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May 8, 2026 155 mins
Friday - We talk to Diandra, the daughter of the woman whose driveway was stolen. We also talk; Hulk Hogan, common-law marriages, missing important engagements, using strangers’ driveways, and the Hollywood actress new retirement program. Prime Time Kitchen with Orlando Weekly Restaurant Critic Faiyaz Kara with his latest reviews. Plus, JCS News, Sink or Sail, Embers Only, Pick the Porn & You Heard it Here First.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are now listening to the Jim Colbert Show on
Real Radio one four point one.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Dad's all right, guys, here we go on a Friday
edition to the Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much
for tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every
single day, and we do have a great program setup
for you this afternoon. We will get you caught up
on what's happening in the world. That will do that
around three twenty with JCS News three forty five at
Sinkers Sale and Embers only, We'll try to sniff out
some yacht rock and I'll turn you onto a really
nice cigar four o'clock hour, prime time kitchen with a

(00:35):
buddy of Fayez car And if you'll remember the story
we talked about the other day when a woman got
her pavers her driveway stolen. Yeah, we're talking to her
daughter today at four twenty five o'clock hour. Will do
pick the porn. We'll end it up. We heard it
here first, your calls, text and talkbacks all day long.
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim to my love my
lovely Mary Danters, cos Miss deb Roberts. Hello there, straight
head Producer g Brad Joab Good afternoon, four seven nine

(00:57):
six four one. That's how you call us. Text us
easily at seven to seven zero three one. Find us
on social Instagram, Facebook, at the Jim Colbert Showing X
just at Jim Colbert Showing all day, every day at
Jim Culbert Live dot com. This where you can check
us out on YouTube. Get involved with our question of
the day. Be part of the chat room over there,
and if you want to send a talk back that's
easy as well. Just grab the iHeartRadio app, go to

(01:17):
real radio and use that mike to send your comment
over to Jack. We'll get you on there no time.
You two friends can be a radio superscar. Your three
o'clock keyword is fun if you in go to a
real radio dot FM and send that away for your
chance at one thousand dollars. Fun guys, that is your
three o'clock heyword. Good luck.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
We have you in.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Tell us my least a keyword. It freaks me out
every time you and Jack go to spell it.

Speaker 4 (01:40):
Yeah you and I'm like, no, no, okay, it's fun.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
How's the Friday been today?

Speaker 5 (01:46):
Guys?

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Oh wait, what was that?

Speaker 2 (01:47):
Your right? I said? Ha's the Friday, and that's all
you had to say. App yeahah right.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
Why well it's been tough you guys first full week.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Oh yeah, that's right. Yeah you get still together.

Speaker 3 (02:02):
I'm exactly No, I meant us working. Oh I see,
and apparently yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
You are good. He can tolerate you for that much longer.

Speaker 3 (02:10):
You can't know we're fine. I mean, that's three weeks
tomorrow already.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
If you can believe it, let's worried about that relationship?
Then this one? Is it really already three weeks? Can
you believe it?

Speaker 3 (02:21):
No?

Speaker 5 (02:21):
No?

Speaker 6 (02:22):
Really?

Speaker 3 (02:22):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:23):
Wait one two?

Speaker 2 (02:25):
Tomorrow is the third week.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
Our third week, third week anniversary?

Speaker 7 (02:30):
This?

Speaker 2 (02:31):
Huh?

Speaker 3 (02:31):
How about that wedding April April twenty fifth, Yeah, dude,
it's May ninth tomorrow was Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
That's two weeks, yes, two weeks. It's three saturdays, but
it's two weeks. It's the third Saturday it was the wedding. Yeah,
you want it to be so much longer already? Does
it already feel like three weeks? Is that what you're saying? Oh,
that's what it is. Yesterday, That's exactly what you have

(02:57):
to say. I feel like just yesterday so fresh, it's
like new Flowers.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
Well, the beautiful thing is we already had twelve years
in Yeah, yeah, you know that's what's.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
Kind of weird about it. You guys are so together
so long. I almost it's almost like that Kurt Russell
Goldie Honting. You're like, why even do it? You've been
together so long now, it's almost like your common law.
And if Florida had that, you would be right. I
don't know, seven years, I think. I think it's longer
than that. But either way, I don't believe that Florida
does have common law. No, they don't have it anymore.
But I remember I believe because we used to talk

(03:24):
about this on the Monsters quite a bit, that common
law in Florida. Look at this Ubjack you if you
don't mind her somebody, I don't care if you can
text me, but I thought common law, if you lived
together for seven years, that you were like considered common
law married.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Well, I mean, part of the reason why we decided
to do it was because, of course it does deepen
your bond, right, it's the next step tax purposes and
health reasons. Yeah, I mean I would have no legal right,
nor would he to me with something.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
That happened, which is bananas.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
It is bananas.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
And to think that in just a matter of minutes,
everything that you thought you had a right to and
a right to have an opinion about, all of a
sudden legally you have nothing.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Those cases are some of the most horrifying Yes, in
the legal world alone, you know, plus I love them.

Speaker 6 (04:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
Yeah, January one, nineteen sixty eight. Oh, that's when it ended.
When it ended, Yeah, every common law marriage in Florida.
And how many years was? Wow? It was it seven
or ten?

Speaker 8 (04:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Yeah, it was a certain length. And I remember we
used to talk about this quite often because people used
to say, well, you're common all marriage, right exactly, that's
an And I think one of our attorney friends back
in the day said, I don't think they do that anymore,
and then we got told definitely, it does not happen anymore,
all right. Four seven nine one six four one text
tests seven seven zero three one. I have to ask, Okay, So,

(04:47):
for people who do not know Dev's husband, Chris is
a gigantic wrestling fan. As a matter of fact, two
of the best men at his at the wedding were
that are in the world of the WWE yeah. Yeah,
are his best man.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
Specifically, he's Byron Saxton for those who watch Monday Night
Wrong right.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
Yeah. So with that said, I wanted to ask, has
Chris watched this Hogan documentary that's out there.

Speaker 3 (05:09):
It's funny you talk about that, because we he has.
He's watched like the first two episodes of it. Yeah,
and he talked about, you know, how important it was
to watch it because of course he's a little bit
younger than me, so he was a child during the
you know, the height of the Hulk Hogan, right, so
to kind of see what that legacy, how it lives on.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
So it's been an interesting watch.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Yeah, yeah, how many? How many?

Speaker 3 (05:31):
Totally it's four I believe, so he's only two wins.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Yeah. I finished it last night. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah,
because I talked about the first couple episodes you shouldn't
read a book. Yeah yeah, and I would hit and
I and I finished it last night. And I have
to tell you, man, if you haven't watched the Hulk
Cogan documentary, it's a Netflix production, I believe. Yeah, man,
oh man, oh, he's goodding it. It's good for the

(05:57):
wrong reason. It tells a very sad story. Very well.
So it's good for the wrong reason. You watch it
and you see a guy that, at one point, like
they said at the dock, was the most recognizable human
being on planet Earth. And I don't know that you
make a whole bunch of arguments, like other than the
Pope and a couple other people, maybe Michael Jackson. I mean,

(06:17):
this cat was. I mean, and again he had a
giant advantage, you know, six seven, three hundred pounds, you know,
tan you sculle it the whole nine yards, and you know,
he was very easy to spot. But man, oh man,
what a tragic story this guy had. It was. It
was man, the shame involved toward the end of that
thing was just overwhelming. I told my wife, I said,

(06:40):
I have a hard time watching this because of that
projected shame you can get, or that embarrassment when you
see somebody you know, getting embarrassed and you and you
feel so bad for them, it almost affects you. That's
kind of how that last episode was.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
The opposite of Scheidenfreud, right.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
Oh yeah, yeah, you don't want and I you know,
in the end, not a sympathetic character. A bunch of
the stuff that he did as Terry Blea as he
tries to kind of drive a wall between those two people.
You know, man, it just it's man, I don't know.
It's hard. It's hard. It's hard to consume. And I'll
tell you why it sucks, because you don't want that

(07:17):
part of his life to overwhelm the part of his
life that changed people's lives. Because until all this stuff
sorted happening, primarily the sex tape is what really began
the downturn.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
But with that, I have you seen it, I understand.
But what I'm saying is you have no idea how
lazy someone can be. Literally, that's he put me to sleep.
And then the guy's done, and what does he do?
He sits and sits up and asks if the shirt
makes him look fat.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
I've wondered that. Didn't he apologize? Yes, because it happened
too quickly, and he said he ate too much. I mean,
I'm sorry, too much spaghetti. It hurt my hope. Tommy
Lee born with no hands. Yeah, it's way different than
Tommy experienced. Yeah, from a girl's perspective, way different.

Speaker 3 (08:06):
I mean you felt like apologizing to her as well, just.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
For watching you. God, oh mighty I'm sorry, sister. Yeah,
well I'm sorry too. Too many buckle U can't get
those three seconds back?

Speaker 3 (08:19):
Does this shirt make me look both? Well no, but.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
You can still finish. You can still finish the evening news.
We have plenty of time. Sports ain't even hit yet exactly.

Speaker 4 (08:30):
That's not the bathroom break.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
But look, man, even if you're not a fan of wrestling,
I still think it is one of those those cautionary
tales of life that you know, just show you that
regardless of what heights you get, you still have to
maintain yourself to kind of continue that legacy through And boy, man,
you just let the wrong people near him. That's all
it is, and it really is. Should take a page.

(08:53):
It's another cautionary tale of the people you should let
near you. And oddly, yeah, yeah, well don't even name really, yeah,
they don't mention his name. But I will tell you
that the weirdest part of it, and for anybody who
knows about Hulk or whatever, the guy that was his
right hand man was Jimmy the Jimmy Hart Mouth of
the South, Jimmy Hart. And I'll tell you it's weird

(09:13):
because we've known them for a very long time we
met Jimmy a bunch, actually way more than Hulk. And
Jimmy is Jimmy. Like when you meet Jimmy on the
street he has that suit on, you get the feeling
like that's what he wears to bed, Like those crazy
suits with all the sequins and the airbrushing. That's who
he is. And he's a great He really is a
super cool guy. But what you realize is is like

(09:35):
that guy really was his only actual friend. Yeah, it
was his only real confidant. And you don't get the
feeling that Hulk gave him credit for it, But that
guy was destroyed more than anybody, and it really was
a shame that he never got the respector due for
being just kind of a clown that walked around with Hulk,
but in reality, he was the guy's entire support system. Yeah,

(09:57):
crazy Jimmy Hart's gonna be one of our guests at
the Monster event in Mount Dora on June fifth, all
part of the Monster universe. Wow. Really, Yeah, Jimmy's a
great you know he And and again I think Russ
has had a good relationship with Jimmy for quite a
while because I think Jimmy is the one who ran
the store full hold you know when they did the
store or did the thing over there daytime, right right.

(10:19):
I think he was kind of I think he was
kind of the face of that. By the way, I
need to have a conversation with the event planner for
the City of Mount Dora because Russ's Monster event inviting
everyone from the Monster universe. I saw the list. I
think we're at about fifty people right now. Yeah, just
just that used to be an affiliated with the show
one my weekend in one way, shape or another. Yeah,

(10:41):
I mean the quote lobby party is going to be
turning into the main event.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, which is so funny because yesterday, you know,
the event coordinator says to me in the kitchen, Yeah,
I just email Jackie's getting his his driveway pressure watched.
I'm like, you know more about my bosses like that.
I had to go to work to find this stuff,
all right?

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Four seven text A seven seven Are you guys dating
on the side? Zero three one? Like I said, we're
gonna talk to Deander. Her mom is the one who
had her driveway stolen. What a story, right, hey, look
at a driveway? Well they get ja barbecue your TV
now a player. They took my driveway.

Speaker 4 (11:16):
And that's not cheap. It's not that is not cheap.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Found another show again. I've told you guys, my wife
is the absolute dream world TV watcher. She brings up
whatever is on the screen, she clicks on it, and
she clicked on a banger last night. It was and
it's a game show kind of reality show.

Speaker 9 (11:32):
You know.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
It's kind of one of those things that excuse me
your hear it's got caught up in Is that the
two words that are mister and beast? No, it does not. Okay, good,
it has the words a million in secret in there,
and I'll tell you a little bit about that a
little bit later. Living next to an Airbnb, Jamie Presley
makes a life decision that a lot of people in

(11:54):
Hollywood are making. They're actually calling this service like the
new Hollywood four oh one K. So we got a
talk about today? What do you got for news, Debb?

Speaker 3 (12:01):
Well, for news, we're going to talk about a Delta
employee unfortunately dying at Orlando International Airport. Also, a canvas
breach is affecting not just the school's nationwide, but local
students as well. And the priciest home listed in the
US is found here. No, it's not Jimmy's house. It's
a different house. But we'll talk about where that is

(12:22):
and more coming up next during JCS news.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
All right, guys, don't forget fun. Fun, that is your
three o'clock keyword. Slide over to real radio out of
him and send that away for your chance at one
thousand dollars back in a second, dev's News and more
than Jim Colbert Shows day put.

Speaker 10 (12:43):
My wife and I were together ten years before she
popped the question fussly during Happy Hour one night DM.
She goes, I'd like to formalize our arrangement. You need
to bring something other than your you know what to
the table. I was flabbergasted.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
What's the what's the you know what? What's it? What's
what's the what's it? Dumb up? No magic? One fun,
Go to a real radio out of him and send
that away for your chance in one thousand bucks. A reminder,
if you're playing the game, you gotta keep your phone near,
turn it on and up, and answer it regardless of

(13:27):
what you see on the screen. Could be no caller,
I D could be a bunch of crazy things. Phone
number you do not recognize you have to pick it
up if you're in the game, because that's how they
tell you you've won. So again, your keyword is fun,
good luck. Three winners so far. Let's get seven seven
before we love that. Let's run it for sure. Welcome back.
I am Jim Jackson and his writer were there and

(13:49):
dead has your news. Let's get it.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
It's time for JCS news.

Speaker 11 (13:56):
Wow, that's this guy kind of push name on everything.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
It's in my contract, dude.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
There's news on the Jim Colberg Show.

Speaker 3 (14:02):
And JCS News is brought to you by that mortgage guy.
Don give him a listen tomorrow morning when he's host
of the Home Loans radio show, and hang out with
him after your wedding.

Speaker 4 (14:12):
It's a lot of fun. Yeah, yeah, all right.

Speaker 3 (14:14):
A new case of hauntavirus has been found on an
island where a luxury cruise ship made a stop last month.
The MVY Hondias has seen a number of confirmed cases
of the virus, typically spread by rodents. UK officials said
today another suspected case has been detected on Tristan d'acuna,
a remote island in the South Atlantic. The World Health

(14:35):
Organization says five people from this ship have the virus well.
Three others are suspected of contracting it. Three people have died.
The newly discovered case on the island is a strain
that can be transmitted from human to human. Meanwhile, the
CDC is going to dispatch staffers to the Canary Islands
to escort American passengers off of that Haunt of virus

(14:57):
stricken cruise ship. According to reports from CNA and the CDC,
staffers are planning to escort the ship's American passengers back
to the US aboard a charter flight. One source also
said another team has been dispatched to meet those passengers
in Nebraska, where they are going to be escorted and
reportedly be placed in quarantine once they land to ensure

(15:18):
that the virus does not have a chance to spread.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
Yeah, you will not be meeting the captain on this flight.

Speaker 4 (15:23):
No, you will not.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
That guy will be sealed up in the front.

Speaker 3 (15:26):
He's going to be in the first camster looking bubble
that they're just going to roll.

Speaker 2 (15:30):
Yeah, dressing all right.

Speaker 3 (15:35):
Unfortunately, there's an investigation at Orlando International Airport where a
Delta employee has died the cause of the worker's death
hasn't been disclosed, but earlier reports say the death occurred
after a tug hit a jet bridge. One flight was
canceled and operations were temporarily paused. Delta Airlines expressed condolences
and said it's providing support to the employee's family and

(15:58):
the Orlando team.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
You know, when you guys are on planes, like when
you're out there, when you're at the airport, you're waiting
to borderm do you ever look out at what's happening
around the planes. And I'm gonna say this, I don't
mean to be insensitive, and trust me, I'm not. It
really is amazing there aren't more serious injuries around airports.
It looks absolutely terrifying down there. Man, there's stuff going everywhere.

(16:23):
You're going planes. It's crazy that the food tructure coming
I'm responsible for, you know, jet fuel. The other one
is responsible for getting poop poo off the plane. And
the whole time they're loading food and drinks, there's luggage.

Speaker 3 (16:37):
So much happen down when that train that plane is
rolling to a stop, you gotta wave the light sticks
than the right man.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
You have your head on a swivel when you're that's crazy.
I've never known anybody that's done that, that has worked
like on the ground in an airport like that, I've
never known that. I bet they're someone listening right now.

Speaker 4 (16:54):
Yep, and we may know them all right.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
A ransomware attack is not fully resolved, and it's still
paralyzing a major cloud based learning management platform called Canvas.
And again this is coming toward the end of the year.
We only have a couple more weeks left in the
schools that means final exams. So the platform is used
by eight thousand schools and universities nationwide and is impacting Broward, Brevard,

(17:19):
Orange County school districts as well as fiu UF and others.

Speaker 7 (17:24):
I would imagine at this point there's a lot of
panic scrambling to look, is there any old backups we have?
Is there any other options we have? Is there any
bugs in this ransomware that maybe we could fix it ourselves?
So I'm sure right now it's all hands on deck.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
Codred cybersecurity expert Alan Crowitz says students should not log
in on personal devices or click on anything. Luckily, Canvas's
parent company says there's no indication right now that passwords,
social security numbers, or financial information were compromised, but the
hackers are giving schools until Tuesday, May twelve to negotiate

(17:57):
a ransom deal before releasing the key to one's scramble
the data. Wow, all right, how many students are set
to graduate from the University of Central Florida this weekend?

