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December 2, 2025 • 13 mins
For this episode of Whatd'ya Do That's New we review Deborah's choice, which is a couple of short videos on YouTube about DJ Padre Guilherme, a Catholic priest who was asked by Pope Leo to perform at a Rave for an Archbishop's 75th birthday. Next week, we will talk about Jack's choice: a 16-minute-plus video about the history of Rankin and Bass.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Hey, everybody else.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Really, I live on the Space Coast and I'm hearing
a lot about this rocket water in the Indian River issue.
And my thoughts are, you know, if they're capable of
collecting and transporting this water to dump it in the river,
why not just collect it and use it for other rockets?
And if it can't be used for other rockets, it
doesn't belong in the river.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
Okay, I love you, goodbye. That's a great point.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Rocket water in the Indian River. So I have a
better idea.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Why don't we just dump it into the Blue Origin
owners living room?

Speaker 3 (00:45):
How would they like that? Come on, man, how do
how does this even happen? It's just dumbfounding.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Thank you have a beautiful day.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
And I hope you had a great long weekend.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Cheer, thanks buddy. Yeah, the balls is some of these
people right, seriously, But you know the why they ask, right, because.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
They know they're gonna be get in permission.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
I mean they understand, I mean they know the deal.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
Yeah, Unfortunately they understand we don't.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
Yeah, this is be attempt at transparency. Hey, we told
you we're gonna do it all right. Welcome back to
the Jim Colbert show were all Radio one oh four
point one. I'm Jim, there's dem Jack is here as well.
Thanks for tuning in to the AYE. We appreciate that
very much. If you'd like to leave a talk back,
you could do that easily. Grab the iHeartRadio app, go
to real radio and use that mike to send your
comment over. While you're there, they gets your number one

(01:32):
precept pretty please, doesn't cost anything? Helps us and you, Yeah,
it does. You get to the content faster. It helps
us with that preset, So thank you for them. Let's
do what you do that's new? What did you do that?

Speaker 5 (01:50):
What did you do that?

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Hey, that's right. Closmon Law k l a U, SMA
and law dot com offices right there and wonder part
four oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen car crash
called KLOSMA. We'll talk to Glenn on Thursday for Culbert Court.
What'd you do? That's new? Every Tuesday here on the show,
one of the members will choose something for us to watch,

(02:14):
read or listen to. We will do that and then
reconvene on the following Tuesday talk about that and then
move on to the next member. It is Deb's week.
We'll find out what Jack has to offer here in
just a few seconds.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
Deborah, Yeah, I offered up a couple of short videos
about Padre Guillermey, our father Guillarmey, a Roman Catholic priest
who just also happens to be a really cool DJ.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
Yeah with electronic music.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Ye yeah, yeah, he didn't start off as a DJ,
but I found his story to be really fascinating. You know,
the Pope Leo just recently, pop Leo the fourteenth recently
had Padre Giarmy perform a rave for an archbishop's seventy
fifth birthday, because what seventy five year old doesn't want
to rave?

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Rye? And how old is Padre? By the way, it
was hard for me to tell. He looks like it
maybe in his midfie That's what.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
I'm thinking, because he wasn't He didn't join the priesthood
until nineteen ninety nine.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Right, it was like in his thirties, Yeah, exactly exactly,
so I thought it was.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
It's just a completely different look than what you expect
coming out of the Catholic Church.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
I would agree with that one thousand percent. I got
to tell you, I thought this was really a fascinating choice.
I'll tell you why. There was a movement in the
you know, i'll just say Christian, but Baptist is what
I would you know, I went to church for you know,
in Baptist churches primarily, and I remember about like fifteen,
maybe a little bit longer than that. And people who

(03:34):
go to church regularly may be able to chime in
and help out. Well, there was a definitive movement to
change music in churches. It had become you know, that
old hymnal kind of stuff had become a little stiff.
Churches started losing population at an alarming rate going through
the late nineties and two thousands, and they did everything
they could to start bringing people back in younger people

(03:54):
by upgrading the music choices. And I will tell you
they did a great job. I said this. Or the
church we went to when we lived in Baldwin Park,
which is over by over by the Fashion Square mall,
there was a church there that had a band that
sounded like Lumford and Sons. I mean they were and
I'm not joking it was. It was exactly like stand
up base, the whole kind of American folk kind of

(04:16):
thing with music you would hear in church. It was fascinating.
It was one of my favorite things that has been
added into modern church experiences. Fast forward to this thing.
I don't think there's one religion that this fits better.
I seriously do not think there's one religion that this,
this whole idea of raving with church fits better. When

(04:38):
you saw that rave and you can see the video,
go to Jim Corper live dot com, go to the
what do you do That's new master list. You can
actually see the videos what we're talking about them, and
they're doing it from what church was that for the rave?

