I have butter
and sugar to anything. Exactly.

Speaker 5 (01:59:22):
I add the butter and the salt to my grits.
Oh yeah, I like buttery salty.

Speaker 4 (01:59:27):
Have you ever been to a Peach Valley up there? Oh,
let me tell you.

Speaker 5 (01:59:31):
Come on, they have some of the best grits.

Speaker 4 (01:59:32):
Let me tell you. I don't. I don't know what
they do.

Speaker 5 (01:59:36):
I think they use a nice heavy cream.

Speaker 4 (01:59:37):
I would like to know their secret. But there is
no more cloudy, fluffy, delicious grit in the world than
at Peach Valley. Yeah, got almighty, they know what they're doing.
I'm seven bites down in Orlando Trenda. She also makes
really good cheese garlic grits. Oh so good. That's a
meal in itself. I'm serious. You get a bowl of
those grits and bacon in a biscuit in your set.

(01:59:59):
Let's go damn what motor? Oh so you said you
want I want to try him, dude, I think I'm
gonna try it.

Speaker 5 (02:00:05):
I think you would be able to dress him up
enough in a way with your food knowledge that you
could actually make him palatable for you.

Speaker 4 (02:00:12):
I mean, wind up doing that, because you know, you
really should be eating breakfast. And I do not eat
breakfast as a rule.

Speaker 5 (02:00:17):
I do not eat.

Speaker 4 (02:00:17):
Occasionally, I'll get some bananas and have a banana in
the morning, but I just mainline coffee from the minute
I get up. That's not good. It's not no, probably
not yea. When I fill it up with a half
and a half and sugar, oh, then it makes it okay.
Oh yeah, get in your dairy all right? Seven to
seven zero three. Want to take a little breaku buddyros
Paget on the other side, plus a fresh keyword right
nowh Welcome back to the Jim Cobra Show, Real Radio

(02:00:47):
one oh four point one year six o'clock keyword is
win wi in Go to Real Radio dot FIM and
send that away for your chance at one thousand dollars.
Guys win. That is your six o'clock keyword good luck.
We hope you win. For I'm Jim, there's dead. Hello
is here?

Speaker 18 (02:01:02):
Hi?

Speaker 4 (02:01:03):
Every single Wednesday around this time, a good friend of
ours drops by to say, what's happening on the show
tonight that the heirs at eight It's called good Sauce
and this guy's name is Ross Patrick. Good lad.

Speaker 3 (02:01:14):
Yeah, here comes a full prism rainbow of positivity.

Speaker 4 (02:01:19):
I love it, I need it.

Speaker 3 (02:01:21):
Yeah, well, here it comes off the brick. I'm getting
it off of Halloween. Man, here's the thing people need
to lean into their holidays. I've gotten, you know, like,
I've had such a rollercoaster relationship with holidays over the
last ten years, of being young and thinking that they're dumb,
and then getting legal legally of being allowed to drink,

(02:01:45):
and then celebrating any holiday that you possibly can because
you love drinking, and then thinking that they're dumb again
because they're thinking like, man, it's just a cash grab.
And then I realized I'm at this point in my
life and I feel like this is the most old
way of looking at holidays. It's you gotta celebrate the

(02:02:05):
small stuff, the little things. Whatever we have that is
that we celebrate, will take a moment and celebrate with
everybody else because it's worth it.

Speaker 4 (02:02:16):
Yeah, it is one hundred percent. I mean, are do
you look at all of them the same? Do you
have the same verve for Thanksgiving and Christmas as you
do for Halloween?

Speaker 3 (02:02:25):
Absolutely not, No, it's not the same verve. I mean, listen,
Arbor Day is a thing. I don't know what it is.
I thought it was Harbor Day for years, and then
I realized there is no age.

Speaker 4 (02:02:40):
It's your plant trees. Whack.

Speaker 1 (02:02:44):
That's whack.

Speaker 3 (02:02:44):
I'm not going to compare that to the mega death
holiday that is Halloween. Blood Gore, Al Gore, Frank Gore,
all the Gorse.

Speaker 4 (02:02:56):
Leslie Gore. Did you?

Speaker 13 (02:02:59):
So?

Speaker 4 (02:02:59):
What is the baby going? As? I know that you guys,
you and Olivia are going as what is it again?

Speaker 3 (02:03:09):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (02:03:09):
Beautifully, it's some video games, isn't it? Some video game character?

Speaker 15 (02:03:15):
Jim?

Speaker 3 (02:03:15):
This is this is why we're great friends, because I
get to give you good news multiple times.

Speaker 4 (02:03:20):
I love this. Yeah, yeah, yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 3 (02:03:23):
See the glasses half full. You get to give Jim
good news multiple times. I am going as a family costume,
all thanks to my wife who put in the work
to make this happen. But Labyrinth, I will be David
Bowie's character that she'll be the If you've seen Labyrinth,
you know that this is about to be the cutest

(02:03:43):
thing to ever grease Instagram.

Speaker 5 (02:03:46):
Especially your hair and makeup.

Speaker 4 (02:03:48):
Yeah, yeah, it's gonna be.

Speaker 3 (02:03:51):
It's gonna be a big deal. I have a lot
of makeup and I'm wearing tights, so watch out.

Speaker 4 (02:03:56):
How much do you have invested in this year's costume?
Because you guys have really I mean, I remember a
few years back, you guys went. It was a couple
of superheroes, and it was so good that it looked
like it came from one of the parks.

Speaker 3 (02:04:07):
I would say the I'll give you this. The most
expensive costant piece that we have is seventy dollars.

Speaker 4 (02:04:14):
Okay, that's not bad, right, I mean, that's not bad.
What's the piece? Is it like a cod piece or
a wig? What is it?

Speaker 3 (02:04:21):
No, it's the boots. I have knee high boots.

Speaker 4 (02:04:26):
You have knee high boots with tights.

Speaker 5 (02:04:28):
Are you gonna be wearing a cod piece?

Speaker 1 (02:04:31):
No?

Speaker 3 (02:04:31):
But I have to wear a sock or something because
if not, this is.