Speaker 2 (18:08):
By the way, the hackers, not only do we need
an elite squad, track them down whatever country they're in,
I don't care, no borders, no boundaries, been't stopping us.
And take them where Jack, before they go to Knucklehead Island.
You know what you do? You pinch their ear really hard,
their ear lobe that hurts minimum twenty years. Maybe the

(18:29):
back that you pinch the back of their arm, Yeah,
or you have a camera slide down and almost take
your finger off. Just take their hard candy away, Jack.
It's basically the same thing. Give them a horse eat
and corn on the die there purple nkle and then
it's off to Knucklehead Island.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
Right, super wedgie where they can taste in the back
of their.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
Underwearf has God what seventy or eighty thousand people that
go there or whatever?

Speaker 3 (18:55):
This is the amount of students set to graduate just
this weekend starting today.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
I'll go forty eight hundred.

Speaker 12 (19:03):
Ooo.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
That's a lot. Yeah, but actually that's I'm going to
go ten thousand, all.

Speaker 3 (19:11):
Right, Jack, over ten thousand.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Stay.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
It's had to graduate from the University of Central Florida.
This weekend ceremonies there you go, started at nine am
today and continue through tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
I bet they're only in the d's right now or
the e's. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Most UCF graduates are Florida residents who say they plan
to stay in the state after receiving their degrees.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
And I know, Jack, you're a UCF alom.

Speaker 3 (19:38):
I am. My husband's a UCF alum. It's amazing to
see how much that school has grown since I moved
here in eighty nine. When it was you know, it
was small. Now it's second only what University of Arizona.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
Great Magnet Schools, Space of Engineering. I mean, it's some
of the most medical. It was. The student body when
I went. I graduated in ninety nine and I took
ten years off and went back to school graduated ninety nine.
Student body was under thirty thousand at the time. Wow,
it's like almost triple Yeah. Yeah, I think there's only
one other school that's bigger, right.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
I think it's the University of Arizona. Yeah, yeah, I
think that's the only one.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
All right.

Speaker 3 (20:12):
A new law will protect Floridians from hyper scale data centers.
That's what Governor Ron Desanta said yesterday when he signed
Senate Bill four eighty four into law. It bans utilities
from passing data center costs, including electricity costs, onto residential
and small business customers. It also requires large scale users
to pay their full cost of service, and it gives

(20:34):
local governments the right to reject data center development to
Santa says, these are much needed projections for taxpayers and
our natural resources, because I don't know if you guys
have seen the map of proposed locations around Florida for
data centers. It's ridiculous, it is, it's terrifying.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Saw a story today, Have you ever heard one running?

Speaker 5 (20:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (20:54):
So A saw one today and it says, if you
live within this far of a data center, this is
a mile this is what you here twenty four hours
a day. Now, this wasn't a mile away, but it
was a good couple hundred yards away where the building,
although gigantic, fit within the photograph and it sounds like
about six jet engines running at full blast the.

Speaker 4 (21:15):
Entire time, the entire time.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
It is crazy. By the way, the power soak is
so big on those that some of the communities the
power can't be supplied to them by the service because
it actually is more than a small city. It takes
more power. So that's why a lot of what I've
read is is that they're like like Zuckerberg and those
guys are talking about building any small news ye new.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Plant, Yeah, many reactors for that because but for I
think the bigger issue, especially in a state like Florida,
is our water. Right, yeah, well we already have business
entities pulling millions of gallons of water out of our
awkward for every day we can't afford to have a day?

Speaker 2 (21:49):
Is that the sound you have, there's some music with
it that sucks you have because yeah, yeah underneath So
one I saw today was way louder than that, and
it was and they were probably four or five hundred
yards away.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
It was a The one I saw was a woman
who had played the recording off of her phone like
a city council meeting, saying this is what it sounds
like if you live next Florid to one of these things.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
Could not imagine.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
And again, you know they're going up real quickly.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Welco, NARWORL. It's like everybody gets Tonight's yeah.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Exactly exactly. There's a little less pain at the pump.
In Florida at Triple A says the state wide average
is four point fifty a gallon. That's down two cents
from yesterday, but still sharply higher than even a week ago,
with prices up twenty two cents nine cents down book
the crew I know Diesel is averaging five thirty six statewide.

Speaker 4 (22:38):
That's also down two cents overnight.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
Maybe you're like me, you have that little plastic bag
that was you're a postal person put in your mailbox
a couple of weeks and weekends ago. Okay, And that's
because Orlando and several other Florida cities are going to
take part in this weekend's Stamp Out Hunger food Drive.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
The letter Carrier food Drive is always the second Saturday in.

Speaker 4 (23:00):
Yeah, and it's it's an annual event. It makes it
so easy.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
It's put on by the National Association of Letter Carriers.
They couldn't make it any easier, even if you still
don't have the plastic bag that they may be dropped off.
If you have just another even a paper bag and
you have some non perishables, leave it up by your mailbox.
Your postal carrier will pick it up.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
I'm donating avocados and bread.

Speaker 3 (23:21):
Recommended idem no Jimmy No include cereal Jimmy, pasta, canned
fruits and vegetables, soups and juice. All donations will benefit
local food banks. Monetary donations are also being accepted. Yeah,
and kudos to our postal carriers because I know for
them this is a it's it's good because they're helping
the community, but it.

Speaker 4 (23:40):
Also makes it just but their day is so much longer, not.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Even twice as much work. It's got to be like
four times.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
Work at least because it's all that heavy lifting.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Love of those people been on that on that roll
for about twenty years, and they're like, no way, exactly
five knees. Yeah, that's the first day they submit vacation
guy for exact Isn't that the truth? I'll take that
second Saturday in May, please.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
I mean, I want to do good for the community
and everything, but come on, all right, exactly exactly, all right.

Speaker 4 (24:16):
Kodak Black.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
Yeah, he has bonded out of the Orange County jail.
The Great nominated rapper bonded out yesterday after he was
booked on drug trafficking charges. Court record shows arrest thems
from an incident in Orlando last November. But Kodak Black
was also sentenced in twenty twenty two and twenty twenty
three and other drug related charges.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
Let's get that guy back out, I for sure. Let's
give this guy as many swings as possible. All right.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
The social media influencer who accuses former Miami Dolphins wide
receiver Tyreek Hill of breaking her leg in twenty twenty
three was back on the witness stand for a second day.
Sephie Hall describe feeling his body and packed hers during
a football drill at his Southwest Ranches home.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
Oh my god, and.

Speaker 11 (25:01):
Immediately I feel pain through my by and.

Speaker 5 (25:08):
Lose my breast and immediately and.

Speaker 13 (25:11):
All my love.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
She admitted they had a sexual relationship. She even stayed
at Hill's home for days after suffering the injury.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Wow, really walk away soon?

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Jack Hell denies the allegations and claims she tripped over
a dog while playing football. Haul is suing for compensatory
and punitive damages.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
Good luck.

Speaker 3 (25:37):
Uh And this next story just reminds you why for
parents out there, grandparents' aunts and uncles, there are just
some people you wish were not given the title influencer,
m because a Sarasota, a Sarasota social media looks maxer
influencer is the latest to face charges, this time following
an investigation into the possession of child.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
Sex abuse material.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Oh yeah, The Sheriff's office says eighteen year old Mason Hall,
who goes by Hullo online, was taken into custody after
detectives reviewed evidence and seized his phone. Investigators later obtained
an arrest warrant charging hull with fifteen counts following a
forensic examination of his device. Again, he is eighteen years old.

(26:19):
How many followers did he have on TikTok.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Man, of all the things like if you're going to
bring attention to yourself, one point nine three.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
Hundred and fifty thousand followers on TikTok so. I mean
quite an audience for an eighteen year old hair old,
eighteen year old kid.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
Who doesn't even have a full frontal lobe development exactly.

Speaker 3 (26:41):
But he's too busy knocking it around with a hammer
because he's a looksmaxer.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
He's going to get his rear lobed. They developed that
real nice for him. Guess what one way ticket Knucklehead.

Speaker 4 (26:51):
Island, Coilhead Island.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
Absolutely also, I think they really handle his throat lob
very well. I has wound that give him a pinch
right on the back of the yard. He's gonna do
this all day.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
Although his account has since been turned private since his arrest.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
Yeah no, no, let's the platform. Immediately, you lose all
social platforms, I mean forever.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
I can't imagine he'll be allowed to because again, he
was possession of child sex abuse material.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
All right.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
Shakira has just reclaimed her crown as the undisputed voice
of the World Cup with the twenty twenty sixth sim
We're down over there twenty twenty six tournament just under
a month away.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
FIFA has officially tapped.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
At the Colombian superstar for the game's new anthem. So
the track is called Die Die that's Italian for coman,
Come on. This will be Shakira's fourth time performing for
the World Cup, following in the footsteps of her global

(27:55):
smash Waka wakaw Shakira takes to the stage at Miami's
Cassea Center on a lie.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
First, I passed her in the hallway here once. Yeah,
she's like four foot one if that? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Any tiny Did you know that she comes from the
same village that Sophia Vergara comes from.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
No, I did not know that.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
And they're both naturally blonde, really, which is crazy? Like that?

Speaker 2 (28:28):
All right, the impression you didn't know you needed?

Speaker 3 (28:31):
I thank you so much. Are you guys getting your
wives flowers for Mother's Day?

Speaker 4 (28:39):
Which is interesting? Do you guys get your wives anything?

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Oh man, that's a great question. She's not my mom,
that's right, that's right. I did when when? Oh man?
All right, I get a card? Okay, usually not a gift.
And we don't do the flower thing anymore. We talked
about that for sure.

Speaker 3 (28:54):
Well, if you are getting some Mother's Day flowers before
they make it to your vase, just know they have
to pass a very high stakes inspection at Miami International Airport.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
They're not just here to move flowers quickly to get
it out to the market. Their role is to protect
the American agriculture, our economy, and really our way of.

Speaker 3 (29:13):
Life, US customs and border protections. Danielle Alonzo says agricultural
specialist hand inspect. Think about this, hand inspect the millions
of flower stems for hitchhiking, pests, and diseases. Most of
these blooms are coming in from Columbia and Ecuador. Miami
handles what percent of all floral imports into the US.

Speaker 2 (29:34):
It's a gross amount.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
Jack percent? Yeah, points Jimmy, it's a ninety one percent.
And as you can imagine, a single invasive moth or
beetle could devastate Florida's local crops and where our farmers
are already dealing with enough. Since mid April, inspectors have
cleared over one billion individual stems with a bee with

(29:57):
a bee?

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Whow imagine? Isn't that crazy?

Speaker 2 (30:01):
One to got to pick it up? Stand exactly all right?

Speaker 3 (30:09):
A four hundred million dollar mega mansion in is now
the most expensive home listed in the US.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Got to be in Jupiter or Miami or.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
How about bel Air, California. No really, yeah, I thought
you said it was Florida.

Speaker 4 (30:26):
I did not.

Speaker 3 (30:27):
I said the most priceiest home listed in the US
can be found here.

Speaker 2 (30:35):
Trickery, strickery, tainted and unclean. Oh thank you.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
It's also the most expensive public residential listing in the world.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
Now.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
If sold near the asking price, it would break the
record for the most expensive home ever sold in the US.
The current record is about two hundred and forty million
dollars for a New York City apartment that was sold
in twenty nineteen. The potentially record breaking property, called the
Crown Jewel of Los Angeles, hit the real estate market recently.

(31:06):
It sits on eight acres of land, has thirty nine
bedrooms fifty nine bathrooms across multiple structures, totaling seventy thousand
square feet.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
At a wildfire suppression.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
The estate and the hills was completed in twenty eighteen
after about a decade of construction.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
Is it that Russian guy that owned it? There was
an oligarch out there that owned a gigantic piece of property,
but also Aaron Spelling's house. For the longest time was
considered like the most opulent piece of property in LA
in that area, And when you drive by that thing,
it's like it's crazy. By the way, it's so funny
when you go to you go to Los Angeles, We're
gonna drive and see all the stars houses, you aren't.
And here's why. He's thirty foot hedges everywhere you go

(31:48):
right now. If you love hedges, you've hit the paydr
because you're gonna see as many of those as you want.
You're not going to see anybody's house. You want to
see a celebrities house, you'll have to settle for Lucille
Ball's old home.

Speaker 5 (31:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Yeah, really that's the and they don't cover And by
the way, all those rooms and stuff, I don't even
know what that's about. Shaquille. Just to Shaquille O'Neil recently
did an interview about this house he built out here. Yeah,
and went to mirror and he goes like, there are
He goes, I was actually scared to go to parts
of the house because we haven't been there in so long.
We didn't know what was down there. He was like
that series ages. I didn't even go to that side

(32:19):
of the house because nobody was there for months, and
I was like, I didn't know what was down there,
so I never went down there. He goes, I lived
in like three rooms. Isn't that crazy? It's great.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
I don't understand the need for that. And I'm with you,
Jimmy I think there's got to be property in Star
Island or somewhere in South Florida that would sell easily
for close to four hundred million dollars.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Marklogo I think has actually worth about half a billion dollars,
pretty close to that.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
Well, at least what's buried there. And that concludes your
JCS news.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
Him. That's right, guysh for another primetime kitchen here with
their buddy Faia's car from the Orlando Weekly. We'll get
to Faias in one second. First thing is for It's
all brought to you by our good friends over Tools
Ace Hardware. Summer will be here in no time. It
is time to step it up on your back patio.

(33:06):
Make that area the best area for all your friends
and family to come hang out, barbecue, drink it up,
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All the smoking woods, injectables, marinades. It's all there. You'll

(33:29):
love these guys. Fourteen locations in central Florida. Find yours
today at toolsaceardware dot com. Guys, good loud for mister
Fiscara Canadian. Wow. Uh we talked about your believe your
home country yesterday on the air Tanzania.

Speaker 9 (33:49):
Yeah. Did you hear talk about.

Speaker 2 (33:51):
What would you think? Okay, so we were talking. It's
kind of hard, that's a great question. We found that
there's only a portion of the world that allows people
to live there to do this, and this is a
very common thing that every human being does North, a
lot of in the North America, most of Europe, Japan, Australia,

(34:13):
Australia and Tanzania, and of all of Africa. I think
Tanzania is the one of the only country that allows
this to happen.

Speaker 9 (34:23):
Let's go with fracking.

Speaker 2 (34:26):
No, no, Tanzania is the only country in Africa that
we can find that allows you to flush your toilet paper.
How crazy is that? Right? All Rightfi has joined us
from the Orlando Weekly or landoekly. If you want to
check out fis this stuff, you can do that. Every

(34:46):
single week he calls us to tell us what's happening
in Orlando. When it comes to food and drink, he
keeps his ear to the ground for the best spots
out there for you guys to go and try out
some of the newest flavors in the city and some
of the newest spots and what we have. We usually
start off with the review. Let's get do it.

Speaker 6 (35:03):
Yes, So this week's review was a place called Yummy Katsu.
It's at fifty seventy five Edgewater Drive, just north of
what I like to call the shabby sector of College Park,
just north of there, and they specialize in breaded cutlets,
Japanese and Korean breaded cutlets and breaded cutlets. You know,
our love affair with breaded cutlets actually goes back around

(35:26):
nine hundred years when a Benedictine monk presented some sort
of crumbed loin to some famished monastics. And since then,
you know, we've got veal milanaise, and we've got like,
you know, a Wiener schnitzol and chicken fried steak. And
speaking of Tanzania, my one of my favorite breaded meats

(35:46):
is a thing called cutlass, which you know, which is
a Swahili word for really cutlet. But it's a deep
fried beef beef cutlet that's you know, it's it's coated
in eggs and you know, spread cornsent anyway, know, we
just have this love affair with breaded cutlets. But of late,
you know, I personally have been gravitating towards katsu, and

(36:08):
I know many other Orlando ones have as well. And
there's a place, this place, you know, on Edgewater Drives
called It's called Yummi Katsu. And like I said, they
specialize in more Korean style katsu, but they're taking the
Japanese cotsu and just sort of, you know, putting a
very a very slight twitch to it.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
So let me tell you real quick and ask you
a question. So when you go to Dobu, the famous
spot over in at East End Market, and they have
some famous wings there, and I noticed that the crumb
that's on this katsu that's on the screen right now
jump over live dot com is similar to that. Is
it a similar technique to that? I mean, yes, similar.

Speaker 6 (36:48):
I want to say that the wings at Domo were
coated and maybe rice flours, okay, gotcha super. But with
traditional katsu, it's usually it's usually coated in egg and
flour and panco yeah, pincoa right, yeah, So and it's
typically deep fried. You know, when I do it at home,
I shallow fry it. But it's I find it's not

(37:10):
quite the same like in this place. It's dedicated to
all things kotsu. And if you're if you happen to
be close to your to your phone or a computer,
you know, if you pull up my Instagram account, it
it's by us Kara. I'm telling you some of these
photos that I've taken, you know, not to toot my
own horn.

Speaker 9 (37:24):
But they're pretty damn delightable looking.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
So tell me about the sauce that's on that plate
with that chicken katsu there.

Speaker 6 (37:31):
The jack is so that that very first photo chicken. Yeah,
you're right, it's chicken kotsu. It's a chicken curry. Kotsu
and Japanese and Korean curries are typically are very well balanced,
you know, that have that balance of a slightly sweet
and savory and and that pepperinus that that that curry brings.
And when you order a platter of the of this,

(37:52):
when you order the chicken curry cots so you get rice,
you get cabbage, you get some soup, you get the
you know the ban chon Korean banchan, which you know,
the usually consists of a kimchi and and pickled radishes
things like that.