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Oh, that was in front of a fourteenth century beside the.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Cathedral kind of thing, and there were thousands of people.
They are all young people, and with the light show
and the cross like in the background and the sounds
of man, this fits like it fits like that. It
seemed normal.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
He doesn't use secular music, so I know he doesn't,
but it doesn't matter who to tell for the audience
to know he uses, you know, Catholic music. He just
puts it to electronica.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
Yes exactly. He mixes it up that makes it sound great.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
And still wears his clerical collar while he's djaying in fact,
the uh former Pope Francis God Rest his Soula's was
the one who blessed his headphones.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
Oh really, it's so funny. Yeah, I mean, well, you
guys are Catholics. I don't. I don't have like a
connection to the Catholic church. Does this like? And they
said they got a lot of pushback, But it doesn't
really say what kind of pushback or where they got that.
It doesn't say if it came the Catholics from other
Catholics are within the church, which I found. I wish
they would have really kind of gone there a little
bit more because I would like to know what the

(05:48):
church thinks about it.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
Well, first of all, I like the idea of this.
The documentary itself is AI trash. Oh yeah yeah, uh,
And it's a thing that is becoming more and more prevalent,
especially on YouTube. It's just AI generated video that was
AI audio is AI written and AI edited. You could

(06:11):
tell when they take words like he went on the mission.
They have this slow shot of a helicopter flying over.
The video did not match. It was just showing random
rave videos. So the the that video itself is trash. However,
the idea of what we're talking about. The topic is

(06:33):
very interesting.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
The video of the rave isn't isn't AI produces.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
It's the short documentary that because I had a really
hard time finding something within our time constraints that would
give you a little bit of background as to and
so he didn't start as a DJ.

Speaker 5 (06:46):
To Deb's credit, the pick I have is also AI
and I.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Have searched and every I came up with so many
different ones.

Speaker 3 (06:53):
But you can tell, especially with the audio toward the end,
you're like, oh, yeah, I'll tell.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
You something's interesting about that. Like I never even considered
that because I was so into the story. I never
considered who or what made it. I didn't. That really
didn't even affect me. I thought the story was going on.

Speaker 5 (07:08):
I was looking at the the images and stuff, and
it's just interesting the repeating shots and you could tell
some stock footage.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
It was editing. No no, no, no, no, it was hack editing,
but it was a I hack. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
But it's it's like, I think we are being inundated
now with AI content and.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Because guess what, people don't care.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
If you're getting clicks, if you're watching and you're seeing
the ads, that's all that matters to them, so they do.
They can just keep throwing stuff out there. The topic
itself is interesting. What I find interesting about a rave?
You know what makes a rave work? Drugs, ecstasy, MDMA, drugs.
It's interesting to see where those two things really meant.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
And that's not for everybody, I think. I think rave
festivals have certainly gotten the repation of being you know,
ecstasy care, you know, like a train for that. But
I don't know that everybody does it. I understand what
you're saying, Yeah, because there is that, But I think
that everything that where religion and secular worlds meet, there's
going to be those questions, right, And it's interesting that
you say the AI thing because you're one hundred percent right.

(08:17):
I wanted I was like, man, you know who's mad
at him? Like when the minute they said that he
got pushback, I was like, who's pushing back? Is it
people in the church? Is it people? Is it people
who go to the church? Is it the parishioners? Like
I would have to know more about that, But you're right,
because a I would never deep dive into that unless
you ask it.

Speaker 5 (08:32):
Now, if it was a documentary, it would be they
would have interviewed him. Yeah, it would have interviewed you know,
other people, but it was just like they take the
available It searches finally the available information on this DJ priest,
and then you know, it throws that together, it puts
up content.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
What led you to choose this? What wormhole were you
in where you saw this and chose.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
Actually I was on social and saw one of his
performances and was just blown away by the fact that
there was a priest performing you know, this kind of music.
And then at first it was like, well, that's that's
really kind of But then the more I thought about
it and realized, you know, like what Pope Leo wants
is for young people to see that the church sees them.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Right.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
It doesn't always have to be you know, the hymns
that you sing at Mass. It can be a priest
being a priest in the completely modern era for a
new generation that may not connect with the church of
their parents and grandparents, so the church has to figure
out a way to reach out to them to get
them interested in being Catholic.