Speaker 4 (02:04:36):
Is it really good? Is it real tight around that area? Buddy?
Are you gonna have to Are you gonna be showcasing?
Is that what the deal is? Because if not, you're
gonna tell your story without telling your story.

Speaker 3 (02:04:46):
This is the problem. I am like six foot three, right,
six foot two, all kanked up, but but my thighs
are as if they my thighs are large, my waist
is still small.

Speaker 4 (02:05:02):
Yeah, yeah, you get like thirty two sixty five, and
then down to the canks.

Speaker 5 (02:05:07):
What is he? Why does he wear a cup? If
he wears a cup like you wear in sports, then
you don't have to worry about anybody being able to
see your outline. It would be basically like wearing a brazier.

Speaker 3 (02:05:18):
It's because it's hard to celebrate Halloween when all you're
thinking about is Rye Dell right above your what not?

Speaker 5 (02:05:25):
Well, you can always Rye Dell solo dolo.

Speaker 4 (02:05:28):
And why don't you just tuck it? Seriously, dude, why
don't you tape it back? Tape that thing back. I'm serious,
that's what you should do. You should tape it back
and make people guess.

Speaker 5 (02:05:39):
You don't want to have that Ace Bentura moment when
they see it peeking out the back.

Speaker 4 (02:05:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:05:44):
Wait a second, wait a second, he might be onto
something here, Dev Yeah yeah yeah, Dev, you're onto something
here too, wait or hear the pros. The pros is
that it is pretty halloween and celebratory. If I tuck
it and I go, you know, full blown buffalo, little.

Speaker 4 (02:06:00):
Bill straight can spooky yeah straight kindle Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:06:03):
All right. But the cons is, I'm in Florida, that's
a drag queen move might get arrested.

Speaker 4 (02:06:10):
And you have ah and you have the reverse turtle.

Speaker 3 (02:06:14):
Then I got the reverse turtles. So no matter which
way I look, I'm offending someone.

Speaker 4 (02:06:18):
Yeah right, exactly gotten. The eleventh costume is amazing, but
his herni.

Speaker 3 (02:06:22):
Is terrible, and and there's this conversation and man, I
have a celebrate I have a tradition. I'm proud to
say that, good sauce. We have a tradition bred for
this holiday. Because every Halloween episode we're two years in
doing this, we do ghost stories, fooky stories. Last year,

(02:06:47):
I'm not sure if our listeners remember, but there was
thousands of dead babies involved. What what Yeah, it was
a ghost story. Dude, it's supposed to be spooky.

Speaker 4 (02:06:58):
What was the ghost story with a thousand dead? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:07:02):
Yeah? Do you did you hear dev go? It's Halloween, guys. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:07:09):
Uh, but you don't want to be scary around the
kid though, right.

Speaker 3 (02:07:13):
I mean he doesn't understand English yet, So we're good.

Speaker 4 (02:07:17):
Always did a little bad bunny.

Speaker 3 (02:07:18):
Then uh, there's uh, there's all these ghost stories that
happened tonight. But here's the difference. Last year we had
really fun, fictional crazy stories. This year we we still
have because there's like it gets real dark, real fast
and over the top, and I think we get away
with it right now, I'm not getting the way with

(02:07:39):
it because I'm reading the room and it kind of
rubbed you guys the wrong way. This year we have
space embryos in needless I do I have to say more?

Speaker 4 (02:07:51):
You have space embryos where we have a ghost story
that has embryos frozen in space.

Speaker 3 (02:07:58):
Wo.

Speaker 4 (02:08:00):
That sounds good.

Speaker 3 (02:08:01):
I know, I know you have a lot of fun
with their ghost stories man and so like. And now
here's another thing too. We also share some real life
ghost stories.

Speaker 5 (02:08:13):
Okay, all right, kind of like Jimmy's moving laundry basket thing.

Speaker 3 (02:08:20):
Well even even scarier because yeah, because this is real.

Speaker 4 (02:08:30):
I'm one of the only people you know that has
actually seen an apparition. You do you know anybody that's
actually seen a manifestation and apparition. I've seen one that
is by far the scariest thing I've ever experienced in
my life.

Speaker 5 (02:08:46):
You've never shared that story before.

Speaker 4 (02:08:48):
The ghost child running across my pool from one door
to the next and scratching on the glass door. That
that was you know again? What? Yeah, yes, And.

Speaker 5 (02:08:57):
I'm gonna have to get that on the break And
you have never told that story. And the near seven
years you've been on the air, I've only heard about
the laundry basket house.

Speaker 4 (02:09:04):
Or he can say it on the air.

Speaker 5 (02:09:06):
He didn't say it on the air.

Speaker 4 (02:09:07):
Jack, Oh he could?

Speaker 3 (02:09:08):
You gotta do?

Speaker 1 (02:09:09):
You had to play spooky music. Dude, it's happening.

Speaker 3 (02:09:12):
He's about to do a story.

Speaker 5 (02:09:15):
Here we go, Everyone gathered around the fire.

Speaker 4 (02:09:18):
I've manifested this Good Sauce episode eighty space embrio. So
in that same house where the laundry basket thing happened, right,
I was washing dishes like a good husband, and my
wife and my daughter were watching TV over on the sofa,

(02:09:39):
and where their point of view was. They could see
the pool area from one point of view through a
glass door, but I was looking at it through another window.
But we could see the same area at the same time,
and I could see them, but their their perspective was
different than mine. I'm looking down the pool and they're
looking at the side of the pool. The screen door,
the screen we had around the pool had two entries.

(02:10:01):
It had a door on the right hand side and
had a door down on the left hand side that
went out to another patio. So theoretically, you go walk
in through one door and if there was a cover
across the pool, walk straight across the pool and go
out the other door. But of course can't do that
because you can't walk on water. As I was washing
dishes one night, I look and we had just experienced

(02:10:22):
some scratching on the glass as we were watching TV.
And I mean it was like a dog like trying
to get in. But I ran over and opened the door.
There was nothing there, shut the door. By the time
I got back to my seat, it happened again, this
time louder and I mean, imagine something like with nails
scratching on glass.

Speaker 5 (02:10:37):
Yeah, I'm picturing the movie Salem's Lot.