Speaker 9 (38:05):
We also got like the fish kotsu.

Speaker 6 (38:07):
Which is made of swine, which is a very sort
of popular white fish. And and for and for some reason,
when they serve that, the rice that you get is
it's it's got like a sprinkle of like salty seaweed.

Speaker 2 (38:18):
It's so good.

Speaker 9 (38:18):
It's like whatever that is, it's sessing me salty seaweed.

Speaker 6 (38:21):
And again, if you're following on on the on the
YouTube channel, what you're looking at there is the fish
kotsu and they're like thick. And let me tell you
the the thing with katsu, the thing that makes that
draws people there is that is that crackly christ when
you first bite into it. If you don't have that,
then it just but the but the other thing is
that you know, the meats, whether it's fish, whether it's pork,

(38:41):
whether it's chicken, are so are still very juicy that
it doesn't dry out. And if you're looking at this
photo right now, this monsters things like the size of
my head. This is the King Dawn kotsu. It's a
it's a breaded pork cutlet and the pork is like
pounded so so thin that it you know it it
increases in circumference size.

Speaker 9 (39:03):
And then it's deep fried.

Speaker 6 (39:04):
And you would think that, you know, something like this,
you know, the meat would be kind of dried, but
again not dry at all. So it's and it's a
massive thing. It's you know, I didn't even you know,
show all the other kutramm. But it comes with this
sort of demi glossish type of sauce for you to
dip into, and it's just it's all fantastic. It's it's
it's all great.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
I gotta tell you know, it's so funny. Just somebody
texted and said, wow, another Asian restaurant, which we love you.
We know you love those flavors. But you know, look
at these photographs. This looks like an incredibly approachable if
you are scared of any type of Asian or ethnic food.
That it's basically fried meat. But it's similar to how
you would make a chicken parmegan. It's almost like the same.

(39:42):
It's almost the same exact way you do that with
a bunch of different meats and great sauces and stuff
to eat with it. I mean, it looks delicious.

Speaker 6 (39:49):
It is and and and actually Japanese and Korean katsu
is modeled very very similarly. It's very similar to to
Wiener Schnitzel. That's where they got the inspiration from. So
if you like Wiener Schnitzel, if you like German fair,
you will like this restaurant.

Speaker 9 (40:02):
It's great.

Speaker 6 (40:02):
Now that said, they also have a separate sort of
Korean menu. And what you're looking at here is a soup.
It's a soundbou soup. It's a vegetarian soup. You can
you don't have to get the vegetarian, you can get
the ones with the meat. But this is like an.

Speaker 9 (40:14):
Infernal it's a very it's it's it's like a very
famous Korean soup. It's like very spicy. It's like red
and it's bold, and it's got a lot of tofu
in there.

Speaker 6 (40:24):
It's like radishes, you know, it's got that kimchi ish
type of flavor.

Speaker 9 (40:28):
And again it comes with so many things. It comes
with the rice.

Speaker 6 (40:30):
It actually comes with the raw egg, which you're like,
when you serve this this gurgling broth of soup, you
you crack an egg into it and then you sort
of like mix it all up and allow the egg
to cook into that broth.

Speaker 9 (40:42):
And yeah, it's just like so simple, it's so comforting,
so good.

Speaker 6 (40:46):
They also have like oudan noodles there, but honestly, if
you're gonna go to Yummy Katsu, go for the cotsu
because it is it's truly comforting an outside.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Just looking at that picture, my sinuses have cleared up.
It literally looks it would melt your face. But that's delicious, Okay,
Yomi Kottsu on edword to drive give it a try.
If I said it's great, let's move on H and
H Bagels, making it to town.

Speaker 9 (41:09):
Eight and eight.

Speaker 6 (41:10):
So this is like a legendary New York City bagel shop.
It's been around since nineteen seventy two, I think. And
they're going on this nationwide expansion tear and they'll be
opening on May the fourteenth in Altamont Springs. And I
have to look at this address. It is at a
nine thirty one State Route State Road for thirty four

(41:32):
in Alkmon Springs. It's near that Jamestown yea where the Jamestown, Yeah,
that's where it is. It'll be open in May fourteenth.
And now the first two hundred people that go there,
that that you know that line up and go there
will receive a mystery tote bag which will contain a
gift card which could be up to like one hundred bucks.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
Damn.

Speaker 6 (41:50):
So yeah, so May fourteenth in altumon H and H Bagels.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
All right, let's talk about is it James Kitchen coming
to Mills fifty.

Speaker 6 (41:59):
Yeah, James Kitchen, speaking of more Asian restaurant. Now, this
is going to be the third Jang's Kitchen. It's j
I A N G apostrophe s. It's gonna be the
third one. But the first two haven't even opened yet.
So the first one is going to be opening up
downtown on Robinson Street and that'll be I believe later
this month, and then the second one will open near

(42:19):
the Millennium Mall. But this one will open in Mills
fifty at one one one one East Colonial Drive, right
next door to a Go or May Chinese Cuisine and
right across the street from Mills Market, so pretty much
right in the corner of Mills and Colonial. And the
difference here is that they're going to be specializing in
and and Bang bang noodles. They're going to have like
an open kitchen. They're going to have all the all

(42:41):
the noodle maestros there slapping those noodles, and they're also
going to be making dumplings. But they won't have a
full bar. They'll offer like wine and beer and sock
and that sort of thing. But the other two, the
first two will have a full star.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
So now I want to ask you, man, is there
a glut of noodles in Orlando? We saw this with
a couple of things in the past, and it kind
of burned out. There's a glut of takoias for a while.
There was a glut of craft beer in Orlando for
a while, and now there seems to be a glut
of these hand shaped or hand pulled or slat noodles places.
I mean, is is it too manybody? I swear it
seems like every week another noodle place is opening.

Speaker 6 (43:16):
You used the word glud and I and I and
I sense like a negative tone here when you say
that you are there.

Speaker 9 (43:23):
Too many burger places? Are there not too many?

Speaker 8 (43:25):
You know?

Speaker 9 (43:26):
Sandwich shops? No?

Speaker 2 (43:27):
More is more?

Speaker 6 (43:28):
And more and more is good?

Speaker 2 (43:30):
Just asking the question. There have to be so agro
about it. You got it? Jill, Jill Canada. Yeah, okay,
more swimming in the glut of your negative bear. Yeah,
I need a bowl of that soup to fire my
ass up. All right, more Moore is good? All right? Well, okay,
Mother's Days up this weekend. And it says here you
you know where some Mother's Day afternoon tea may be happening.

Speaker 9 (43:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (43:52):
Yeah, So there's a couple of places, so one being
Sparrow right there in the North Quarter. It's it's uh,
you know, it's run by Wendy Lopez that James Beard
nominated Wendy Lopez. And so I believe it's on May
to ninth. I think it's on the Saturday, not on
the Sunday. There she's having like a special afternoon tea.
And I think it's only sixty eight bucks. I think

(44:12):
they have two seatings, one o'clock and three o'clock. Kids
are welcome to come, I believe kids I think are forty.
I think it's forty bucks for children twelve and under.
But if you want to do something nice for your mom,
afternoon tea, that's something like different. It's opposed to like
a brunch or you know, the typical sort of thing.
You know what afternoon Tea could be very nice. And
then over at Ravello at the Four Seasons, they're having

(44:36):
something called Spring in Bloom and they're also doing a
Mother's Day brunch and I think that one there, I
think that one might be like around eighty bucks. So
a chef Robbie Saber, who was like again like a
James Beard nominated pastry chef, will be doing all the
little things. And if you've never been to Ravello, by
the way, I went to Ravello last week and my god,

(44:56):
a chef Fabrizio Scinardi there. He's got like a whole
new spread of things and man of life. I everything
from like the you know, the the via Milanese to
like his octopus to oh, my god. I mean, if
you haven't been to Rebello, it's easily one of our
finest Italian restaurants in town.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
That's awesome. And the funny thing is we don't talk
about that that much. That's a good heads up. Ross
and his brother and family just went to June the
other night for his brother's birthday and he still contends
it's a you know, top three in the city. Do
you still contend that.

Speaker 6 (45:25):
Yeah, I top your restaurant June is outstanding. So for
people who follow my column last year, I mean June
the best new restaurant to open in twenty twenty five,
and and for sure it is. June is outstanding. The
chef there Jason Campbell, Nick Greco they you know, chef
Tommy there as well.

Speaker 9 (45:43):
They do an outstanding job. The drinks are great too.

Speaker 6 (45:47):
It's a it's a fairly focused menu, but I'm telling you,
I've tried everything on the menu and everything is so good.
Everything is just so good. Just get anything. Yeah, and
it's a great place for vegetarians to go to as well.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
Yeah. And his wife is that so that's probably why
they chose that. But always good to see you, buddy.
Where can people see and read all the cool things
you write about the great food and drink in the city.

Speaker 6 (46:05):
Find all of my stuff at Orlando Weekly dot com.
Click on Food and Drink and you'll see all my stuff,
the reviews, the columns, and of course follow me on
Instagram at It's fayas Kara I T S F A
I y A C K A r N. Follow mine
culinary Shenanigans.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
On there Orlando Weekly dot com. You can also read
the tip jar column, which is also a breakdown of
things happening this week or that week in the food
and drink world that means openings and closings as well.
Or added to that, always good to see Buddy, Good
lab for mister Fiascar. Guys, Happy Mother's Day, have yourself
a wonderful weekend. Buddy'll see you soon. You too, You
gotta buddy a right four seven nine one six four

(46:41):
one textas seven seven zero three one. Your four o'clock
keyword is coin c O I N go to real
radio dot FeMn. Send that away for your chance at
one thousand dollars coin. Guys, that is your four o'clock keyword.
Good luck back at a sec. Thanks for joining us
for primetime Kitchen brought to you by our friends over
at Tools as Hardware. Look, guys, when you're dialing in
your backyard of those special days, tools as you cover

(47:02):
with the best grills at are Weber, Trigger and of
course Big Green Egg. All the accessories you need, all
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(47:24):
Find yours today at toolsacecardware dot com.

Speaker 14 (47:27):
A little off topic, but back to the conversation about
shaw Day yesterday. Anybody that doesn't know about this artist,
you gotta dial in man. She is backed by one
of the most incredible precise bands that's ever played music,
and they stayed with her throughout her entire career. Pam
and I were very, very fortunate to see her live
on stage and beyond bucket list.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
Hello, Helloha, brought.

Speaker 15 (47:50):
Up Happy Friday, Colbert cru beatobs here. It's up Duba
that the fhps are out marked and unmarked in fourth
especially on Turnpike and four weight ahead of the Rolling
Love weekend. Oh man, everyone be safe, drive slow, you'll
get there. I'll wait to see everyone tomorrow at the

(48:11):
Gescolmo Bowling Tournament. And if you see me, come say
what's up right now?

Speaker 9 (48:16):
You'll have a good one.

Speaker 16 (48:19):
Thank I work in a middle school. I'm a lunch lady.
Middle school kids are the absolute worst, YEP, and it's
only getting worse because parents, guardians whomever are watching us
little Rudgrass and not take a responsibility. It is an
absolute nightmare. Thank you. Have a great weekend.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Thank you too. Thanks for the update for humanity. We're
human beings on the planet. They are they are. You
know you need to give them page right on the
back of the arm man right before you send them
the knucklehead island, right right. Maybe a little paint on
that ear low. Yeah, coin is your fourth lucky word.

(48:58):
Co I in slide over to real radio, don fim
and send that away for your chance in one thousand
bucks coin. That's that's the word, guys. Good luck and
a kick in the ass, A swift kick in the ass, yeah,
not a slow one.

Speaker 1 (49:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
Yeah, I'm Jim. There's deb make them go pick out
their own switch. Jack is here. I've had to do
that number of times. I was the league leader in
having wooden spoons broken over anything in my body. I'm
not even kidding, dude. I just had wooden spoon after
wooden spoon just broken over all of me. So earlier
this week, by the way, we talked about a I
think it was yesterday or Wednesday, yeah, or it could

(49:36):
have been six months ago. We were in a time
warp here. Yeah, I think it was Wednesday or Thursday.
We talked about this horrible case where this woman is
trying to sell her house. I think she and I
will get this cleared up in a second. She goes,
I believe, goes away from a little bit, but when
she comes back, someone has stolen her driveway, like pavers
to the tune of like five grand, like where are
you gonna park?

Speaker 9 (49:55):
Right?

Speaker 2 (49:55):
And then you remember she's trying to sell her house,
So it's not like you can just go well, I
guess we'll just kind of put this together a little
by little. If you're trying to sell your house, you
have to replace that driveway, and I believe we have.
Is it her daughter in law? No, it's her daughter.
It's her daughter, you guys, give it up? Good lab
for deandor what do you say? Okay, how are you
doing good? How are you not too bad? I mean,

(50:18):
am I close on my story? Is that what happened?
She went away and then came back and her driveway
was gone? Or so?

Speaker 5 (50:25):
She lives in Orlando with her boyfriend and has used
that property as a rental property for many years. Just
kind of you know, she always wanted to keep it
for me and my sister, and we were finally like, Mom,
go ahead and sell it. You use that money for
your retirement and everything. We don't need it. We have
our own houses. We don't need it. So another realtor

(50:49):
went by the home and called her and said, Lucy,
I thought you had your driveway repaired. So at the
end of the driveway was a crap because we're you know,
she's telling it. She wanted to look nice and it
was a very small repair that needed to be done.
At the end of the driveway had to repair, no problem.

(51:09):
Two weeks later, the entire driveway is gone.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Wow, unbelievable, Like no, no neighbors or anything, kind of
alerted to the fact that somebody was pulling up the driveway,
nobody went over and said, hey, you know, I mean,
I guess miss is it Miss Lucy? Lucy is your mom? Yes,
you know, I didn't know Lucy was doing this. I mean, like,
no neighbors kind of chimed in and did they do

(51:33):
it in the middle of the day. They had to
have right the next.

Speaker 5 (51:36):
Door neighbors saw someone there and she didn't think anything
of it. I guess it was just like, oh, I
thought you were having the driveway repair, Like why would
we just have the driveway repair? So she didn't really
say anything. Luckily, another neighbor did go over and get
their business card. Had it not been for that neighbor

(51:57):
getting the business card, we would not know who went there.

Speaker 2 (52:02):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (52:03):
Unfortunately it is a lot of older neighbors, so no
one really has like ring cameras or anything. Right, Yeah,
but we were able to find the company thanks to
the neighbor who had a business card, and we found
out who it was. And my mom called them and
they're like, well, I don't know, I'm sorry, And I
was told to stop doing the job. Okay, but you

(52:26):
didn't even check to see if there was permit pooled?
Where are you at the right address?

Speaker 6 (52:31):
Like?

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Nothing? So where are we right now?

Speaker 3 (52:34):
Me?

Speaker 2 (52:34):
Is she gonna get Is she gonna get her driveway
back from these people? Did they say that they're just
gonna keep the papers? What's going on? Where are these rocks?

Speaker 5 (52:41):
So it was a regular concrete driveway. They were prepping
it for pavers.

Speaker 2 (52:46):
Oh.

Speaker 5 (52:48):
If they even drove through the neighborhood, they realized not
one person has papers for driveways. We're not allowed that
in the age of a way that we are, gotcha,
you would think they pavers look nicer.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
But whatever.

Speaker 5 (53:02):
They told her basically, oh so sorry, we're not fixing it.

Speaker 2 (53:06):
Wow, really that's crazy. And when you but when they
say they stole the driveway, what are they talking about?

Speaker 17 (53:13):
Then it's kind of just I guess what the news
is using as the driveway.

Speaker 5 (53:19):
Was stolen because she didn't hire these people to do
any driveway work. We did with police reports, I was like, Mama,
it sounds silly, but we need to call and at
least do a report. Of course I felt weird. I'm like,
what do I call them?

Speaker 2 (53:36):
Be like, hey, so my driveway? Yeah, yeah, that's a while.
So did they do any work to ruin it? I mean,
is she still able to sell the house or did
they like chip it up with a with a It's
just it's just dirt, there's no driveway, so they chipped
up the concrete and took it.

Speaker 5 (53:54):
They completely ripped up the entire driveway, not what you
would prepare for a pay for driveway.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
So they thought they were it was a legit company
doing work. But what they were at the wrong address.
Is that the case?

Speaker 17 (54:13):
They were hired by the quote unquote new owners investors
of this home, which no one has bought the home.

Speaker 5 (54:21):
It's still on the market.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Oh man, this sounds this sounds scammy. It sounds yeah.

Speaker 5 (54:27):
So to scam the people who hired this company that
is local are actually in Nigeria. They send them a
check and they were the scam is they sent a
check and they say, oh, we overpaid you. We need
you to send some amount of dollars back.

Speaker 2 (54:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (54:49):
Well, basically they're just getting their money because no money
was ever actually sent. What happened is is the company
was then like, hey, this is not the check. Oh
whoop someone's driveway.

Speaker 2 (55:06):
So so let me ask you a question. So, how
did your mom learn about this, uh, this particular company
or service. She'd just go online and find it or
did a friend tell her? Or how did she find
out about it? Neighbor, the neighbor who got the car from.
That's why if that neighbor, she wouldn't know who was
if that neighbor didn't walk up and say, hey, can
I get your car? Wow, they're a real company, which

(55:29):
is why they if they were just thieves, they wouldn't
have given her to the car. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It
seems like the construction company or the driveway company is
really the victim of a scam here, but now her
mom is the victor, the true victim, because somebody has
and somebody, so somebody has to poor a new driveway,
so she can't have papers, so that has to be

(55:50):
a poor driveway. And concrete is blinking expensive right now, man,
So it would cost like four or five thousand dollars
to report that, wouldn't it.