Speaker 5 (09:32):
It wasn't up there, log I when you assigned it.
It was only up there for like five days. It
was a pretty fresh video. Now the first video that
was about ninety seconds long where they show a video
of Pope Leo blessing the crowd and so that was
the real dj y the priest DJ and that was
that was legit.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
That was his crowd.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
Yeah, that was a real event that occurred.

Speaker 5 (09:56):
It's the other accompanied double Genery thing, which was the
AI thing that was.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
They told the story about it, but the rave part
was the coolest part anyway.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:03):
I mean if you see his performance at Christ the
Redeemer at Rio de Janeiro, or when he performed at
Youth Day and Lisbon, Portugal, a million and a half
people showed up. Yeah, yeah, you know, so I like
that message of we'll come to you, We'll come to
you and speak your language.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
You know.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
Yeah, it's a message you have to have. Whatever you're doing.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
You have to happen if you want to reach gen
Z and Alpha, and you have to be able to
speak that language that they understand and let them know
that you're part of this too.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Yeah, interesting do you think, like so I believe that
this works for the church if they create the event
and people come there. I don't think this worked for
the church. Off he tours with no Yeah, but I
would think it would have to be only him. I
don't believe that he could bring any other element from
that world into that and still maintain the credibility of
doing it as a as a witnessing sign tool. Did

(10:59):
I mean in the drug part, Yeah, yea.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
And that would be part of the issue, because again,
none of his music is secular. It's it's all actual
church music. It's just been remixed to electronic beat with
laser lights.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
You know. You get that Italian that that that pope,
the Pope intro to that thing.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Like he did an after party after the conclave.

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Voice. Voice though, is so resonant when you get to
those those speakers, and it's it really, I'm telling you,
when you watch it, go watch it, because I'm telling
you this, watch the rave one. It fits so well
to that whole scene.

Speaker 5 (11:31):
Very cool, it's definitely, it's definitely cool. And and I
mean and churches, not only churches, all institutions, all right, institutions,
they've all they've been losing oh yeah, people for for
years and years and years, although continuing.

Speaker 3 (11:46):
But gen Z, they say, is actually that first generation
and somebody that's bouncing back and kind of returning to
organized religion just because the world is so out of
sorts and they, you know, trying to find their way.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
So I applaud you know.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Pod exactly keep exactly out there rocking the beat with
his clerical caller.

Speaker 4 (12:03):
I thought that was really cool.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
All right, Jack, what are you have first? Buddy?

Speaker 5 (12:06):
Good job, by the way, Okay, speaking to Ai, I
knew what I wanted. I found a video and I'm like, okay,
there's got to be better. And then I started searching,
so I finally found one. It is sixteen minutes long, okay,
sixteen and a half minutes long. It is available on YouTube,

(12:27):
and the season times out nicely. I believe perfectly for this.
It is the history of ranking in bass Christmas specially.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 4 (12:39):
He knows his audience. Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 5 (12:42):
I've already watched a few of them, and then I'm like,
all right, I tried to find the one that was
you know, I've that kind of summed it all.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Up, you know, I just saw the one that popped
up the other day. It's one of the real rare ones.
It's the year without Santa Claus. Yeah, that's a rare
one that doesn't really get a lot of play like
Little Drummer Boy.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
You never see that.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
Don't to play either, and uh and again a very
popular one and nothing never gets played.

Speaker 5 (13:04):
Well, you were that at Santa Claus. What made that
the hit? It was was basically the Heat miser so.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
Right, yeah, mister heat, I'm mister dude.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
It was ot like TBS or tn T recently because
you remember there was that one day where I watched
it twice in a row.

Speaker 4 (13:23):
That's right, all right, very good?

Speaker 1 (13:24):
How long is it? Eighteen minutes?

Speaker 4 (13:25):
Sixteen?

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Naybe all right, very good? All right for our seven
nine one six one o four one. You can always
text us at seven seven zero three one schools. My
friend could be in big trouble, but not those kind
of schools, I'll explain.

Speaker 5 (13:45):
M Proudly sponsored since day one by Glenn Closman Closmanlaw
dot com.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Hi,
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