Speaker 4 (02:10:39):
But it's dark outside and you can't see anything. Then
the second time it happened, I jumped up and ran
because I'm like, I'm gonna find out what this is.
Nothing on the back patio, no doors are open, no
animals back there, no nothing. When I come back, I
actually go into the kitchen to start washing dishes. As
I'm washing dishes, I look up and I'm getting chill bumps.
And what would have come in through that door on

(02:11:02):
the far side was a I call it a smoke
boy because it looked like and they called Ross that too.

Speaker 5 (02:11:11):
For a whole different reasons.

Speaker 4 (02:11:13):
But it looked like it looked like a person made
of smoke running across my pool to go out the
other door. That and the reason I know I saw
it is because the instant I saw it, I looked
left to see if my daughter and my wife saw it.
They were staring at me white, so they saw it

(02:11:36):
from a different perspective. So we both saw it at
the same time. But they saw it from the side.
I saw it from head on. In other words, we
saw that foreshore without question.

Speaker 5 (02:11:46):
Different individuals three.

Speaker 4 (02:11:47):
Different people, my wife and my daughter and then myself.
That doesn't stop. That house was full of stuff. Something
through their gerbil cage against the wall and it crashed.
It was crazy.

Speaker 5 (02:11:58):
That was That was the lake house.

Speaker 4 (02:12:00):
That's the one over there, the Maitland house. Oh yeah,
the one before. Anyway, there's your ghost.

Speaker 3 (02:12:04):
Yeah, he moves like a nomad, so.

Speaker 4 (02:12:08):
Shut up, boy.

Speaker 3 (02:12:12):
Also, how how great is it? Just like Jack doesn't
say a single thing during that story but still finds
a way to play the most cartoonish and less respectful sound.

Speaker 4 (02:12:24):
During your right to take everything away from it.

Speaker 3 (02:12:28):
Your vulnerable monologue, right after you say I've got goose bumps.

Speaker 4 (02:12:33):
Yeah he need.

Speaker 5 (02:12:34):
It, he did.

Speaker 4 (02:12:36):
I got one button spooky organ. You said you're gonna
play spooky. I was literally waiting for you to play
the scary music, and then you wind up playing the
carnival sound.

Speaker 5 (02:12:46):
I wonder if he said it's a spooky organ? Is
that what you call it a halloween?

Speaker 4 (02:12:50):
No, that's called tiptoe cartoon is what that is? That's
called cartoons.

Speaker 3 (02:12:56):
So I want to tell you you what our other
ghost stories are, because our other ghost stories and scary
stories are real life things. Joel goes through sober October.

Speaker 4 (02:13:09):
Sober October. That's scary.

Speaker 3 (02:13:13):
No one recognizes that he's lost some pounds.

Speaker 4 (02:13:17):
That is the scariest thing ever, right when you've lost
ten pounds and nobody knows. Yeah, that's horrifying. Can't dress,
but that's scary.

Speaker 3 (02:13:24):
That's scary. And then I briefly brought it up to
you guys, and uh, Deb, I don't think you were
here when I brought it up. I like, I'm gonna
blame parenting, but I definitely had to throw away a
pair of pajamas.

Speaker 4 (02:13:39):
Why, oh man, this is gross. Let's just say accidents happened.

Speaker 5 (02:13:45):
Deb from Ross or the baby?

Speaker 4 (02:13:48):
No, from Ross, the baby, And I need to my my.

Speaker 3 (02:13:54):
The big lesson, the big lesson that I have learned
that is that I need to cancel my Alie Pop subscription.
It was you Ross, Wait what it was?

Speaker 4 (02:14:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:14:08):
It was me?

Speaker 4 (02:14:08):
It was me.

Speaker 5 (02:14:09):
Really, he's reached that age where you can't trust a.

Speaker 4 (02:14:12):
Yeah he jammed the jamas hell brown jams. But it
said but it.

Speaker 3 (02:14:19):
Said like a ghost story, which makes it comedic. Can
we get away with you all tonight? Episode eighty good Sauce?
It is ghost story happy Halloween. Go eat all of them.
Go ride in Nimbus three thousand. Don't watch Rocky Horror.
If you want to ruin every moving image for the

(02:14:41):
rest of your life, go watch the Substance. Happy Halloween,
Happy Halloween.

Speaker 4 (02:14:44):
Go watch the first episode of Welcome to Darry Dude,
prepare yourself accordingly. Okay, I'm not joking. Compare the first
fifteen minutes of that show to Substance. Okay, all right,
all right, we'll see tomorrow, buddy. All right, there you
text seven seven zero three one back in a second

(02:15:05):
with more than Jim Colberg show.

Speaker 1 (02:15:16):
Yeah, we got a chunk of that weather.

Speaker 13 (02:15:18):
Sunday down here in West Palm, I was playing an
outside gig on Singer Island and all of a sudden,
at five o'clock, tarped everything in the Heaven's just opened
up that there were tables and chairs flying everywhere.

Speaker 1 (02:15:32):
It was like a monsoon.

Speaker 20 (02:15:34):
Crazy on the topic of weird and annoying ways that
people watch television, Whenever my mom comes to visit from
New Jersey, she always wants to watch movies with my
wife and I, and we put a movie on and
immediately she starts talk to text, texting people on her phone.
She gets up every ten minutes to go out and
smoke a cigarette, comes back in and tries to have

(02:15:56):
conversations with us.

Speaker 4 (02:15:56):
We never get anywhere in the movie, and inevitably every
single time.

Speaker 20 (02:16:00):
In the middle of the movie, there's a point where
Showy says, this movie makes no sense.

Speaker 4 (02:16:04):
I don't know what's going on. My wife and I
have a little bit of that. We don't quite go
to that extreme. My wife and I will watch something
for like about eight minutes and we'll look at each
other and if we're on our phones, we're like, this sucks.
If it can't keep our attention, to keep us off
our phones, where's like, get out of here. That's when

(02:16:26):
we put on Welcome to darry last night, And if
you haven't checked that out on HBO Max, let me
pre warn you the opening fifteen minutes of that show
are shocking. But it's an interesting show, and it's the
first episode they drop them every Friday night, so check
that out for sure. It's very interesting. Can't wait. We
brought it up at the beginning of the program and
people sort of texting in and they agreed, it is

(02:16:49):
just crazy. Welcome back. I'm Jim, there's deb Hello, Jack
is here?