Speaker 5 (55:58):
Yeah, we got a quote about to get.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
A new Yeah, so do you take them the small
claims court or what's the next step? DeAndre?

Speaker 5 (56:07):
So right now, how she put in a claim with
the insurance company just to at least try to get
something done. She has talked about small claims. I started
to go fund me for her to try to see
if we can if for some reason the insurance company
is like, sorry, we can't do anything either, at least
try to help her. My mom is almost seventy two

(56:27):
years old. She doesn't work, She's done everything by herself.
It's always just been me and my mom. That's the
house I grew up in.

Speaker 2 (56:36):
Yeah, yeah, that's crazy, man, crazy to contact Orange County
Consumer Protection as well, DeAndre.

Speaker 3 (56:46):
Okay, yeah, they might be able to help or give
you some more advice on the next best steps moving forward.

Speaker 2 (56:52):
It says here that all the driveway was broken up.
They chipped it all up and then pulled out as
if they were prepping for a paver job. But like
she said, the pavers aren't even allowed in that a
That is that is so crazy. The thing is, even
if let's say this driveway company got scammed, right, but
they still went to a house. As the ander points out,
there was no permit for this job. They didn't pull

(57:12):
a permit. They're doing work on this house without any
confirmation from a homeowner. No one signed a contract for this. Yeah,
they have to ultimately be liable. You take them to court.
I think they have to pay small claims. I think
goes up to five thousand, does it not? And I
think it's their insurance who should be paying this. Yeah,

(57:33):
matter one hundred percent. She calls none of this, none
of this was started or caused by her, not even
a little bit. DeAndre, I think we solved this. What
do you think I think? Well, Deonder, thanks for taking
some time to call in and kind of clear this up.
That's great. We hope that you get some Look what's
the GoFundMe? Where can people find that?

Speaker 5 (57:54):
Let me see, I don't know, I've never done.

Speaker 2 (57:56):
A golf Okay, let's right he email, yeah, yeah, yeah,
then we'll uh we'll talk about ye jacket real RADIOFM.
Do that please and uh and we wish you the
very best and have yourself a great weekend. Okay, and
tell your husband we said hi, all right.

Speaker 4 (58:11):
Let's see and tell your mom happy mothers.

Speaker 2 (58:13):
Yeah, the same same right four seven nine text us
seven seven zero three one. Not crazy that could you
imagine coming home and some random companies just chipped up
your blanket driveway?

Speaker 3 (58:23):
Well this is so we didn't have that, but we
had a similar situation when when we were renting our
landlords had still lived in Sarasota and we're looking to
get like some stairways and porches and landings done and
they were just out bidding for the work. And this
is how you know you're getting scammed when you come
home and a couple of guys have already ripped up

(58:44):
the structure and said, oh, well, we thought we were
hired for the job.

Speaker 2 (58:48):
Uh, Huh.

Speaker 3 (58:48):
Those are the same guys that I ended up finding
drops of paint throughout our house as they were going
through our dressers and drawers. Jeez. Yeah, you know when
they get out and say, I just got out of
the hospital, but they didn't give me enough medication, so
have to go back.

Speaker 2 (59:00):
Yea, yeah, right here we go. That is so crazy.
Just somebody just randomly chips up your driveway for nothing.
And by the way, at last, I got concrete right
the last time. I it's not even that you have
the money to buy it, like I think, just getting
on a list to get it, because I think the
wait for concrete right now is ridiculous, or it was

(59:22):
for a while because there were so many houses being built.
You just couldn't even get a truck to come over
to your house. If you weren't buying a lot of it.
They just wouldn't would come by. You had to wait.
They would sell you what they call leftover or what
there was a term to use. It was a concrete
that would be left at the end of the day
that they could just kind of pour out that they
would sell it to you, but you had to be
within a certain place because it would basically just drop

(59:43):
buy and dump it off on you. If you had
everything and you had to prep it and everything like
that's the best you could do. I'm serious. It was
crazy when I got it out in Geneva for a
job we were doing, I had to beg this guy.
I had to wait a month to get my concrete
and it wasn't even that much, maybe a little bit
decided like the size of a single driveway. What kind
of homeowners association won't let you have pavers? You have

(01:00:05):
a concrete driveways makes it look way better. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:00:08):
Well the other question is too, I mean whether the
company felt they were duped or not, they're the ones
who did the unauthorized work. There's no reason why seventy
two year old women should have to come up with
five thousand dollars to fix their driveway when it wasn't
even a work order.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
Correct. I can't believe there hasn't been a follow up
story online about this, because if that story was clear
and she explained that to the news station, you would
think that the news sessions would be all of this
is a Todd Ulrich wet dream, because I mean, he
loves this kind of stuff. When you get in there
and find somebody that's been screwed over and they can't
defend themselves or too old, or like this family here,
they just don't have the resources to do anything like that. Man,

(01:00:43):
that's crazy. I would be in somebody's face like nuts.

Speaker 3 (01:00:46):
Somebody just somebody texted a really good idea as a
way to for the company to look good. The company
should take this as a loss to get good pr
and show their quality of work so they can get
it as free advertising one percent.

Speaker 2 (01:00:59):
They should do that. That would be brilliant if they
did that. It's either that or small claims core. Yeah.
So I just texted and said leftover concrete. It's called
hot mud. Oh nice, that'll be happening today at five
forty five. Oh, Jimmy's already warned me. I wondered today.
I came in and said, you got no chance against
picked the porn today. Kid, you're done. Just clock out

(01:01:22):
right around that time and go on home. You're done,
So all right? Four O seven nine four one text
us at seven seven zero three one. Don't forget coin
C O I N That is your four o'clock keyword.
Just kick it over to real radio NFM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars back
in a second with more of the gym gorg. I
guess I hope you guys are doing well so weird.

Speaker 18 (01:01:43):
I think I know I'm getting old now because all
my friends are Rockville and Rolling Loud, and I worked
throughout the whole weekend starting at five am Tomorrow and Sunday.

Speaker 19 (01:01:52):
Damn man.

Speaker 18 (01:01:53):
Well, I don't really feel bad for myself, but dang,
now I know I'm getting old. Thanks bye bye.

Speaker 20 (01:01:58):
Can confirm schooler suck. My wife was cafetarian manager for
years in a middle school, and our youngest is now
in middle school and is surrounded by all of those
other cretans, and he is neurodivergent, has picked up all
of their most horrible traits and uses them frequently and
gets in trouble quite frequently in school. But when we're

(01:02:21):
in there talking to staff, they're like, we're just happy
you're here. You and two other families are the only
parents to ever visit this off.

Speaker 2 (01:02:28):
Whoa middle school is a game changer for kids and
it all it's a crapshoot on their friend group, really
the people they're surrounded with, and really that goes into adulthood,
but you're right in middle school because that's I don't
know about you guys. That's where I formed my closest
relationships with friends I had for years. It's when you
first had freedom, when you're going class to class. Yeah,

(01:02:50):
you know, from elementary school where you're combined with the
same kids in the same class and the teacher kind
of oversees everything. You get this certain autonomy in freedom
when you go to middle school and you're bouncing class
a class time in the hallway, meeting with friends groups,
and you know. So it's that dynamic really shines, and

(01:03:11):
it can be pretty troublesome. That's why I say the
worst human beings on the point. Yeah, it's easy to
say too. Just to rolls right off the tongue coin
is your four o'clock. Hey, we're gonnabout ten minutes or
so to get over to the real radio dot of
him to send that away for your chance on one
thousand bucks. I'm Jim. There's deb Jack is here as well.
What all right, I'm gonna give you guys something to watch.

(01:03:31):
This is what would you do that?

Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
It's gonna say, you've already given us the cult album
to listen.

Speaker 4 (01:03:35):
I'm gonna gives.

Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
I'm gonna give you something to watch. You don't have
to watch it. I'm just saying, this is a great suggestion.
My wife stumbled onto this. We talk about this all
the time. How she's able to just oh, comes from Torri,
We'll listen. Yeah, yes, right, exactly. She's just gotta click
on something and get it. But she finds these little uh,
she finds these these reality shows that are the love
is blind. Uh, you don't marry the person until you

(01:03:58):
see him at the very last minute. I mean all
of these, all of these shows that you think are
gonna be terrible, and they're just painfully interesting. And I
don't know why this one, this one I could not
stop watching. I literally had to fall asleep to stop
watching it. And maybe you're sure I have the U.
It's called Million Dollars Secret. Have you heard of it? No?

Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
No, But the texting service lit up with people who were.

Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
Like, yeah, they already know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 4 (01:04:23):
Oh, they're saying it's awesome.

Speaker 9 (01:04:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:04:25):
Netflix, it's a Netflix show. It's called Million Dollar Secret.
This is the second season. I'd not heard of this before.
My wife said, this is the second season of this
and do you the premise is very interesting, all right,
So I believe it is eight eight or ten people,
five girls, five guys if I remember right, and each
of them are picked randomly and they go to this.

(01:04:48):
They go to this beautiful estate like resort thing up
in Canada, and I mean it is crazy looking, right
like something to it looks like a it looks like
the English estate of like a royalty, like it's that badass.
It looks fake almost, And so they give one they
everybody gets a box right like. It looks like a

(01:05:10):
humidor like kind of box, right, wooden box, and everybody
opens their box. One of those boxes has one million
dollars in it.

Speaker 5 (01:05:18):
Woo.

Speaker 2 (01:05:19):
The one of the other boxes has a clue. The
goal of the game, and I hope I get this
right is you have to try to convince people that
you aren't the one with the million dollars, because if
you make it to the end of the show and
you have the million dollar box, you win the million bucks.
Obviously not that easy, because when you have a million dollars,
your personality changes a lot. And then they also give

(01:05:42):
you some They also give you some like some ways
to earn like some different kind of powers at the
end table, like you can be omitted from voting, you
could vote somebody else out of the room or whatever. Right,
and their their challenges. The first guy happened to be
this black guy and he was the only black guy
in the entire show. No, I think there's one other dude.

(01:06:02):
And then an Indian guy, middle Eastern guy, I should say,
And his challenge they gave him, they said, you have
to say this ten times by the end of the show,
and if you do that, you get to knock somebody
off the show and you get some kind of immunity, right,
And what he had to say was the phrase no cap,
which is like slaying for I guess, don't lie or

(01:06:23):
you're lying or whatever. No lie right? No lie? Yeah,
like no lying, no cap, I'm not lying, right, And
it so he had to have general conversations with people
that are trying to figure out if he's the millionaire,
but nobody knows who has so they start asking each
other all these questions and man, I have to tell you.
At first I was like, man, I don't know about this.

(01:06:44):
By that third episode, I was like completely hooked.

Speaker 11 (01:06:49):
It is.

Speaker 2 (01:06:50):
It is really such a human experiment and watching how
people can be manipulated into believing that something is true
when it's not, and all it takes is powerful suggestion.
I'll give you a I'll give you a little an example.
One of the girls, they thought that was the millionaire.
They thought this because when they were out kind of
milling about, she was trying to do handstands. Well, somebody

(01:07:13):
automatically thought that was part of her challenge, right well
they in other words, they thought, they said, They said
to her, hey is the millionaire. If you go out
there and you successfully just try three handstands, you know
you are now immune. You have completed your challenge, right right.
So one girl noticed her doing that, and all of
a sudden, through the owners, she goes, well that she

(01:07:34):
was starting to do the handstands. That seems like a
challenge to me. So it's got to be this girl,
She's got to be the millionaire.

Speaker 8 (01:07:39):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:07:39):
Everybody fell in line. One person suggested it, and it
was just a stab in the dark, but almost everybody
fell in line to believe that that person was that person. Dude,
I'm telling you, it's a crazy, entertaining show. And I'll
tell you a lot of these shows live and die
by the contestants, because if the contestants aren't good, not intriguing,

(01:08:01):
they're boring, or they're douchebaggy. You know, it can ruin
the entire show, even if the premise is great. Man,
not this case. These guys picked everybody from this real steely,
fifty two year old woman, uh, to a like a
like a real estate mogul to a cowboy. It was,
but it was a really entertaining show, you know, something
kind of fun and brainless to watch. Check out a

(01:08:22):
show called Million Dollars Secret on Netflix. I think you'll
like it, all right, Yeah, I'm serious, dude. You don't
like the reality show of those things, do you? No,
I don't mind. No, it's okay. I think Naomi will
love it all right, Well, good noted. Look, but I
don't know. I need something that that that we can
both watch. I will tell you after the third episode.

(01:08:42):
This sounds crazy. I Uh, my wife was laying on
the other side of the bed. I'm laying on my
side of the bed, and when that last episode went
down before the next episode started, I leaned over and
I gave her a big kiss, and I said, great,
job finding something we can watch and get into together,
because that's hard to do sometimes. Yeah, like my my
TV kind of likes or not like where hers are

(01:09:04):
sometimes and it's rare for us to find something that
is in that middle where we can enjoy it. You
guys have that issue, not really, No, No, you find
something you like all together.

Speaker 3 (01:09:11):
Yeah, but if not, I've got the TV in the
bedroom and the remote control of.

Speaker 2 (01:09:15):
How about you, Jack, you like finding something like that? Well,
I have good taste, and there's a lot of things
I like that I'm interested in, and I will. I'm
willing to watch a new series, like I don't have
to be convinced to watch it, Like I just need
a little interest and then i'll if I watch the
first episode not feeling it, we can you know done.

(01:09:38):
But my wife is like, if everything doesn't line up,
like if it's not a comedy or a comedy or
something or or something funny, yeah, yeah, yeah, then she's out.
Yeah yeah, you know, she's okay. Dramas are right, zero
act the action, no violence, no action, no violence. Not interested.

(01:10:00):
And see that's the funny thing is I like this
thriller kind of Jason Bourne. We're talking about with Emily
about that this past Monday. That's like one of my
favorite things to watch. My wife hates it. She hates it.
You can't dislike it more. And it Actually our love
of horror movies is kind of waning a bit. We
haven't watched one in months. We just I don't know

(01:10:22):
what it is. It's just kind of you kind of
go in and out of those out of those things,
like I don't watch much. I don't watch comedy much
anymore because I don't know what it is. I just don't.
I can't sit down. I like drama, I like good stories.
I like thriller and action movies are fun TV. Though, Man,
that's a different thing for me. It's like, yeah, I
tried to find a star. I want somebody I know
that can pick a good script or at least gets

(01:10:44):
offered good scripts. So for me, when I see all
these new shows popping up on streaming, first thing I
do is I look for who is in it, because
if it has a good cast, chances are the show's
gonna be pretty good.

Speaker 3 (01:10:55):
So a new study suggests this generation is unsubscribing from
streaming services.

Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
What generation do you think that is?

Speaker 17 (01:11:02):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
Where the hell are they going gen X? You think
gen X?

Speaker 3 (01:11:08):
Yeah, you go gen X boomers, millennial gen ziemers.

Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
Alpha. Oh my gosh, you know what I'll go. I'll
go younger than that. I'll go to the younger people
because they're going to like YouTube it such.

Speaker 4 (01:11:22):
Are you going Alpha, I'll go Alpha. It's actually gen Z?

Speaker 2 (01:11:26):
Is it really? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:11:27):
According to Generations in Play twenty twenty six audience Insights
report from Dentsu and Ign Entertainment, fifty nine percent of
gen Z users surveyed actively subscribe and unsubscribed to streamers
to quote chase a single title end quote. So kind
of think of what Jack does when he needs, you know,

(01:11:49):
what is it Netflix or YouTube wherever to get some
MLB games and then you'll cancel it right after the season.

Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
Yeah, well I look for this special. Sometimes it's like
the one just like Apple TV it was like for
three months only, or Disney it was two ninety nine,
three months only. And then you do it and instead
an alarm on your phone. Yeah it does. I did
set the alarm, but I also learned if you do
it then cancel it right away, you're good until that deadline,

(01:12:16):
and then it does not auto regal. Oh really yeah wow.

Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
Well this is also showing while gen Z is learning
from the book of Bradshaw, sixty two percent of gen
Z won't pay full price for video games. Well, seventy
one percent of stop buying physical music, and seventy percent
no longer buy hard copies of TV shows and movies.

Speaker 11 (01:12:37):
No.

Speaker 2 (01:12:37):
Wait, so that's the duration after US. Yeah, so that
would know. They're the generation after millennials for millennials. Yeah,
they're younger than raws.

Speaker 21 (01:12:45):
Gen Z.

Speaker 3 (01:12:46):
Yeah, gen Z our daughters. Wow, really yeah, that's gen Z,
So they're there. Gosh, they've got to be in their
mid twenties to early thirties with Z his elphas after that.
What's interesting, though, is that gen Z is thirty teen
percent more likely to attend a weekend opening of a
movie than older moviegoers. They're the ones that theater goers

(01:13:07):
are really leaning on, yeah, to save the movie theater
business because more than any other generation boomers, gen X, millennials,
it's gen Z that's going to the movie.

Speaker 2 (01:13:16):
And that's crazy because that adds right up. Believe it.
I mean, my daughters have that Jack Bradshaw gene where
they do that Tuesday night movie thing at AMC where
it's like ten dollars or eight dollars or five dollars
wherever it is to see a movie. Yeah, so glad
everyone's starting to see the light. And so they have
like a Tuesday night date. And can I tell you
they don't even care what movies are out. They will

(01:13:37):
go to the theater because they're only paying five dollars
and they will just try to watch something just because
it's out. They don't care.

Speaker 3 (01:13:43):
And they also said that gen Z they're unsubscribing means
quote platform loyalty is effectively dead.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
Oh goodness, gracious, how crazy is that?

Speaker 4 (01:13:53):
They're all about the price?

Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
Baby all right? Four seven nine six four one text
us seven seven zero three ones, take a little breakway,
have a keyword for you at the top of the hour. Here,
I have a question for you guys. When we get back,
we'll do that that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:03):
Thirty five years of Weird. The Orlando Fringe Festival May
twelveth through the twenty fifth. All the info at Orlando
Fringe dot org. The Jim Colbert Show returns now on
Real Radio one oh four point one.

Speaker 22 (01:14:26):
Jim James, I don't know if you had this in
your house but when I was a kid growing up,
my folks said them big old wooden.

Speaker 6 (01:14:36):
Spoon and fork.

Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
Yeah customary.

Speaker 22 (01:14:41):
Back still bad, but yeah, I got smart with my pops.
She just reached over and grabbed it and proceeded to
break that over my head.

Speaker 2 (01:14:52):
Well that's memories, right, yeah. Yeah, memories also explain some things.

Speaker 3 (01:14:57):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:57):
We had those in our kids. Everybody DoD I'm tell
you it was customary. If you lived in the South,
you had to have the big wooden spoon in the
big water, the big spoon. Media is your five o'clock keyword,
that's M E. D. I a slide over to your
real radio dot FM and send that away for your
chance on one thousand bucks. Guys, media, that is your keyword.
Good luck. Go get that money. Had some wonders here recently,

(01:15:20):
Go get that cash.

Speaker 4 (01:15:21):
Yeah, I get it.

Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
I'm Jim. There's deb Jack is here as well. I
got a cool story coming up at five point twenty
one of these am I the a whole stories that
is really interesting, So we'll do that around five twenty.
So I got a quick question. I saw something online
today and it was a Facebook post and it was
a woman bitching about something and I wanted to ask

(01:15:43):
if it doesn't have to be the entire segment. I
just wanted to ask what you guys think about this?

Speaker 5 (01:15:47):
Right?

Speaker 9 (01:15:48):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:15:48):
Do you guys don't garage sale or anything? Do you? No,
you don't really do it? Jack not a posed to it,
But I have to see something right from my car,
right that pulls me in, right, So I don't do
it as much as I used to.

Speaker 3 (01:16:02):
I used to do it quite a bit every weekend,
thing with one of your daughters, right, Yeah, Actually.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
We would load the entire cab up, we would go
get coffee, and we would drive around and do grudge.
And that's where I taught my kids how to negotiate
for stuff when they're buying things, right, is going up
and you know, just trying to negotiate with the people
to get the best deal possible by buying in bulk
or choosing certain things. And it's worked out pretty well
for him.

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
So I don't do as much anymore. But I saw
a lady online today and she was complaining because somebody
in her neighborhood had a garage sale and she was
sick and tired of people using her driveway to back
up and turn around, and the question was and by
the way, she was upset. She also said, in the
context of the email, she understood this probably didn't look

(01:16:47):
great because what's the harm kind of thing? But then
she's exactly what I was hearing. But she then posed
the question, She said, am I wrong here?

Speaker 23 (01:16:55):
You know?

Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
Am I wrong for being upset that for about six
hours on a Saturday, you know, people were using my
driveway because of its position and where the garage sale
was is. They were pulling up, backing in and then
turning around. Because of the way the neighborhood was configured,
it was the easiest thing to do. She has a
double driveway, and they keep both of their cars in
the parking or in the in the car port, so

(01:17:17):
the driveway or in the garage, so the driveway itself
was wide ass open. And there are myriad answers. And actually,
be honest with you, it was probably about fifty to
fifty as I could read. I went down and probably
looked at about thirty of them or so, and about
half thought it was rude, and about half said that
you it's not a big deal. And to be honest
with you, I's other answers too. There's nothing rude about it.

(01:17:41):
But I've done it one hundred times, and I can
tell you after I read this, I was like, I mean,
I don't know that I would want people using my
driveway as a turnaround for six hours on a Saturday.
I don't think i'd want that. For one thing, You're
on my property. Now, what if something happens, like am
I liable for that? And like you pull into my
driveway your truck breaks down, or you you hit something
or whatever the case may be. Is am I liable

(01:18:03):
that you're on my property? I didn't stop you from
doing it. Wait, aren't they on the first ten feet?
That's the easeman, right, Yeah, But I mean they were
using the driveway that they're literally pulling up and then
turning around, So they were putting at least half of
their vehicle into her driveway. And and like, what do
you like if that happened to you? Somebody ad a
grid sale and they use your driveway to back up

(01:18:23):
over and over and over and over for like you know,
this thing's usually run from like eight till two.

Speaker 3 (01:18:28):
You know, I'd be a little peeved, But at the
same time, I would just tell myself Listen, this is
a one off. This isn't This isn't something that happens
all the time, you know, and especially if you've seen
you've seen our driveways.

Speaker 2 (01:18:43):
I mean we regularly have to lean on neighbors just
because we.

Speaker 3 (01:18:47):
Have a very long driveway, right yeah, but I mean
once you're parked in there, like it's easy for me
to get parked in right, yeah, I would be peeved,
but I would also try and be understanding if it
becomes a habit.

Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
Yeah, if they're once once a month, garage said discussion.

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
No, no, no.

Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
She actually wound up backing her cars out of the
garage down to the front of the driveway, blocking the driveway, which.

Speaker 4 (01:19:11):
Is the easiest answer in and that's exactly what she said.

Speaker 2 (01:19:15):
She goes, after, you know, after three or four hours
of it, I got sick and tired of it, but
we don't know why. And then she goes, we just
backed our cars out of the driveway all the way
down to the sidewalk and just left them there. Nobody
did it anymore. It's funny you say, I don't know why, Like,
but why, I mean, if you're you're taking action, you
can't say I don't know why. I'm getting why it's
bothering me. It just does well, I mean, I get

(01:19:37):
come on, but that can happen, though, can it. Don't
you have something that's irrational that you're like, man, that's
all my nerves and it's completely irrational because it's not
hurting me. It's not harming me at all, but for
some reason, until my nerves because it's happening on my property.
I mean I could completely understand it, to be honest
with you, but I mean I, oh, you would totally
be pissed.

Speaker 3 (01:19:55):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (01:19:56):
I would back my cars down immediately, immediate. Matter of fact,
we used to have ouns we put up and we
would put them up in the front of the driving
when people had those. We just didn't want people on
our property. You are that guy. I am that guy.
You're right, yeah, but one hundred I would say, what
even makes more annoying? Let's say you have a ring
camera ye our motion at everything, Then you'd be getting

(01:20:17):
notifications every time there's a lot I say, level of annoying.
It's like the bell on a convenience store door. Oh yeah,
oh could you every single time I go into a
convenience store and these old ass rundown coupland farming convenience
stores and you open it's it's got that.

Speaker 5 (01:20:34):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:20:36):
I'm like, how long do I think I could work
at the counter? Hearing every three seconds?

Speaker 4 (01:20:43):
I would say about thirty minutes.

Speaker 2 (01:20:44):
I would last. I would just set it on fire
and leave it. Couldn't take it at all. I found
that to be an interesting question because I've done it
so many times to people. I have literally backed up
in people's driveways over and over, and I felt like
a complete dick. I read the story, I was like,
I should have because there are opportunities they've just gone
down use the cult a sacker or done something else

(01:21:06):
and turned around or what say, there's no call to sack.
What are you supposed to do? Keep driving around the
block instead of just turning around by the turn. I
mean that's what I do now. Now, don't put your
tires on the is that it not? Put your tires
on that little on the ramp to the driveway.

Speaker 5 (01:21:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
And the other thing somebody brought up in the in
the in the in the comments was is you know
what if they miss and they're driving on your grass? Now?
She never said that that happened but I will tell
you I've seen that happen. And also sprinkler head get
busted up because somebody backed up and they didn't have
their backup right, and they backed up some sprinkler had
and busted it up. I'd be so pissed off. I mean,

(01:21:42):
not that they're super expensive, it's just a pain in
the ass.

Speaker 4 (01:21:45):
Well then you're left to fix it.

Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
Yeah, this is like a This can be a big issue,
like in a city like Mount Dora where parking is
at a premium, right, and when they see that you
have a you know, fairly large driveway, it's like, hey,
do you mind if I park here? And say, yeah,
I do because I don't want Yeah, well we've thought
about that. It's like I don't want the liability for
your vehicle or your persons while you're on my property.

Speaker 2 (01:22:06):
And look, a lot of these new neighborhoods that are built.
My wife's closest friend lives in one of these neighborhoods
where the houses are pretty close together and the roads
are relatively narrow, so there really isn't a lot of room.
And some of them also have rules where you can't
park out on side of the curb. You have, your
car has to be in a driveway. Now, hers isn't
like that, but some of them offer very little space

(01:22:28):
because they're trying to maximize the area they can develop.
So the roads are narrow, the houses are real close together,
the driveways are super narrow.

Speaker 4 (01:22:36):
Is it Baldwyn Park? No, it's not Baldwin, but okay,
but it's like Baldwin.

Speaker 2 (01:22:40):
But you can go up and down a novido and
find these old neighborhoods like this all around. Matter of fact,
we can find them in Mount Door as well, where
there's just not much space anywhere.

Speaker 4 (01:22:48):
Almost bought in one.

Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
And trying to back up in three point turn one
of those things is a nightmare.

Speaker 3 (01:22:52):
And that's and that's you know, part of the reason
why I don't think this house is going to work
for us. Oh yeah, yeah, it's just because the parking
was ridonculous.

Speaker 19 (01:22:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:23:00):
And if it's ridoculous for the two people who live there,
what what is it going to be like when you
try and invite family and friends?

Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
Right right right? Are you the millionaire? Is that why
you're using the oculus? Is that the secret is that
the secret work? Cap No? Cap uh? Did people in
the text he's ever say they were watching that show
The Millionaire Secret Couple A couple yeaheah. I mean it's
a good show, so you should check it up, all right?
Four oh seven nine one six four one can always

(01:23:25):
text us at seven seven zero three one. What texter
or nails it. This is exactly what's wrong with the
world today, Okay, everybody not caring about other people or
just not being willing to put up with some little
action that somebody else did might inconvenience you. So he's
on the side of somebody using your driveway to turn around.

(01:23:46):
I would read that. That's what I get from that.

Speaker 19 (01:23:48):
Yeay.

Speaker 2 (01:23:49):
In other words, she's being irrational by bitching about it.
It's like, I mean, how would you feel though, Okay,
Saturday after the Saturday morning, you're in your house and
somebody's having a great sale right around the corner, Like
every five minutes, somebody's using your driveway to back up
and turn around. That wouldn't be annoying. I'm fine, as
I'd say, it would be different if I had kids

(01:24:10):
who would be outside play. Yeah, that's that's that's the issue.

Speaker 3 (01:24:13):
It's a place to be, you know, And I needed
to get in and out of my own But it
sounds like they're just using it to turn around.

Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
Made for driving. Yeah, yeah, if the gres was two
doors down from her place. So what happened was people
would park before it, then they would go get in
their car and they would drive past it. And her
driveway was the first accessible driveway to be able to
pull in and turn around, and everybody used it, she said,
almost nobody. People are literally waited for them to do it,
and it was a line of people doing I would

(01:24:40):
you know the uh you saw it after property? Yeah,
you could check with Ross's neighbors the day after his
holiday party. Every year he has a holiday party. Every
time I met ross Is it's always past the house.
It's I don't know where that road goes, but I
know I have to go back the other way. Oh really,
so I always do a three point turn or yeah,

(01:25:01):
basically in the driveway when Code Black used to have
I remember, I think this is right when Code Black
used to have big parties. He lives on a straight
road there where people would have to park on the
side of the road. Yeah, some of the neighbors are
not cool. The guy who lives right across the street
from him is unbelievably uncool about stuff like that and
has called the cops on him multiple times. So what
he does now is he literally walks down the street

(01:25:21):
and goes having a party on Saturday, having a party
on like pre warning everybody, Hey, look, we're having to
get together. There's gonna be some people parking on the
side of the road. I've told everybody not to park
on your grass, but there will be some people parked
here and that's legal, and it is legal, but maybe
not overnight parking, but parking on the road at least
on one side sometimes like where the traffic is going. Yeah.

(01:25:43):
In my town, they said you can't park on both sides.
Yeah yeah, because I remember we had a poker game
but my neighbor's house. We did a tournament in his
house and the cops came on the door and were like, ah, yeah, yeah,
you can't hide. The cops busted our poker game. And
it was just about parking. You can't park on like
if one car is on one side, you can't be
on the other because you have to have enough room

(01:26:04):
for bigger vehicles to get through the right. Sailors do
not do that. They park and they give you, man,
you can't get a bicycle through there. Sometimes it's ridiculous
how lazy people are. They just want to be as
close as possible. But I thought that was a really
cool thing. And Copleck's a cool guy, so he would
do something like that. But that's actually a pretty good protocol,
is to walk around just tell your neighbors, hey, look, man,
having a little get together this uh coming up this weekend.

(01:26:24):
There's gonna be a lot of people here. I apologize
for in inconvenience. We've warned them in advance, don't don't
park on your property, don't come on your property, and
it should be out of thereby New yor twelve. That
should also come with an invitation to the party. You're right,
it should, but it didn't know it's like a week
we're not sharing that part of the party. Jack all right,

(01:26:46):
four oh seven nine one six one four to one. Again,
you can always text us seven seven zero three one.
Your five o'clock keyword is media. That's m E.

Speaker 5 (01:26:53):
D I A.

Speaker 2 (01:26:54):
Go to real radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. Okay. So I
was faced with a decision to make and he made
a decision and it did not sit well. And when
you hear what he decided to do, I think maybe
you'll understand why. I'll tell you the story next.

Speaker 21 (01:27:15):
Just imagine one of those vehicles has a massive oil
leak and leaves. Even if it's two or three drops
of oil on a perfectly clean driveway, then you have
to clean it. Also, what if something's dragging and they.

Speaker 5 (01:27:28):
Scrape up the driveway.

Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
Good points.

Speaker 21 (01:27:31):
Not only that, but we all should have learned how
to do three point turns before we got our license.
That's the reason for three point turns, so you don't
invade other people's space.

Speaker 2 (01:27:43):
We all need to learn how to turn down the
radio during talkbacks too. We can introduce the lady that
complains about people turning around in your driveway to the
lady just gout her driveway stolen. Okay, that's funny. Check
out a picture of it up a minute ago. Boy,
they blank her over, good Lord of Mercy. Media, that

(01:28:05):
is your five o'clock keyword. M E D I A.
Just kick it over to real radio dom and send
it away from your chance at one thousand bucks. Guys, media,
that is the word go get it. I hope you
went some money. I'm Jiminnor's deb Hello Jack his ears one, Yeah, gratings.
All right. I think we've all had decisions that are
difficult to make in life. And actually I have a

(01:28:26):
story that kind of goes parallel with what I'm about
to tell you about. All right. So there's a guy
out there.

Speaker 24 (01:28:31):
His name is.

Speaker 3 (01:28:33):
G.

Speaker 2 (01:28:34):
Scott Senior. G. E. E. Scott Senior.

Speaker 11 (01:28:38):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:28:39):
He is an MC right okay, and he got hired
to do a pretty cool job. Right. The job is
he will m C six FIFA World Cup Games, okay,
all right, and that is a big deal for him.
He said it was an incredible oportune. He says, this

(01:29:03):
is one of those things where it is literally once
in a lifetime opportunity for him to do something cool
like that. It doesn't really mention the money he's making
to kind of give you an idea of, you know what,
if it's just a thing for him, or if it's
a monetary thing that he can't pass up because the
money's so good. But it doesn't feel like that. It

(01:29:23):
feels like this is just something that he wants to do.
He's an MC get an opportunity to be on a
gigantic platform like a World Cup game. You could see
where that would be a big deal. Right, Absolutely, there
is a hitch. He is going to miss something to
be a part of the World Cup MC events. Oh,
no daughter wedding, birth of his child, daughter's wedding, son's wedding,

(01:29:50):
his wedding. He's going to miss his son's wedding. He's
going to miss his son's wedding to MC some soccer
game as at the World Cup. Buddy, it's world Yeah,
four years marriage, it's your son and he's getting married,

(01:30:11):
and he's not going to make it because he's gonna MC.

Speaker 8 (01:30:14):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:30:15):
He says, he's been catching stray's at home and around
all the time. His son says now, or he says,
his son says, look that I understand. I understand you're
gonna catch a lot of hell for this, but I
do understand the value of this moment for you, and
I basically give you my blessing. But even the dad said,
in the context of him saying that, not sure he
bought it naturally, yeah, because I mean your son. Look,

(01:30:37):
you know, look, man, my son would probably say the
same thing. I want to be honest with you now.
My wife would never talk to me again, but my
son would probably say, pop, I get it, you know
you Like, if let's say I got offered to caddy
at the Masters, to carry somebody's bag at the Masters, right,
and you're talking about like you can't even believe a
lifetime experience. Just to go is a lifetime experience. To

(01:31:00):
be on property, be part of the tournament would be unbelievable.
My son would look at me without a pause and say, Dad,
go do that. I understand, right, And we're going to
get married and we'll celebrate when you get done or
something like that, no question, because when it's his fault
wedding during the Masters, it would not stop me. You're
kind of right. It would not stop me from feeling

(01:31:21):
like a complete donkey. And even then, I don't know
if I would do it. I don't know if I
could live with myself missing my son's wedding is over
something like that.

Speaker 4 (01:31:30):
I don't think my wife would open the door.