Speaker 6 (02:16:53):
Hi?

Speaker 4 (02:16:53):
Six thought keyword is win wi in slide over to
real Radio dot FM andsen that await for your chance
at one thousand bucks? When is the word go get
the money. I've got a pretty interesting lawsuit coming up
I wanted to chat about here at the end of
the program. Do you guys remember that teacher who was
shot by the six year old?

Speaker 10 (02:17:12):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (02:17:12):
Yeah. Her name is Abby Zwerner. She's a former assistant
principal at a Virginia elementary school. The former assistant principal
is the one who ignored multiple warnings from other people
in the school that a six year old student had
a gun in the hours before he shot his teacher

(02:17:35):
shot her twice, once in the hand and once in
the chest.

Speaker 5 (02:17:37):
Oh wow.

Speaker 4 (02:17:38):
She had to go through, if I remember right, six
surgeries and still doesn't have full use of her left hand,
and the bullet still remains in her chest. Oh fu.
The first I think of the opening statements of the
lawsuit were today she is seeking forty dollars and I

(02:18:00):
don't know how they're going to defend it. I do
not how they're going to defend this at all. She
spent two weeks in the hospital. The lawsuit of court
accuses the former administrator, Ebony Parker, of failing to act
after four different people went to her with concerns that
the student brought a gun to school. The attorney said
in opening statements that bad decisions and bad choices that day, unfortunately,

(02:18:23):
were paid by this this teacher. How do you have
check if that many people bring that information to you,
how do you not check, jack? If one person was
if one person says it, Like if we're in this
building and somebody came in and said, I don't know, man,
this cat that's in sales is unstable, and I hear
he's got a piece, there is no pause. Ye, no,

(02:18:44):
there is zero pause. I dial nine to one one
D at the staircase. There's no pause. There's no time
to play with that stuff anymore. There's no time at all.
Occurred on the first day after the student had returned
from a suspension for slamming Zwerner's two days earlier. It
sent shockwaves to the military shipbuilding community in the country,

(02:19:07):
with people wondering how a child so young could get
access to a gun and then shoot his teacher six
years old. Guys that's second grade first, I think, is
it first? Yeah? Well kindergartens, that's right. Kindergarten's five years old. Yeah, yeah,
you're right, first grade. Quote. No one could have imagined
that a six year old, a first grade student would

(02:19:29):
bring a firearm to school and then use it and
then you'd like know how to use it, right, that's different.
I mean I could hand as I could hand most
six year olds a loaded gun and just have the
safety on and not rack around in there. And they
may have a diffict. Well, I don't know. With video games,
maybe not. Yeah, yeah, with video games and access to
video games, they may know how those things work perfectly. Actually,

(02:19:52):
nobody would teach you, would it not. Wouldn't it teach
you how to rack around into a semi automatic pistol?

Speaker 13 (02:19:57):
Man?

Speaker 5 (02:19:57):
I would hope not.

Speaker 4 (02:19:58):
But I mean they do it all the time. I
mean video do that. They showed me there.

Speaker 7 (02:20:01):
They simulate it. It's not a demonstration, but it's a simulation.

Speaker 4 (02:20:05):
Yeah. I mean, however, I mean, it doesn't have a phone,
It doesn't have to be a demo, it doesn't have
to be Hey, this is how you do it. You
just do it and then the person goes Oh, that's
how that's done. And look, I don't have it. I
mean again, I do believe that the video games in
the way they are have affected people's personalities, kids' personalities.
I believe that wholeheartedly. I know that I can probably

(02:20:26):
make that argument a long time, and I'll have a
lot of people like Ross, maybe with yourself, Jack, who
would disagree with me. I don't. Do you agree with that?
I do?

Speaker 7 (02:20:34):
And here's I remember sitting in a college classroom in
the nineties and my teacher saying that there is no
cause of link.

Speaker 4 (02:20:42):
And I just always.

Speaker 7 (02:20:43):
Felt that there's some that's you use it for training,
you know, you use computers to simulate training and being
in a combat environment, so it does have some effect
on making you more comfortable in that situation.

Speaker 4 (02:21:01):
Let me, I would just ask the simple question, do
kids learn lessons on computers? Do we have cartoons on
PBS that teach kids how to how to count and
what colors and shapes are? So you're telling me that
video that doesn't do that can't teach them as well.
You're telling me that a kid can't watch his mom
and dad do something not good, or maybe watch his

(02:21:23):
dad roll a joint every day for ten years, and
then at a tenure as a ten year old be
able to figure out how to roll ajoint pretty well
in the first or second or third try.

Speaker 5 (02:21:31):
Hey, Jack is sitting right there.

Speaker 4 (02:21:33):
Yeah, but I can roll them, eium, I haven't done
that in forty years. Man, I want proof.

Speaker 5 (02:21:37):
I don't believe you break it out.

Speaker 4 (02:21:39):
It's the same argument I use when I hear people
use really illogical arguments. I get, where else in your
life do you apply logic like that? You know, when
they try to really make something that they believe in
seem really plausible. I just asked them all the time.
I get you know, where else do you use that
logic in your life? If there's nowhere else you use
that logic, then maybe the logic you're using here is

(02:22:01):
only because you're interested in the ending result and you're
not really interested in the truth. But in this situation,
like I fully believe that. I mean, you can't have
a kid at eight, nine, ten years old play a
video game for ten or twelve hours and the entire
video game is killing people and not have it in
effect or it desensitize or at least teach a kid
something and maybe maybe a tactic.

Speaker 5 (02:22:22):
Who knows. I know, in the Sandy Hook shooting, the
officers who had responded to that so that the perpetrator
shot like he was in a video game. Yeah, kind
of like how you would shoot when you walk into
a room.

Speaker 4 (02:22:34):
So they reload, they rerack, they rewrack. So when you
reload with a new magazine, you rerack. I mean that's
you know, you're telling me a ten year old would
know how to do that without without learning or seeing
it in a video game.