Speaker 2 (01:31:32):
Oh well, no, I can't even begin to tell you
how I should react, Like I don't I don't know
how well I know that would go unbelievably poorly if
that were to happen. If I were to choose something
else over one of our kid's weddings, that would be
that would be a bad, bad day. Maybe the last
bad day. Yeah, maybe the last bad day. This guy

(01:31:54):
couldn't like do. I don't know how many gigs did
he have? What's a handful of games? He couldn't do
all but one? Yeah, I don't know, buddy. It doesn't
really really. It's a relatively short article. It just kind
of goes into the idea that that he's making this
decision over going to his son's wedding, and then of course,
at the end of the story it says, you know,
my son's kind of good. He's good a matter of fact,

(01:32:14):
I can he well he he quotes it. He goes,
does it bother me?

Speaker 22 (01:32:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:32:17):
I'm human, right, I'm human. It's the biggest fomo. Does
it hurt? Is it something I don't even like talking about?

Speaker 8 (01:32:23):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
I don't even like talking about it. And when my
wife brings up, I don't like talking about it. That's
how much it bothers me.

Speaker 3 (01:32:30):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:32:30):
He says that Scott's son understands he goes even to
the groom. Quote gets it. He doesn't expect anybody else to.
In other words, his son said to him, although I understand,
I don't expect anybody else in the family to kind
of understand where you're coming from on this, because it
seems pretty egregious. Told him it was he was going
to catch a lot of strays. Yeah, yeah, yeah, one

(01:32:51):
hundred percent.

Speaker 3 (01:32:53):
And uh because even nf I mean, even professional sports
players will miss a game because it's the birth of
their child.

Speaker 2 (01:32:59):
Yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah yeah. And I had a
similar situation like this when I was younger. I missed you.
My closest friend at the time, when I was in
high school was getting married to his high school sweetheart
matter fact, they're still together to this day, right, And

(01:33:19):
I was really close with this guy. We were very
good friends, right, And I did not go to his
wedding because at that time, my fiance was graduating from
college and I chose to go support my fiance at
the time rather than go to my very close friend's wedding.
And he never forgave me for it. And since that

(01:33:40):
day we've probably spoken three times. And that happened in
eighty nine or ninety ninety one, something like that, so
I haven't spoken to him more than three times in
thirty years, and we were inseparable before that. He could
not understand how I could prioritize a graduation over his wedding. Yeah,

(01:34:01):
but it was your right, and that's what I told him.
I said, your fiance at the time. Huh, this is
a tough one. Yeah, you don't think best friend. Yeah.
It was my closest friend at the time for sure. Yeah,
no question. We spent our entire senior year and most
of my junior year hanging out. Either I was at
his house, we were surfing, we were riding around, we
were listening to music. We were doing something literally five

(01:34:23):
six days a week. Oh so he thought you put
your whole before your bro. Yeah, yeah he did. But
so fiance, this is the woman you ended up marrying. Yeah,
this was my first wife, got a rest of her soult. Yeah,
when she graduated from UCF, it was a big, big deal.
What was her take on this? On you missing the wedding?
She didn't think wise about it. I mean I was.

(01:34:44):
I mean, that's that's where I should be. I should
be there with her. That's how you feel to this day. No, Yeah,
that's how I feel to this date. That's how she
felt as well, and I agree with it. I wouldn't
have ever missed her graduation to go to his wedding,
not a million years you go, yeah, because I mean
that's then you made the right decision. Well, I mean
that's all relative, right, because I don't talk to this
guy anymore. And I guess, Look, if if something that simple,

(01:35:05):
I guess can come between you, maybe way weren't as
close as I thought. That's a legit point. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Maybe then Have you ever had anything like that where
you had to make a decision?

Speaker 23 (01:35:12):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:35:13):
And uh and kind of uh askew or issue one
part of the equation or the other. Didn't go to
my aunt's funeral? Oh god, that's a good one. Were
you guys close?

Speaker 24 (01:35:25):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:35:25):
I've all I yeah, to a degree? Yeah, not too close,
not overly close.

Speaker 4 (01:35:31):
Yeah, I mean I like he didn't ask you that?

Speaker 2 (01:35:34):
Yeah, I mean is that but but when it comes
to like events where you're supposed to show up, Yeah,
where does funeral stand? Like, let me ask you a question,
is it more important? Would it have been more important
to go to her wedding or her funeral?

Speaker 25 (01:35:47):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:35:48):
Oh, that's a tough one. Oh, that's a tough one.
See the funeral, you're saying goodbye forever. But also they're
not Yeah they don't know. Yeah, they can't read these
they can't read the sign in book. Like I mean,
if I would have missed your wedding for something arbitrary,
you would have been pretty pissed off, right, No, you
wouldn't have No God dogg and I don't drinking. I

(01:36:09):
knew it. Yeah. Well, I mean, by the way I've
done this with you, you and I have had this
scenario with no, not with sudpupps, and well that happened.
That was a that was on vacation. Yeah, that broke
my heart. That was that was an event for the show.
That was a completely different scenario. What I'm talking about is, oh,
you're gonna love this one and this one to this
day he still gets brought up a little bit. You

(01:36:30):
know what I'm talking about?

Speaker 10 (01:36:32):
You do?

Speaker 2 (01:36:33):
You ready? So when Deborah did a reading of the
Vagina Monologues as part of as part of a as
start of as part of a promo that we're doing
or something like that. Deb was doing Lady James and
you are doing a live reading at this place. It
was a packed house or a couple hundred people there.
And it just so happens that was the same night

(01:36:55):
that my wife and our friends were going to see
Garth Brooks, right, And uh, my wife said, are you
going to Garth Brooks? And I said, well, I gave
deb my word that I would come to the Vagina Monologues,
and I don't. I really don't want to go back
on it. And I told Deb this, and Deb even said, Jimmy, don't,
you don't need to, like, you can go if you want.

(01:37:16):
I said, well, I gave you my word, and I'm
going to go. And I brought my daughter and we
came and we saw the show. And my wife went
with our friends to see Garth Brooks.

Speaker 4 (01:37:25):
And said it was one of the best concerts, one.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
Of the best, one of the best, top three shows
she's ever seen.

Speaker 26 (01:37:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
Fortunately they talked about it literally for three months afterwards,
and uh, yeah, well you should have been there. Unfortunately,
in hindsight, I probably would have done that. I probably
would have just picked up another time.

Speaker 3 (01:37:41):
But because you said you gave your word, no matter
what myself or anyone else would have said, you would
not have exonerated yourself.

Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
I would have felt bad about it because I did
give you.

Speaker 4 (01:37:51):
My word, and and that thing, but that that meant everything.
That you gave me your word.

Speaker 2 (01:37:55):
That was awesome. Yeah, but that was and and the
other thing too, is the concert was booked. We knew
about We found out about that after the fact, so
it already made these plans. So I would have had
to break history of double booking. I would have had
And look here's the thing. I'm not a gigantic Garth
Brooks fan. I would have gone because my wife and yeah,
my wife and friends are big Garth Brooks fans, and
I know enough of the songs. I could have certainly

(01:38:16):
enjoyed myself, and no problem. It just you know, I
give you my word. That's I don't know, that's what
you're supposed to do, right.

Speaker 3 (01:38:24):
I mean yes, and no, I didn't need you to
give me your word. You did give me your word.
But then when the conflict came up, I would have
completely understood.

Speaker 2 (01:38:32):
I know, but I didn't.

Speaker 3 (01:38:33):
It's a lot easier to read my vagina part without
having to look out at the audience and see your face.

Speaker 2 (01:38:39):
I appreciate the support.

Speaker 11 (01:38:42):
Jack.

Speaker 2 (01:38:42):
I think I killed Jimmy. I sat in the back.
I could still sense you.

Speaker 4 (01:38:48):
Some Texters are said it in some crazy situation.

Speaker 2 (01:38:52):
Yeah, hit me with that. That's great. Let's see this one.
My best friend of twenty years decided not to fly
home from a vacation to be at my son's funeral.
I haven't spoken in nine years. That's a tough one, man,
That's tough because that's the that's worst day ever for
being a parent. Oh man, your friend isn't gonna be

(01:39:15):
for that? You need all. Well, here's here's the thing.
Is there any excuse that could get you out of that?
What would have to have had? What what would that
guy have to be like committed to to not go
like a wedding, I mean, like the most important business
meeting of his life. Look, I mean that's a that's
a short list of things that can over trump that.

Speaker 3 (01:39:35):
How about seven seven zero three one missed my grandpa's
funeral to Caddy at Pebble, got paired with Tiger Woods
the first three rounds and Sergio Garcia the last day.

Speaker 2 (01:39:48):
Oh god, that's a tough one. Up exactly. I thought
I would have probably had to visit that or a
pop up a little bit after that. Oh, how about
this one. You and your partner, Yeah, going to Turkey
for vacation, for a vacation tour. They die on the

(01:40:09):
plane over and you continue with the tour. The partner
dies on the plane and they continue on. They ship
the body back and you go on to vacation. Who
could do that? Someone who's maybe behind it? Evil? Oh
you you are evil. Get out of here with that.

(01:40:31):
Gosh almighty, I don't ever consider that in a million years.
Then you don't watch enough investigation discop Okay, speaking which
you have this year, SAIDs Pups and Pipe. They you
know the poker tournament is August fifteenth, right, you get
on now, yeah, right, not gonna be on the cruise.

Speaker 3 (01:40:47):
Sure, it's the end of all September, okay, because we
will have another Jim Culbert Show lookalike contest last.

Speaker 2 (01:40:53):
Saturday in September, is SAIDs. Pups and in Mondora. All right,
very good, got it right there, first Saturda to day
in October, best of challenge, you said, the last of
the first, last, the last twenty sixth, all right, last
weekend you every got.

Speaker 4 (01:41:08):
Guy, It's only May, It's only May.

Speaker 2 (01:41:13):
Should we just be communicated with direct to Tory. He
probably should. Yeah, she's gonna have a well, she's the
one that screwed us over for the last one, screwed
us over, She bolgi. Well, she surprised me with a
really nice trip, and it kind.

Speaker 3 (01:41:25):
Of said, don't say screwed met us over, because then
you're gonna have to look.

Speaker 4 (01:41:28):
She's gonna say I screwed you, surprised.

Speaker 2 (01:41:31):
No respect for your job. She thinks you come here
just to play on the radio. Oh yeah, yeah she is.

Speaker 14 (01:41:37):
What do you do?

Speaker 2 (01:41:39):
What are you doing over there? She's basing that by
what you do?

Speaker 11 (01:41:42):
It all?

Speaker 2 (01:41:42):
You can't clean the counters?

Speaker 11 (01:41:43):
What do you do?

Speaker 2 (01:41:44):
A friend posted the cabinet doors.

Speaker 3 (01:41:46):
A friend postponed his dad's funeral to go on a
week long cruise.

Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
Oh my goodness, was it free? Oh my goodness, I did.
I'll tell you when it's so funny you say that
one because I did one. I did see one on
Reddit today where a guy's boss the I text his
boss or emailed his boss and said, hey, look my
father passed away. I need to do take some time off.
And the guy actually asked the guy to put his
dad on ice for a couple of days, so he

(01:42:11):
because there are two other employees out. He goes, well,
so and So's out and this other guy's out. Can
you postpone the funeral, like put your dad on ice
for a few extra days so that we can get
this done first. Uh? You know what kind of sack
it takes to say something like that to somebody.

Speaker 5 (01:42:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:42:26):
Well, someone that we know in love on the show
very very much texted us at seven seven zero three one.
As a fairly new bride, I can commiserate with this.
My best friend was on tour in Spain and was
supposed to fly home to be in my wedding. She
told me three weeks before that she wasn't coming because
it was too much of a hassle to fly back.

Speaker 2 (01:42:49):
Well that means they really weren't friends, right, I mean,
we can figure that out. Those people are not friends.

Speaker 3 (01:42:53):
Well, unfortunately this person learned that three weeks before this
this person was probably going to be her maid of honor.
Could you imagine that they have so many duties that day.
I mean they take care of tips, they take the
rings and all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:43:05):
Could you imagine that? Now?

Speaker 3 (01:43:06):
I had a situation like that myself. So when I
first moved to Florida. One of my college best friends
was getting married and I simply just didn't have the money.
I had no one to ask, no one to borrow
BA Wisconsin exactly, well, Minnesota, Minneapolis. I didn't have the
money for the dress. I didn't have the money for
the and they said they understood.

Speaker 2 (01:43:26):
But we never spoke.

Speaker 3 (01:43:28):
Not much after that. Yeah, like maybe once or twice,
and they didn't come to my wedding.

Speaker 2 (01:43:33):
Oh really Yeah, Yeah, it's so wild with that whole
thing with the bridesmaids. It's such a it is a
so tip for town. It's such a burden too. Yeah.
You know, you buy the dress, you gotta make the travels.
You know, you inviting somebody to a wedding is going
to cost them like a thousand bucks exactly. So it's
like a weird thing there. Yeah, that's wild, all right.
Four oh seven nine six four one text us seven

(01:43:55):
seven zero three one time, Hey.

Speaker 8 (01:43:59):
Guys, day talking about missing events. My buddy was getting married.
I totally flaked and forgot and had the chance to
hook up with this chick and went and stay at
a hotel in Daytona. Missed his wedding, but I gave
him a bunch of pesos because he was going to Mexico,
had a great time, and then when he got divorced,
he was like, yeah, Mark, maybe you didn't a day.

Speaker 2 (01:44:21):
All right, Welcome back to the Jim Culbert Show. We're
all Radio one four point one. Thanks for tuning in.
We appreciate that, as we do every single day. Media
is your five o'clock keyword. Got about ten minutes or
so to get over to real radio dot FM and
send that away for your chance of one thousand bucks. Remember,
if you're playing the game guys, phone on phone near
you and you have to pick it up when it rings,
even if it says like no caller ID or out

(01:44:43):
of the area or a number you do not recognize.
If you're in the game, you gotta pick it up
because that's how they tell you you've won. Again. Your
five o'clock keyword is media. Well, if it's one, another
one for you. At the top of the alan, I'm
Jimner's deb Hello Jack is here as well, and he
has the Jackie sack. What's a there, buddy? All aboard?
Good Jagga clickty glack WI get a gleck pair of

(01:45:05):
tickets to see Orlando City take on Atlanta United FC.
This happens at our own intern Cod Stadium on May sixteenth.
The other prize that you will get to pick from
a pair of tickets to see the Strokes. No, yeah,
they will be performing in Tampa at the Benchmark International
Arena on September twelve. Those are the two prizes in

(01:45:31):
the Jackie's Age. So back to you, clickity class. Last,
speaking of Strokes, yea time for Pick the Porn?

Speaker 19 (01:45:40):
One?

Speaker 2 (01:45:40):
Two, three or four or five?

Speaker 4 (01:45:42):
Uh, we're gonna go with number four.

Speaker 2 (01:45:44):
Number four. Let's do it, Tracy. How you doing, I'm
doing great good. Want to play a little game with us.
Let's do it now.

Speaker 1 (01:45:54):
You can put a lifetime of research to work and
maybe win a prize. It's time for pick the porn.

Speaker 2 (01:46:01):
Show, all right, Tracy. It is Friday. That means this
time for another round to pick the porn. Here are
three actual adult film titles and one line that has
supervised visits with its kids. This is gonna be a
good one and a cold sore, all right, Tracy? Which
one of these is not an actual adult film title?

(01:46:22):
Are you ready? All right?

Speaker 19 (01:46:24):
Here we go?

Speaker 4 (01:46:24):
Number one sounds a little scared.

Speaker 2 (01:46:26):
Legs Benedict, number two, Cream Rents, Number three, thumb Plumber
or lastly rearranging the Basement. Oh dear, which of those
is not an actual adult film title? Number one? No,

(01:46:49):
that's absolutely true. Leg's Benedict is not only one of
the most clever names I've ever heard for an adult
film title. That is quite a cover. Can you describe it? No, man, there's.

Speaker 3 (01:47:06):
No.

Speaker 8 (01:47:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:47:06):
Maybe during the breakout your fingers. Yeah yeah, get the cameras.
Black out will show you, all right, one, two, three
or five?

Speaker 4 (01:47:13):
We're going three?

Speaker 2 (01:47:14):
Three? Is Carol? Carol? How you doing? I'm good, Good Carol.
Find out which one of these is not the actual
adult film title and you win. Here we go Number one,
Cream Rents, No. Number two, thumb Plumber or lastly rearranging
the Basement Number two thumb Plumber. Yeah, that's the one.

(01:47:36):
You're This girl knows her porn. That's right, all right, Carol.
She did not deny it. She just laught. Did you did?
You're such a nasty I can feel it, all right, Carol,
thanks a lot, Thanks for playing. We appreciation yourself a
great weekend. Your thumb plumber is not an actual Mother's
Day yeah, same. Yeah, uh cream rints is and so

(01:48:00):
is rearranging the basement.

Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
Care to share what those titles it looks like now?

Speaker 2 (01:48:06):
And a couple of do not make the cut milfwood
U s a milfwood, milfwood, frisky kiddies and by poll her.

Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
It's the play on words. Yeah, exactly what is that
one about?

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
Okay? Four seven nine six. A couple of friends came
over and they played a board played a board game
pole nobody was born. It was uh yeah, all right,
excuse me, I know, sorry, guys four seven one o
four one text us at seven seven homework for this
show zero it is not good good enough? Have to

(01:48:48):
do Oh by the way, I mean, we're going to
get into this in a few minutes. But so what
do you think they're calling Hollywood's four oh one K
or Hollywood? It's actually Hollywood's retirement plan and invest only
fans of the because Jamie Presley, Yeah, Jamie Presley signed
up today. And this is on the heels of Shannon
Elizabeth signing up for it, on the heels of Carmen

(01:49:10):
Electra signing up for it. So they've had some pretty
you know, some some relatively notable people sign up for
this thing.