Speaker 7 (02:22:46):
I mean it's also I mean that is also available
all over the internet as well.

Speaker 4 (02:22:52):
Yeah, sure, but I mean you're not interacting with it
on the I mean, I guess watching a video is
one thing, but I mean playing a video game and
actually going through the action of doing it has to
have some effect. The law knows that it's fundamentally unfair
to judge another person's decisions based on stuff that came
up after the fact. This is the whole idea of
the kid, you know, slapping the phone out. Parker is

(02:23:14):
the only defendant in the lawsuit to judge previously dismissed
the district superintendent and the school principle. They face a
criminal trial next month on eight counts of felony child neglect.
That's the mom and dad or the.

Speaker 5 (02:23:25):
Dad, and therein lies the problem. Yeah, you can trace
a kid with severe emotional behavioral problems, and in most
cases not all because it's not fair to vilify parents
when so many are trying to deal with behavioral issues
mental health problems. But when they're facing charges of neglect,

(02:23:46):
you can go, well, now we understand why your young
son is so angry and already a menace to society
and they're not even in second grade.

Speaker 4 (02:23:53):
The student's mom was sentenced to four years in prison
for felony child neglect and federal weapons charges.

Speaker 5 (02:23:59):
Oh wow, a whole new level.

Speaker 4 (02:24:01):
Yeah, yeah, so you got the mom going to prison
for four years. The kid, now, is, you know, is
going to have this around for a long time. Of course,
being that age, I don't know if it'll follow him
around forever, but I mean, you know, it's gonna be
in some type of therapy for the remainder of their.

Speaker 5 (02:24:13):
Life about his father.

Speaker 4 (02:24:15):
And this school's gonna have to wind up spending forty
million dollars to pay this, But there's no way they're
gonna lose. I mean, I can imagine you could make
an argument that would defend that.

Speaker 5 (02:24:22):
I don't think she's gonna get that judgment though, because
the school district, they wouldn't have that amount of money
to spend.

Speaker 4 (02:24:29):
State maybe state caps it, I mean that's state by
state though, this I mean laps it.

Speaker 7 (02:24:35):
But why would they allow them to super forty million dollars?
Then who she's suing?

Speaker 4 (02:24:39):
Specifically, she's suing the school because the school said they
dismissed the case against the principal and the other person
because I think I think they're going for the person
who ignored the assistant principle is the one who ignored
the calls to say, hey, this kid's got a gun.
It's one person. Let me get her name here for you.

(02:25:00):
Her name is we just had it here for a
second Ebony Parker. She failed to act after four different
people went to her with concerns that the student brought
a gun to school. And by the way, these aren't
I mean, I don't know if they're students, But what
if for adults said that? What if for teachers or
other assistants in the school came and said, hey, look,
you know, we heard a rumor through the other kids
that so and so brought a gun to school and

(02:25:21):
they're like, it's just a kid, it's a rumor. Go
pat the kid down. Why wouldn't you do that?

Speaker 5 (02:25:26):
I mean how we saw that in Parkland?

Speaker 4 (02:25:28):
Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Speaker 5 (02:25:29):
I mean that kid should never have been allowed on campus.
And the FBI knew, right.

Speaker 4 (02:25:33):
Yeah, yeah, right exactly? All right? Four seven nine six
four one. So the Super Bowl weekend thing, the halftime
show still has some interesting things going on. Did you
guys see the latest on that? No, I guess now,
look the alternate halftime show. Yeah, well it's not the
one that It's not the one Turning Point's doing. I
don't think it has anything to do with the Charlie

(02:25:54):
Kirk Place.

Speaker 7 (02:25:55):
Oh is it the one where they have a lot
of little dogs that are up for adoption?

Speaker 12 (02:26:00):
No, I don't say.

Speaker 4 (02:26:00):
They call it the puppy bul Jim. It says music legend.
Sting is just announced as a headliner of the Super
Bowl Weekend concert series in San Francisco, which is being
put on by the NFL's hospitality provider. It's not going
to be the halftime show, but I guess they're offering
an alternative program that has Sting, It says, we learned

(02:26:20):
last week the country music sar Chris Stapleton will be
doing a Saturday show at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium on
February seventh, ahead of Super Bowl Sunday. They wait, I
don't get it either. They're not broadcasting it. They're just
letting Sting play seven hundred and fifty bucks a ticket
pre super Bowl concert.

Speaker 13 (02:26:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:26:39):
Yeah, I don't think that's really anything that they have
celebrations going on the entire week.

Speaker 4 (02:26:43):
Wait a minute, but they wrapped it up in for
some reason. They mentioned the super Bowl controversy around bad Bunny.

Speaker 5 (02:26:49):
So we got a we got a foreigner to accompany
the Americans.

Speaker 4 (02:26:55):
Sting's English, by the way, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:26:58):
So way to counter that, I know, let's celebrate America
argument by the way, Like you know, Paul McCartney's non American.
Aren't Americans?

Speaker 4 (02:27:09):
You don't just sing English? He sings the Queens English
as Queen's English. Yeah, man, that's crazy. How much juice
that thing got. Sting is a seventeen time Grammy Award
winner and is on his way to an egot. He
has an Emmy Golden Globe and has been nominated four
times for the Academy Award for Best Original.

Speaker 5 (02:27:28):
Song, not for acting.

Speaker 4 (02:27:30):
Yeah, it'll be John joined on stage by his longtime
guitar player Dominic Miller and drummer Chris Moss. They're on
a tour right now and I still don't kind of
understand what they're doing. This doesn't affect the halftime show
at all, but for some reason they wrapped it up
in the headline like it was part of the super
Bowl halftime controversy. I think it's more of a squirrel.

Speaker 5 (02:27:52):
Something shine.

Speaker 4 (02:27:54):
Yeah, so crazy how that whole thing went. Yeah, Sting's
gonna play out there. I found that interesting. I wouldn't
have seen Sting some good songs that we played the
Police stuff.

Speaker 5 (02:28:01):
I saw him at the Wisconsin State Fair for four dollars.

Speaker 4 (02:28:05):
Really, what four that's a bargain? Was that with the police?