Speaker 3 (01:49:19):
Well, I think it's the what's your name? Yeah, who
had gone on OnlyFans trying to save her home, right, yeah,
and fifteen minutes exactly exactly, like hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:49:33):
And that's the woman from Sopranos. And that story goes
back a couple of years where you know she was
in dire straits because she couldn't get a job. I mean,
nobody would hire her, but she was a rat. Yeah, well,
you know that's funny. Nobody would hire her. And you
know that that show is episodic. You get paid by
the episode. That money is spent no differently than you
would spend money from your paycheck every week. There's no

(01:49:54):
like residuals. That's for the writers and the producers and stuff.
The actors are just hired guns, right, unless you make
a good deal. And I don't think she had the
position to do that. Maybe Gandalfini did, but she certainly
wouldn't have had that kind of juice. I'm not sure
if you are, like, if you have an acting cards,
you're part of the guild. I think don't you automatically
get residuals. It may be to a lesser percentage. Yeah,

(01:50:17):
maybe so, Jack, But I don't think it's like that
kind of money we hear about that's like sustainable. I mean,
she's living in a certain part, you know, living in
New York in an apartment. So she became destitute, had
to take care of her mom, and and was running
out of money. She really had nowhere to go. She
owed like six hundred and fifty or seven hundred thousand
dollars on her apartment. She was about to get evicted,
and at the last minute she said, we'll do OnlyFans.

(01:50:39):
That's the only way I think I can raise money.
And she paid off that house. And I think in
the first day, as a matter of fact, if I
believe I remember the story right, it took her about
three hours to make a little over half a million dollars.
Wish you naked. I don't know what it was because
I mean, I think you have to log on to
find that out. I mean, they're not giving that stuff away,
that's the whole idea. But you know, Jamie Presley's got
to be in her She's gonna be like what in

(01:51:00):
her mid forties. Now, she's forty eight, forty eight years old,
she's forty eight. She was my name is Earl, right,
she played Joy Turner. That I think she's I think
she's underrated for being a comedic actress. I think she
also did didn't she do the cheerleading movies? Because didn't
she deliver the famous line?

Speaker 3 (01:51:21):
She was also in not another teen movie Joe Dirt. Yeah,
Mom d Away Dead or Alive? Ring Master. Okay, let's
see what other shows. But I think she's best known
for my name is Earl and she.

Speaker 2 (01:51:35):
Yeah, like I said, I think she did make Yeah,
she's certainly made that, like that that low budget movie
kind of thing. But again, that money doesn't last. And
if you're you know, if you're forty eight years in
Hollywood and you were, and your whole job when you
were in Hollywood is pretty girl, that is, you know,
you know, pretty girlfriend, right, you don't really have acting
chops that are gonna get you those scripts that keep
you sustained with acting work.

Speaker 25 (01:51:57):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:51:57):
Well, she's in that age group where women intended disappear.

Speaker 2 (01:52:01):
Unless you have a gigantic name, and then and even
then you're right, and then it does give you a
better chance these days. But if you just kind of
got through on pretty. And if you look at a
lot of these girls that are doing this, that's what happened.
They just kind of made it through on pretty. And
then you turn forty eight years old, you're pretty. Isn't
pretty enough anymore because all the young girls are getting
those getting that work, and off you go.

Speaker 4 (01:52:19):
To only fans exactly just to make a living.

Speaker 10 (01:52:22):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:52:23):
Can I ask you a question? I asked my wife
this the other day. I hope this isn't offensive.

Speaker 4 (01:52:27):
I already know he brings this up all. I looked
at you and your feet. No, but why I'm not
doing only?

Speaker 2 (01:52:34):
No, No, I don't ask you why you're not doing it.
This is the question I asked my wife. I said,
that's what I meant by you and your feet? I said,
doesn't it make it? Does it make you feel uncomfortable
that you know that you're attractive enough that if you
wanted to flip that switch, you literally could be a
millionaire by the end of this year easily, with with
zero effort. She could do that and you could as well.
Isn't that a weird thing? Because I'll tell you why.

Speaker 4 (01:52:54):
It's odd, And I don't know if I'd make that
kind of.

Speaker 2 (01:52:57):
Oh, you would make a lot of money, Debora, you
would be Can I tell you wouldbably make it just
from fans on the show. You probably wouldn't have to
You probably wouldn't have to market outside of the context
of the radio show. And I'm not joking. It would
be gross how much money you would make. She'd make
some money, no doubt. But Jack and I we don't
have an outlet like that, Like there's it's not fair,
it's a discrimination. But we can't, Like even if I

(01:53:20):
was a really good looking, honky kind of guy, there
is nowhere for me to go on that thing like
for girls. I mean, I guess I could do it
in the gay community. No, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:53:28):
I mean, have you seen any of those videos when
with men cooking and they're smacking the dough and they're
working coconut like in a way the coconut needs an attorney.

Speaker 2 (01:53:37):
Tell me about the coconut work.

Speaker 3 (01:53:39):
I'm just saying, you like to cook, Yeah, you slap
some dough around, you get yourself some only fans.

Speaker 2 (01:53:44):
I let's talk about how much what Debit would have
to do to and and how much money she can earn.
How much do you think Jack well, it depends five
five K a day. Are the clothes coming off?

Speaker 1 (01:53:58):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:53:59):
No, you couldn't do that. You have to do You
have to do some really, you have to do some revealing.
A lingerie. I think a millionaire is going to be
tough if if we're staying dress nobody. I'm telling you,
pimp over there, listen to pimp over there. He's not
doing a very good job for you. He's selling your
ass out. These dollar generally in your ass right now.
That's what pimps do.

Speaker 16 (01:54:15):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:54:15):
They make you do all the work and they take
all the cast. At least I'm TJ maxking you show title.
But I'm telling you, I'm telling you if you were
to just do hey, I'll sit and you can't. It's
barely revealing, like Victoria's secret kind of stuff where it
leaves stuff that it would be here we go.

Speaker 3 (01:54:34):
It would be gross, slow cut, top eyeglasses, lollipop, read
a children's story.

Speaker 2 (01:54:41):
I mean, how much money do you want me? You
have to ask yourself that question. You would have to
ask your yourself a question when do I my husband?
When do I want to stop?

Speaker 10 (01:54:52):
Well?

Speaker 2 (01:54:52):
Your husband driving a lambo? He didn't care anymore. He's
giving up all all integrity's gone when you pull up
with pink lambos all right four oh seven nine one
six four one text us at seven seven. What Jack
got them? Yeah, it's a side to go my pipe
over there. That's I got another keywork for you right now,
Daddy Bradshaw.

Speaker 1 (01:55:11):
It's back the twenty twenty six Orlando International Fringe Theater
Festival May twelfth through the twenty fifth in Lockhaven Park.
I think it's available now at Orlando Fringe dot org.

Speaker 3 (01:55:22):
From the Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash called Klosmanlaw
Klosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 27 (01:55:28):
Still pretty busy out there this Friday afternoon. Accident blocking
the right lane Connorroy Road eastbound at Fineland Road. Also
another crash four seventeen northbound at Orange Blossom Trail blocking
the right lane. That's a company on I for westbound
between Lee Road and South Street. Also a slow ride
I for eastbound between Osciolo Polkline Road and World Drive.

(01:55:48):
See traffic troubles call of Abilen and instant Oil Chains
traffic tipline at eight sixty six six seven six eight
four seven seven from the traffic center.

Speaker 5 (01:55:56):
I'm Katie Wilkins.

Speaker 23 (01:55:58):
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Speaker 2 (01:56:18):
Y Family, Enter it now on our website at real
Radio dot FM, and don't forget to answer your phone.
If you get the call, good luck. Obviously, this is
why YouTube boys created.

Speaker 1 (01:56:31):
Obviously At Jim Colbert Show on You two Show.

Speaker 13 (01:56:40):
After Morning, Colbert Guru, all right, come on, Jimmy, come
on honesty time, buddy.

Speaker 2 (01:56:52):
You know I've seen one only bears, I added you one.
Come on, only bears.

Speaker 3 (01:57:00):
Got that lovely patch of white hair on your back?

Speaker 2 (01:57:03):
Mmm?

Speaker 9 (01:57:03):
Some white?

Speaker 2 (01:57:04):
Oh oh awesome?

Speaker 26 (01:57:09):
Good A great Colver group along waited anticipated Friday's finally
bear Dad. My wife had two brides made to drop
out of the wedding two days prior to the wedding.
What we did was instead of flower girls, we had
beer boys. So they came up the aisle to bring
them out, bring them out and mount beers to everybody.

(01:57:30):
And they still on her side and took their places
and they were happy.

Speaker 5 (01:57:32):
To do it.

Speaker 2 (01:57:35):
But you gotta do right.

Speaker 4 (01:57:36):
You gotta pivot.

Speaker 3 (01:57:37):
It's just like our frozen wedding cake that arrived three
hours late.

Speaker 2 (01:57:42):
Four seven nine one text us seven seven zero three
one family F A M I L Y. That is
your six o'clock keyword. Go to real radio dot FM
and send that away for your chance in a thousand bucks.
Family guys who'll get that money? I'm Jim. There's deb
Jack is here as well. Yeah, you gotta change a

(01:58:05):
keyword on the screen because it's family.

Speaker 23 (01:58:08):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:58:09):
Appreciate that very much. It's like changing every hour. Have
you noticed that it is? It's like part of the deal.
I think so. I saw this story. This actually was
on Channel six a little bit earlier this week, and
it's about this lakey Ola Heights home and the code
violations that it's that it has. I want like I'm

(01:58:33):
lake like right next to Lake Eola there. Yeah, I guess.
The city claims it's being used as an airbnb. The
homeowner claims homestead exemption, and the neighbors around there say
that there is no possible way. By the way they
say when they got asked about it, like, well, we
have a lot of friends in family. You know, we
have a lot of friends in our family that comes by.
They're trying to contend that these are family get togethers

(01:58:56):
or something like that, and the neighbors are like that,
I ain't no family get together. That is a rager
at an airbnb, and you better shut it down. These
guys are literally looking at like a couple hundred thousand
dollars in fine. Oh wow, and I don't think it's
gonna go well for them. Actually, let me let me
check that. Five hundred thousand dollars and fines. One of
the largest single finds alone is three hundred and forty

(01:59:16):
one grand they hit. They've been hitting him for two
k a day since twenty twenty three to kind of
to get it into compliance, and they have not. They said,
there's no business here. I make zero money on anything
they claim I make. They deny the allegations, saying gatherings
out at the Homer simply for family and friends. I
have a big family, and why should I not have

(01:59:38):
friends over, That's what they say. Residents who live in
that condo complex right behind them, those say, hmm, no,
thanks exactly. These events are having They're not family they
are loud. They go on forever. It's like a concert.
It'll shake your windows. And the reporter goes, really that
loud and the lady goes, yeah, dude, that loud. And
you know when I saw this story and you the

(02:00:00):
airbnb thing, I think is a bit of a scourge
here in central Florida, is it not? Oh? And I
know that all around You know, we used to go scalloping,
and the Airbnb that we stayed up when we were scalloping,
that guy went out of that business that next year,
like he all, he had like three or four in
that same area, and he changed the properties and got
out of the airbnb business. But I could, like, I

(02:00:21):
don't live in an area where there are I could
not imagine living next to one my next one.

Speaker 3 (02:00:25):
No, my house was an airbnb. My mom's house was
an Airbn?

Speaker 2 (02:00:29):
Was it really? Oh?

Speaker 3 (02:00:30):
There are so many homes in Mount Dora that are airbnb.

Speaker 2 (02:00:34):
Do the city not have Well? I guess they can't
do that, right, I mean, you can't stop somebody from
buying a house, but you can't stop them, Oh, can
you stop them from running it out? Some I mean
things they've been dealing with this different cities have different
ordinances trying to manage this. We booked one for my
mom's ninetieth birthday, and so this would have been almost

(02:00:56):
ten years ago down in uh like Davenport champans Gate area. Yeah, awesome, beautiful,
huge house. But we needed a big house because just
that my first cousins stuff. It was like twenty twenty
five people right right, right, But as I look down
that the street with all these large houses with hardly
anyone it looked like living in them. I think it's

(02:01:18):
a common thing for people to have these buy these
houses and either it's their second home, summer home, or
just in the airbnb right situation for him, And I
think we we just had that story about you know,
them making an arrest and the shooting. It was in
this same area, right, yeah, clovicular. Yeah.

Speaker 11 (02:01:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:01:38):
In fact, that is a huge problem in Osiowa County
because for a while you either had hedge funds buying
up these private homes or other.

Speaker 4 (02:01:46):
Groups and we need to put it into that. Yeah,
I think they did and basically.

Speaker 3 (02:01:51):
You know, pricing single families out of these neighborhoods that
they could then rent them as vacation homes to people
come and traveling here, And yeah, Clovicular is facing charges
in our Steala County, allegedly for starting a fight between
two women that he staged for social media and shots
were fired.

Speaker 2 (02:02:05):
Well, my wife was doing the rios, which was back
in like two thousand and eight. These are bank owned
properties that were being foreclosed on when the downturn hit
in two thousand and eight. We were She had a
fund from an investor up north, and the investor basically
had this giant fund and he told her, because she
knows the market quite well, says, hey, look, when you're

(02:02:26):
doing these foreclosures, if you see one that you think
is good for us, you know, let us know, and
you know, we'll use you to put a bit on
it and buy these things. And we didn't know if
they were buying them to flip. That's what we thought
they were doing. But in hindsight, there's a good possibility,
because a lot of them were in nazi Ila County,
there's a good possibility they were buying those to just
sit on them and turn them into airbnbs. I don't

(02:02:47):
know how. I don't know how. I think, I don't know.
I guess it's profitable I've stayed in a couple of them.
I actually don't like staying in airbnbs more than like
staying in hotels. Well, now that the fees pretty much
match what you paying, it's the same. It used to
be a saving, so affordable, and then you'd have so
much more conveniences, like the whole place you're not worried

(02:03:08):
about next door. You're gonna have a kitchen if you
want to cook instead of eating out on your yea, yeah,
I know. I think that there are a number of
neighborhoods that were similar to Margaritaville. I'm not sure if
Margaritaville does this, but I remember at least one complex
like being marketed like that, like, hey, you know, by
this time share, you'll have it for three or four

(02:03:28):
months a year, and then airbnb it for the remainder
of the time. Like that was part of the business
model they were. They were drawing people in to buy
properties for that very reason, almost like a hybrid, like
a hybrid vacation club, that kind of thing where they
would buy it. They would say, hey, look, you know,
you write off whatever months you want if you want
to say the entire summer, you're doing that and then

(02:03:48):
we'll airb and be the thing for your for the
remainder of the year, and off you go. And I
know that a lot of those kind of pop up
condo like a Reunion, champions Gate, Margariteville in those areas
are by the parks, some of the stargate areas out there.
I guess they also did that.

Speaker 3 (02:04:03):
And I know a lot of the beach side areas
are over in the airbnb experience because people, you know,
they'll have loud house party, especially during spring break. The
whole driveway situation comes up. You've got people parking on
your grass, you've got loud parties going on, you've got
young kids.

Speaker 2 (02:04:19):
Do you think Choa's for the most part ban those, Yeah, sure, yeah,
because that's obviously one of the gigantic advantages of living
in an hoa, you know, controlled community is is that
you don't have to worry about buying a house and
then on either side of you or behind you, somebody
buying house and turning it into an airbnb, where every
week there's a different ilk of human being around your property.
You don't know from one minute to the next. I

(02:04:40):
told you guys, we airb and bet a place for
about a month and a half when we were waiting
on our house to close, when we were going from
Geneva to Eustas. And it was a condo that or
it was a duplex, so we had the right side
of it. That left side was an Airbnb as well.
And I'm telling you that in the time that we
were there, different people came and lived there. You don't

(02:05:02):
know what they're about, you don't know who they are.
We would see him hanging out smoking cigarettes and like
hoodies and stuff like. We didn't have any idea what there.
It was wild man.

Speaker 3 (02:05:10):
It was somebody just texted and said, most of Celebration
is now Airbnb.

Speaker 2 (02:05:15):
Celebration was the other one I was trying to remember. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:05:18):
And someone also said I live next to one. I'm
on Merritt Island.

Speaker 3 (02:05:20):
It was awful at first and has since been regulated
by the neighbors and isn't too bad at all.

Speaker 2 (02:05:25):
Yeah, And I think what happens there's a learning curve there.
And also it's I think it's hyper dependent on where
it is. Yes, you know what kind of neighborhood it's in.
I mean, the one we had in Sanford was in
downtown uh in one of the historic areas. But it
was you know, it was a duplex and it was
an old duplex and they written out both sides of it.
We had one for a month, and it's so expensive.

(02:05:46):
There is no break, by the way, when you rent
one for more than like, there's no Hey, if I
get it for a week, is it this cost? Or
I get it for a month, it's it's the per
day cost. There's no break.

Speaker 3 (02:05:55):
Well, like I had mentioned yesterday, because Rolling Loud right,
which started in my me Beach back in twenty fifteen,
this is the only US stop and it's only here
in Orlando. Well, the Osteola County Sheriff is losing his
mind trying to find all of these illegal house parties
at Airbnb's in Ostila County with all of these you know,

(02:06:15):
twenty thirty forty kids pulling up in these houses underage drinking.
Like I said, they've had reports of shots fired, sexual assaults.