Speaker 5 (02:28:10):
No? That was his like right when he broke off
as a single artist. Yeah, exactly. Not my favorite album
or my favorite music, but it was an opportunity to
say Sting from like ten rows back for four bucks.

Speaker 4 (02:28:21):
He got really kind of when he left. I can't
he lost his edge. Yeah, when he left the Police,
it didn't have it wasn't the same kind of music.
I think Stuart Copeland kind of Drew.

Speaker 5 (02:28:31):
Drove Mandy Summers. Man, they were there was a reason
why the police worked so well.

Speaker 4 (02:28:36):
By the way, one of the most underrated guitar players
in rock and roll, without a doubt, Andy Summers. And
he's a little fella and that message. No I'm serious though,
but it's a it's a difference because when you play guitar,
you have to be able to spread your hand open
to get those chords. And if you look at the
the chart for message in a Bottle, that riff will
break your arms off. And he plays it like it's nothing,

(02:28:56):
and it is a bit of a rift to play,
and that little cat just rolls through that thing like
it's nothing. And one of the coolest guitar tones of
all time too, by the way, Yeah, Chronicity is one
of the best songs ever.

Speaker 5 (02:29:07):
It's speaking of cat. Happy National Cat Day.

Speaker 4 (02:29:09):
Yeah, Happy National Cat Day. I was gonna do tribute
on cats, but I didn't last year.

Speaker 5 (02:29:13):
When are you getting your kitten, Jenny.

Speaker 4 (02:29:18):
I'm probably gonna wind up surprising my wife, but I'm
gonna be honest.

Speaker 5 (02:29:22):
Maybe Christmas, Hello, have a kitten in this Christmas stocking.

Speaker 4 (02:29:26):
She doesn't listen. She's a pilates.

Speaker 5 (02:29:29):
Seriously, put a kitten in a Christmas stock.

Speaker 4 (02:29:31):
You listen to Cravits. She loves Cravits.

Speaker 5 (02:29:36):
Everybody likes Brandon Grabbit likes Gravit.

Speaker 4 (02:29:38):
She's listening to the game? Is she no, she's if
she's smart, she's hammering weed. Drinks right now and when
to get home. Also, the last other thing I want
to say is if you're interested in any of the
stuff for you get to break. You know that ocean
liner they've been promising they were going to sink to
create an artificial reef man. Yeah, yeah, yeah, the Cold War,

(02:29:59):
a cold or a carrier, a vessel SS United States
will take our final plunge into the sea. I'll have
multiple digital options so you can actually watch this happen.
If you wanted to watch an ocean liner sink to
the bottom of the other here.

Speaker 5 (02:30:12):
Pretty cool.

Speaker 4 (02:30:12):
Yeah, it's very cool, actually very cool.

Speaker 5 (02:30:14):
Yeah, because there's no people on it, you have to
feel bad about seeing it sank.

Speaker 4 (02:30:17):
No people on anything like that. But if you I
found this story at a al dot com and basically
what they're gonna do is gonna drag this thing out there.
They're gonna blow up. They're gonna make a professional documentary
about the whole thing. Wow. If you if you google it,
you can find out the streaming cameras. And I think
there's gonna be a multiple camera shoot on this thing
when they spot and when they blow it up and

(02:30:38):
make it sink. It's gonna be pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (02:30:40):
That would be fun. Yeah, well, let's put it on
their fourth box there, Jack, Yeah, all.

Speaker 4 (02:30:43):
Right, four our seven nine one six one o four
one text us seven seven zero three one. You do
have a few minutes to get over to real radio
dot FM and send up the keyword win. That's wi in.
That is your keyword for six o'clock doub What do
you have for news?

Speaker 5 (02:30:55):
Sumter County deputies identify a victim in a nineteen seventy
one cold case, a new snag for Terry Rosier. Yes,
amid federal gambling charges.

Speaker 4 (02:31:06):
I saw that, you know, And I'll tell you. When
I saw what happened, there was like nothing made sense.
And then when I saw that story today, I was like,
now it makes sense.

Speaker 5 (02:31:13):
Now it makes sense. Yep. Absolutely, And then are you
watching the World series tonight? You are not alone we'll
give you the numbers behind that and more coming up
next during you heard it here.

Speaker 4 (02:31:23):
First yet letsak at break'll come back and get debzueos
get the hell out of here. On a Wednesday, our.

Speaker 7 (02:31:28):
Friends at tklaw want to remind us to look ahead.
So on real Radio we look ahead tomorrow Thursday edition
of the Monsters in the morning, and that means is
a Daisy del Toro day on the Monsters. Plus he'll
have a couple more chances for you to win one
thousand dollars. That's starting at nine a m. Don't forget
to look ahead for you and your family's future with

(02:31:49):
the team at tk law. Visit one firm for life
dot com.

Speaker 19 (02:32:04):
Every time they sink one of the ships cruise ship
or like an aircraft carrier or whatever. It's great that
we're making it for coral reefs and stuff. The funny
thing is way in the future, somebody's gonna be down
there and go, what happened to these?

Speaker 1 (02:32:24):
Why is that there?

Speaker 10 (02:32:26):
Boy?

Speaker 3 (02:32:27):
That must have been one hour of a war.

Speaker 4 (02:32:31):
Actually, if I remember right when the Titanic thing was,
when they were doing the diving of the Titanic, that's
submercial that wound up exploding and killing that that crew.
I remember that, you know, it was like Titanic heavy. Well,
that was all happening. So they were giving a lot
of information, and if I remember right, they don't think
there's gonna be much sign of the Titanic. Within the

(02:32:51):
next like twenty or thirty or fifty years or something
like that. The sea will have consumed it. It will
have basically rotted down to nothing, a big pile of rust.
So even and it's been in the sea for what
a hundred years, over one hundred years. Nineteen eighteen is
when I went down. I think nineteen twelve, was it twelve? Yeah? Okay,
so yeah, man, it's been down there for a while.

(02:33:11):
So one hundred and fifty years from now there will
be no sign of that nothing. I'll be gone, all right,
seven seven zero three one. Got a few minutes for
your keyword wind w I N side over two real
radio dout of him and in then away for your
chance of one thousand bucks. I'm Jim, there's deb Hello.
Jackie is here as well.

Speaker 7 (02:33:26):
Yeah, those artificial reefs make for interesting diving.

Speaker 4 (02:33:29):
Yeah, you dove before? Was it creepy? It's so funny
because anytime I'm going around I see something under water,
it makes me skied out. Well, I get skithed. What
if you think of that scene from Jaws. Yeah, Like,
we're a number of diving movies. Why they they've done
them with Moray Eels. Oh yeah, yeah, anything coming out
of the dark at you. Yeah, open water.

Speaker 7 (02:33:53):
I got my certificate off of Boyton Beach, West Coast
Diving West Bomb Area. That was really fun, but diving.
The scariest time was when I was in the Fort
jeff Fort Jefferson out you know, in the Gulf of
Mexico basically, but right there by the fort, and uh,
seeing those two sharks crossing my path in both directions,

(02:34:18):
so I couldn't go right or left. I just had
to start swimming backwards, doing it with like my fingers.

Speaker 4 (02:34:23):
You know, just try to push the water away from me.
No extremities, don't make any noise. Yeah, all right, I'm
getting the hell out of a chill guy. Yeah. Yeah,
I don't know, man. I like, I love snorkeling, but
the idea of going you know, down there, it is
kind of a weird, almost clausterphobia thing.

Speaker 5 (02:34:43):
I loved scalloping, but as soon as you tell me
that that snorkel tube is my only source of air
and I've got to figure out how to how to
hold my breath, get down to where the scallops are,
pop back up and and not get water in my.

Speaker 4 (02:34:57):
Mouth hail enough to blow the water out of the tube.

Speaker 5 (02:35:00):
Panic in when you feel a little bit of that
water going to the back of your throat and you're like, ah.

Speaker 4 (02:35:04):
It's funny.

Speaker 7 (02:35:04):
The first time, sorry, the first time you're going through
your certification for diving.

Speaker 4 (02:35:09):
You do it in the pool, right, but just the
idea of.

Speaker 7 (02:35:12):
Breathing underwater takes to get so you have to be
se in your mouth. But then you go into water
and then they're like, okay, now breathe and you're like,
put I'm under water exactly.

Speaker 5 (02:35:21):
Yeah, yeah, I know I could never be certified for diving.
There's one easy way I know I would never be
certified for diving, and that is you already know what
it is. You already know what it is, right.

Speaker 7 (02:35:33):
Your flotation devices, no die, no is because as soon
as I get to that certain point underwater jack where
they say that you have to do.

Speaker 5 (02:35:43):
Simple math problems to make sure you're not getting the
bends or whatever.

Speaker 4 (02:35:47):
Yeah, sure, narcosis.

Speaker 5 (02:35:48):
They failed me before I even flipped over the side
of the boat. That doesn't spe Nope, don't let her in.

Speaker 4 (02:35:53):
That doesn't start for like two atmospheres or something. Right,
you're looking on like sixty feet or something around. Yeah,
but still that's a long way down.

Speaker 5 (02:36:00):
It's a long way down and breathing, you know, through
a tube underwater. And then to make sure that everything
is kosher and copa acetic, you've got to do math.
Can't I paint you a picture?

Speaker 4 (02:36:09):
You need a watch? Does that erectly?

Speaker 5 (02:36:11):
Can I identify an elephant, a camel, and a rhinoceros?

Speaker 4 (02:36:14):
I get skimed out in dark and deep water. It's weird,
even if like it's perfectly safe. When we go to
itch Tutney up there, there's a thing called the blue Hole,
and it's basically this gio Hey, it's this giant boil
that you can swim over, right, And it's wild because
when you swimmer you realize it's a tunnel of earth,
a rock that goes down about if I remember right,

(02:36:35):
it goes down like one hundred and twenty feet and
then and then it's you know, splinters off into caves
and that's where the water comes up. Well, the boil
is so strong that it's hard to kind of swim
over to begin with. But dude, when you get over
the middle of that thing and you look down and
it's like one hundred feet, it trips me out, Like
I kind of get weird anxious about it. I don't
know what it is.

Speaker 5 (02:36:53):
Can you imagine you spell lunking?

Speaker 4 (02:36:56):
Hell?

Speaker 12 (02:36:56):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:36:57):
Hell?

Speaker 3 (02:36:58):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:36:58):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (02:36:58):
Going to is it the eagle nest the one up
like in Dude, that to me takes a whole new
level of adrenaline junkie to be willing to not just
go through caves, but caves underwater. We don't know when
the tide yes belongking.

Speaker 4 (02:37:16):
Can't even watch them do it. Those usually take their
tank off the butt the tink in first too. No,
that's next video, thank you. It's like those Russian kids
backflips on the edges of buildings like next video. Yeah, no, no,
thank you.

Speaker 5 (02:37:30):
I love those Parkourt videos. But that's about all I
can handle.

Speaker 4 (02:37:32):
All right, let's heard it here first, Really, it's time
for you.

Speaker 5 (02:37:36):
Heard it here first.

Speaker 2 (02:37:38):
On the Jim Colbert.

Speaker 5 (02:37:39):
Show, a young woman killed more than fifty years ago
and left in a lake beneath an overpass known as
Little Miss Lake Panasafk has been identified. The Sumter County
Sheriff's Office says Maureene Minor Rowan, also known as Cookie,
was discovered deceased in a case that had remained unsolved
for decades since nineteen seventy one.

Speaker 4 (02:37:58):
That's right.

Speaker 5 (02:37:59):
She would have been seventy six years old today.

Speaker 4 (02:38:02):
Yeah. Yeah, that's a fascinating case. The way they found
out and kind of boiled down that she was from Greece, Yeah,
that she was this tall, that she had the specific
things in her past that legend to believe a word,
and it was just fascinating how they tracked her down.

Speaker 5 (02:38:15):
It was because and because when they discovered her in
nineteen seventy one, they figured she'd been in the water
up to thirty days, and of course that's fifty four
years ago. But like you were saying, yeah, discovered the
lead in her teeth meant she came from this part
of Greece.

Speaker 4 (02:38:28):
She was crazy.

Speaker 5 (02:38:28):
She'd only been here for ten to twelve months before
she was killed. And as it turns out, the Sheriff's
office also named her a strange husband Charles Rowan Sr.
As the person of interest in her case. She was
discovered with a man's belt around her neck.

Speaker 4 (02:38:42):
Wow, so he's alive.

Speaker 5 (02:38:44):
From my understanding, it is because they said the investigation continues. Yeah,
speaking of oof Miami heatguard Terry Rosier, am I pronouncing
that correctly. Thanks will not receive pay while on leave
amid a federal gambling investigation. ESPN reports Rosier is nearly
twenty seven million dollar salary. It's frozen. He faces federal

(02:39:07):
charges related to an illegal gambling scheme involving NBA players
and coaches and reportedly the mafia. Rosier is accused of
helping associates place bets using insider information, among other things,
and apparently the mafia's fingers go deep into many professionals.

Speaker 4 (02:39:24):
Yeah, it's mark cards. They had shuffling machines. That ray
machine is really wild stuff. But did you hear they
had just put I think this dude Rosier had a
multimillion dollar tax lien on him, reowed back taxes. And
that's the same kind of speculation of reason why that
Phil Mickelson went to the Live group because he was
so he had so much gambling debt he needed a

(02:39:45):
large and influx of cash to take care of that,
and it looks like maybe that was the same situation,
as there's a possibility this guy had a massive tax
lien and was doing this to maybe pay that off.

Speaker 5 (02:39:56):
But it's crazy. It's literally an Ocean's eleven type story.
When you hear how these private rooms were set up
special glasses to read specially Mark Card's, it was unbelievable
the lengths they went to.

Speaker 4 (02:40:06):
And by the way, I said that there was a
professional poker player that mentioned this game being bad in
twenty eighteen, I think it actually was way before that.
He had mentioned this on a podcast years and years
before that, or twenty twenty three. It was in twenty
eighteen when he said it. So this game has been
known to be crooked for years. There are tens of
millions of dollars that were lost there.

Speaker 5 (02:40:27):
What I found interesting is that they nabbed him here
in Orlando.

Speaker 4 (02:40:30):
Oh wow.

Speaker 5 (02:40:31):
And then finally, the twenty twenty five World Series is
reaching its largest global audience in a decade. The league
announced that games one and two of the series between
the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays earned a
combined viewership in the US and Canada of more than
twenty million people. According to the League. It was the
highest rating during a two game span since the twenty

(02:40:52):
sixteen World Series between the Chicago Cubs and Cleveland Guardians.

Speaker 4 (02:40:56):
Oh, that was one of the greatest.

Speaker 5 (02:40:57):
Oh, one of the best.

Speaker 4 (02:40:58):
This one's pretty durned good, Bob oh Man, this one's
been great.

Speaker 5 (02:41:01):
There's nothing like an eighteen inning game to make us
stay tuned.

Speaker 7 (02:41:04):
Right, let me do what it is doing, and the
next day the one of the world game's greatest players
ever is going to pitch right.

Speaker 13 (02:41:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:41:10):
Yeah. The great thing is it's a lot of offense.
They always, I mean, people tune in to see hits
and bombs and doubles and dudes racking homers, and this
thing is riddled with home runs. It's been fun, by
the way, Freddy Yeah, maybe one of the best clutch
hitters of all time. Freddy Freeman. Oh yea yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:41:27):
The spike is being credited to growing interest from international
markets in this year's matchup. The World Series is tied
at two games each ahead of the pivotal Game five
in Los Angeles tonight. And you heard it here first
on the Jim Colbert show.

Speaker 4 (02:41:41):
Thank you. I appreciate that so much.

Speaker 5 (02:41:42):
I was gonna watch it.

Speaker 4 (02:41:43):
Yeah, I'm gonna watch a little bit of it. I've
been watching a few innings of almost every one of
the games me too, and then watch the highlight reel.

Speaker 7 (02:41:48):
And then a couple of innings, I go watch a show.
Then I come back and watch more.

Speaker 5 (02:41:52):
It's another eighteen innings.

Speaker 4 (02:41:54):
I can't do that. Ten forty one is my bedtime.

Speaker 5 (02:41:58):
We want to thank Kristin Buer m pdv Opossum from
the Care Foundation, along with Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell,
Ross Paget from Good Sauce with Ross and Joel in
case you missed Animal House, Scott Maxwell or Ross. All
of their podcasts have been posted at The Jim Colbert Show.
And last but never leased, Sam Bowen and Candice Rich
for running our YouTube chat.

Speaker 4 (02:42:18):
Thank you, guys, appreciate that very much. Chat question today.

Speaker 7 (02:42:20):
In our YouTube chat, we posed the question does the
person hit by a duck on a roller coaster deserve
a payout from the theme park.

Speaker 4 (02:42:30):
I would say that most people are gonna say no.
I'll go seventy percent say no, eighty seven percent said no, Yeah, yeah,
get out of here man, come on well, thirty percent
say yeah yeah, peel or off. Thirteen percent are broken
in the little cash I get it. What happens if
I wasn't that body like, yeah, give me the money,
get your duck. That duck's on you. All right? Coming
up tomorrow Danny Meyering for dat night, done right. We'll

(02:42:52):
also talk to every buddy. Glenn Clausman Ross will be
in tomorrow. More opportunities for you in a thousand bucks,
more prizes in the trivia staff. We have all kinds
of cool stuff, so tune in tomorrow three o'clock. We'll
see them for sure on behalf of David Jack. I'm Jim.
We follow New Chunky, they follow the monsters in the
morning after us, it's Tom and Daming the Corber Time
good sauce on our friends from Real Laughs. We'll see
tomork three for more of The Jim Colbert Show. Until then,

(02:43:13):
have yourself a fantastic Wednesday evening.

Speaker 5 (02:43:15):
Guys, can go put some mump in your day.

Speaker 9 (02:43:17):
Bye.

Speaker 4 (02:43:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:43:21):
If you missed any part of today's show, check out
The Jim Colbert Show on demand and for highlighted feature segments.
Listen to the Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are
available for free on the iHeartRadio app
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