Speaker 2 (02:06:22):
So some people will pull them off the market during
certain events if they don't want a certain kind of person.
They're like over in Daytona during spring break, people just
pull them off the market. They just like delisted for
a while till that thing is done.

Speaker 3 (02:06:31):
Somebody said, had my car towed at an Airbnb because
the neighbors were fed up?

Speaker 2 (02:06:35):
Yeah. This person says we had a nature way and
they allowed Airbnb. Oh goodness. Another person said, we did
an airbnb in Germany. It had a note that one
toilet wasn't flushing properly and if something happened while we
were there, we'd be responsible.

Speaker 5 (02:06:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (02:06:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:06:52):
The one I rented up in Palatka when I went
up a couple of years back to play at the
golf tournament, I got one that was actually as a
little house to was part of a bigger house. It
was like a main estate and it had a little
cottage and I was staying in the little cottage area.
And the list of rules when I walked in it
was like one of those laminated eighty eight and a
half my eleven paper on the back of the door.

(02:07:14):
I was like, man, are you kidding?

Speaker 3 (02:07:16):
Can't change the thermostadic I can get into the military easier.
Can't take longer than a five minute shower.

Speaker 2 (02:07:21):
Like they said it where you're one hundred percent right,
they said it, where you just have enough hot water
to take like a five minute shower. The ac wouldn't
go below seventy four. It was ridiculous. Don't want to
pay that bill? No, Yeah, someone else says they stayed
in an apartment Airbnb in Naples, Italy, a couple of
weeks ago. It was two hundred and fifteen dollars US
for the whole stay. Wow, shocking compared to the airbnb

(02:07:45):
prices here in the state. Like I don't even I
don't even look at airbnbs now when I travel because
there's just it's too expensive. But Jack, you're right though,
if it was a situation where we're taking like, you know,
six eight people, hard to do that with a hotel
and save money, but you could definitely do that. That's
where that's really where airbnbs shine. Yeah, and I think
the mountainous areas like up in Carolinas, you can really

(02:08:06):
get good deals on them and say there for a week.
We did that before as well. We did it in Montreal. Yeah.
Well we went up for my nephew's wedding, but it
was me and like three of my sisters and my
niece all in one you know, giant, big apartment. Yeah,
whereas some of the sins they had hotel rooms, but
that it was a lot cheaper doing it the way

(02:08:27):
we did when you parsed it out. Over all, the
people standing there, the Margaritaville experience. Man, if you if
you went out there and yeah, that's the greatest. I mean,
those those places are set up. Every suite it's like
a master suite. It has its own own bathroom and everything. Man,
that's the That is the way to go for sure.
All right, four seven nine one six one four one Again,
you can always text us in seven seven zero three one.
Family is your six o'clock keyword, that's FA M I

(02:08:51):
L Y. Go to Real Radio dot FM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand bucks back
in a second.

Speaker 1 (02:08:56):
Coming up tonight on Real Radio at seven, it's a
Corporate Time with Tom and Dad. You by my Eternal
Vitality dot com and Modern Plumbing Industries. At APM it's
the Orlando Shine Show with Brendan and the Bus. At
nine we all find out what the hell is Angel
listening to tonight on Real Radio one on four point one.

Speaker 27 (02:09:14):
Accident blocking the right lane Conroy Road eastbound at Vinelin Road,
and I'll watch out there's another crash.

Speaker 2 (02:09:21):
I for westbound at Lake Mary Boulevard, Leslie.

Speaker 5 (02:09:23):
There is Colbert Crew.

Speaker 3 (02:09:25):
What's up.

Speaker 5 (02:09:25):
It's Sarah.

Speaker 11 (02:09:26):
So I like airbnbs more than hotels, just for the
fact of having like a little bit of a homey
kind of feel for sugar, like a soap an oven.
To actually make proper meals and not have to eat
out and then actually be able to eat bluftovers appropriately
is my favorite thing to do, for sure. But I'll
do it alone, Like I don't mind going to Airbnb's alone.

(02:09:47):
I'm sure I'm being recruited, but I feel a lot
safer an Airbnb than I do at a hotel.

Speaker 6 (02:09:52):
But that's just me.

Speaker 24 (02:09:53):
By Here in Louisiana, the city of New Orleans has
shut down the use of airbnbs inside the city limits. Basically,
you have to have a hotel license or live in
the property in order to airbnb it.

Speaker 2 (02:10:12):
Yeah, I think different communities look at that differently. In
New Orleans is a totally different machine altogether.

Speaker 7 (02:10:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:10:19):
Yeah, And if you're a tourist community, I don't know.
Maybe it has something to do with how powerful the
hotel lobby is. And yeah, yeah, we got a couple
of hotels here. Yeah, family is your six o'clock keyword
FA M, I L Y go to real radio dot
of M and Sen that'll wait for your chance at
a thousand bucks. I'll remind you again, if you're playing
the game, phone on, phone up and answer the damn

(02:10:41):
thing when it rings. And it doesn't matter what it
says on the screen. If you're playing the game, you
got to pick it up. Was just talking to our
buddy Scott during the break. Scott's been on the show.
He works with Orlando City Soccer. He's about to take
a trip to London, and I go, are you staying
in hotels or Airbnb? He's doing. It's a combo of both,
really like depending on the city today and it might
be a hotel there or sometimes they'll have it nearbnb.

(02:11:02):
Very cool, Yeah, very cool. Welcome back. I'm Jim that
was here, missing him around?

Speaker 11 (02:11:07):
So is Jack.

Speaker 2 (02:11:08):
I think I need to go to London. I'd like
to go on an international trip and also have it
beat English. Yeah, London is We've started thinking about our
European trip for twenty twenty seven. Yeah, London is it.
That's a city to see. Yeah, and I think those
are the places we want to kind of do in Barcelona.
We want to go to Rome, we want to go

(02:11:28):
to Paris, we want to go to London, you know,
places like that. Our kids just went over to Oh
my god starts with an F France. Yeah, no, no, no,
it's it's it's tough stuff. Florence and oh Madrid, Oh
Madrid and Florence. I've been to Florence. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:11:48):
Paris is another good city and you have to walk it.
That's what they say, happen to.

Speaker 2 (02:11:52):
You just have to walk. London, you walk, you walk Paris.

Speaker 3 (02:11:55):
You just you'll miss too much if you rent a
car or you get a tax or I mean, in
some spots, depending on what you're going to be doing
that day, you're gonna want to, you know, maybe take
the tube, but you're just there's too much to see.

Speaker 5 (02:12:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:12:10):
You know when we this last trip, we went to
the Keys and we were done at a golf cart
and just drove around the keys and just kind of
check stuff out. Had been down there in twenty years,
and I told her, so that was the best fun.
I mean, I'm down for that. Like renting something where
you can just kind of tool around and drive around.
I don't know about no damn scooters though I don't
think about a scooter, but something contained we could do it.

Speaker 3 (02:12:28):
Maybe, I don't know, um no, uh, just because like
you know, one of the weirdest things about English roads
that I found is there's no emergency shoulder.

Speaker 2 (02:12:37):
Yeah, nowhere to go.

Speaker 3 (02:12:38):
There's nowhere to go, which makes the highways really dangerous.
And if you don't know how to drive or which
side to drive, it's it's yeah. And the shoulder it's
filled with horse poop from the carriages, and that would
be from when they just throw this stuff out into
the streets.

Speaker 2 (02:12:53):
That's a weird way to return a rental. This was
white when we gave it to you, sir, and it's
not now. So this is a really interesting business concept
and I find it interesting. And we have someone who
just went through this, so I can ask. So this
is a People magazine story. This couple had been together

(02:13:14):
for a while and they were sitting around this couple,
Jeff and Karna Bessen, and they worked with a website
to launch or they worked with a designer to launch
this website. So they said that we were always going
on weekly date nights, right, We usually go to the movies,
to the beach comedy, and they started running out of

(02:13:34):
things to do. They're kind of getting a little bored.
Then Jeff looks at the wife, Coriina, and says, you
know what, I wish we could. I wish we could
go to a wedding. I like weddings. They're so much fun.
And then she applied. You know what, that sounds great,
but we don't know anyone getting married, so that kind
of that That conversation kind of went by and they
didn't think anything of it. Then Jeff comes to her

(02:13:58):
the next day and says, you know what, a little
light bulb went off. What if we started a website
and we contacted or we found out when people are
getting married, and we sold access to people's weddings. Not
a wedding crasher. You're not just getting dressed and showing
up as a rando. You're actually paying to go to

(02:14:20):
someone's wedding. This is an actual website. It's called not
a wedding Crasher, right, And the whole deal is is
that you get to go to weddings. You have to
be like, the party has to invite you. You have
and your cost is on top of the fee for them,
which they don't really mention, but the cost is you

(02:14:42):
have to give a a certain level of gift to
the bride and groom, like you know, a wedding gift,
as you would give any person that you're going to
scale their wedding. You bring something, But this one has
a minimum and it said once a guest requests a seat,
they're prompted to complete a third party identity of verification.
The couple then reviews every request to ensure that no

(02:15:04):
guests are arriving uninvited. Then approved guests make a monetary
contribution to the couple before taking part in a day
built on connection, joy and shared experience. So theoretically you
could have you could have a small wedding, like maybe
you're getting married and you only have twenty people. That's
not going to produce a lot of revenue when it

(02:15:25):
comes to your wedding gifts. So maybe you go out
there and you go, well, you know, we'll put the
word out and we'll get a table or two of
these these invited guests that I just want to go
to weddings and they can come and hang out and
they're donating a couple hundred bucks a couple whatever the
case may be up to our wedding take to a
couple thousand bucks more than what we usually get.

Speaker 3 (02:15:43):
Not after you're done feeding them and liquoring them up.

Speaker 2 (02:15:45):
It doesn't well I think you take everything of that,
all that into consideration, you I mean, well, no, don't
you remember what was Dev's big concern wasn't trying to
get more people for guests. It was like, how to
cut it down because of the cost, right, yeah, because
the cost one hundred percent. So if you're adding people,
that adds to the cost. But obviously the cost of

(02:16:06):
going to it, what they're charging is going to not
only cover the gift part of it would also cover whatever,
uh uh whatever, pack the meal, yeah, meal and drinks
like it's open bar and you're getting a great meal.
Or that wedding cost more. Now it's three hundred bucks
come to the wedding on top of the gift. Oh
so you have to pay and give a guy it's
us here. After all, the couple decides how many seats

(02:16:27):
to open up, what price to set, who to approve,
and how your celebration feels. While thoroughly are thoughtfully recapturing
part of the investment you've already made and that's the
whole idea, like inviting randos to your wedding at a
price so that you can help offset the cost of
your own wedding. And they said it's been overwhelmingly positive.

(02:16:47):
It says, who do you think signs up the most?
According to these guys, what type of gay guys? It's
not K guys. It's not K guys, gay guys, it's
not gay guys. There is a certain group of people
that are doing this and apparently not only are they
having a blast doing it, it's saying, your widows, it's
working out great for the people that are going to

(02:17:08):
because they're not troublemakers. They're there to have a good time.
Not broskis, people who like to dance, divorces. It's groups
of single women now that are going Like you say,
if you have your girl group and it's like six
eight girls or whatever, these girl groups are getting together
and they're finding these weddings they want to go to,

(02:17:30):
and they're going to these weddings and they're tearing it up,
they're having a blast. Well, they're probably dressed up, they're
probably meeting people. I mean, who knows what single people
are going to be there. It's hard to find somebody
to be with right. Oh yeah. YouTube chatter says, I
love weddings that would totally take advantage of this website.
But people are doing it. It says that it's that
group of ladies' nights out that are really killing it
for them. They've got to some amount of people from

(02:17:52):
the wedding industry sign up as well, because they're all
for they're they're often working during weddings and really never
get to actually appreciate them and have a good time. Yeah,
that's true. It says the guy has a background in
finance and he found himself building this after he wasn't
working or looking after their kids, and he built the
he built the website. He said it was kind of

(02:18:13):
comical in the beginning, but excuse me, I'm so sorry, guys.
But then as it started to kind of build up,
he realized, Hey, you know, we're kind of onto something here.
I mean, I don't know how long it'll last. Let's
send you to the doctor. No, we're fine, but I
don't know how long. I don't know how long it'll last.
But at least you know, you you have like a
premise for a business. It seems to be working.

Speaker 5 (02:18:33):
Well.

Speaker 3 (02:18:34):
I think it's off the heels of that Brendan Fraser movie,
the Rental Family.

Speaker 2 (02:18:38):
I never even saw that.

Speaker 3 (02:18:39):
Well, the whole concept is that in Japan you can
rent people to be a part of your family, come
to a funeral, come to a birthday party.

Speaker 2 (02:18:47):
So this kind of scene that I know they did
that with animals, I didn't know they did it with people.

Speaker 3 (02:18:51):
Yeah, that's that's the that's the character that Brendan Fraser
a movie. And I haven't seen it yet. I've really
really wanted to see. It's supposed to be very poignant.

Speaker 6 (02:18:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:18:58):
It's one of the movies that Emily reviewed on Monday.
Oh is it really Yeah? Yeah, wow you were here.
Yeah yeah, I got that one hundred percent. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:19:05):
So that idea of you know, renting people out or
filling up your wedding with people who want.

Speaker 25 (02:19:12):
To be there.

Speaker 2 (02:19:13):
Yeah yeah, I mean that's exactly what they're saying. Is
it is like, it's so funny because he goes my
husband has become a bride. It's very funny because he's
the one like doing all the bookings and stuff, and uh,
and I just I don't know, I just find this
is a really unique idea and I never in a
million years thought of anybody would even think of doing that.
So are they getting a percentage for kind of facilitating?
So they set the price. So let's say you want

(02:19:34):
to go to a certain certain wedding and they have
a certain setup at a certain place and it's really nice,
and they're saying, okay, so to come to the wedding,
it's going to cost you three hundred dollars to come
to the wedding and you have to bring a gift.

Speaker 3 (02:19:46):
Oh well, that's good because if it's three hundred dollars,
so part of that would go to their fee. Then
the other price would probably hopefully go to the bride
and groom to cover the cost of food and dessert.

Speaker 2 (02:19:55):
And they set that price. The bride and groom are
the ones really setting the price. You're saying, hey, look,
if somebody wants to come to the wedding, we don't
have any problem with it. They go through an identity
check to make sure they're not maniacs, and then they go, well,
and you know, if you want to come, here's the price,
because this is how much it cost us to feed
everybody and for drinks, they say, you get a couple
of drink tickets and food, and that costs the breath
the wedding party you one hundred and twenty five dollars.

(02:20:16):
I mean they could charge two hundred bucks and put
that money toward the total cost of the wedding. And
you can even cheat on the gift. You can give
them something used from your house, wrapped up. They won't
open it until after you're long gone. Just just steal
something from every wedding and just give it away at
the next wed There you go, you're regifting.

Speaker 3 (02:20:35):
So in Japan, yet a rental family service known as
rentaaru Kazuku allows people to hire professional actors to play
the roles of family members, friends, or co workers at
weddings maintain social appearances.

Speaker 2 (02:20:49):
So that is banana. Is that so crazy? Isn't that? Yeah?
And by the way, this guy was told, he goes
when we started this up, he goes everybody, my attorney,
everybody said this is the dumbest idea I've ever heard
in my life.

Speaker 3 (02:20:59):
And now they're going, how much can I invest?

Speaker 2 (02:21:00):
And it says the other this is the other hate
we get is I hate this. I want to sign
up and man, I'm gonna tell you you know, it's
so funny every time a wedding comes around. I remember
thinking to myself back in the day, I was like, God,
dog man, this seems so cumbersome. You gotta get dressed up,
you gotta go do this. It's an all day event.
But every single one I go to, I have a

(02:21:21):
complete blast, Like I have a blast because it's plug
and play for the guests.

Speaker 4 (02:21:25):
Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 2 (02:21:26):
We don't have to do anything. We show up, we clap,
we see a beautiful ceremony with two people, even if
we don't know you. And then you dance and you
have an m scene. There are people there you don't know,
There are drinks, there's food. What else do you want?
You get to dress up.

Speaker 3 (02:21:42):
Everything you could want for a good night out right
on someone else's done.

Speaker 2 (02:21:46):
How much would you charge for yours? Go ahead? It's
just weddings. It's usually weddings. It's like, ah, we have
to go to a wedding, right, That's usually how I feel.
With Devs. I was excited to go me as well,
so excited I almost I got there eight minutes.

Speaker 4 (02:22:01):
Before, I know, thanks to Jack.

Speaker 2 (02:22:04):
Eight minutes before is when I showed up, and the
one I went before that was Rosses, which I had
a complete blast at Rosses time out. You know what,
you give yourself credit. You got there before it started early,
eight minutes, doesn't matter. It was early, you were not
late exactly. I'm glad it wasn't. It was a little
warm in the church at first, and then they shut
the door and that AC started kicking in. That ac

(02:22:25):
was made in eighteen ten. You got that date right
old building in Mount Dora, where Jimmy was not married.
I know, I don't know how we got that wrong?

Speaker 9 (02:22:36):
All right?

Speaker 2 (02:22:37):
Seven?

Speaker 3 (02:22:38):
And I went on, hasn't mentioned so you you forgot
where we got married? No, she hasn't mentioned that.

Speaker 2 (02:22:44):
No, what I mean, well, because you thought that, let
me take so she had no clue either, No, no, no, no, no.
Matter of fact, when we were driving over there, I said,
it's at the same church we got married at. Where's
that she go? She just looked at me. She was,
I don't know, I don't know where it did him
in Mexican to day we got married twenty years ago.
I was supposed to remember that. I'm like, well, mountain door,
it's not that big. Let's just drive around. Then I'll

(02:23:05):
get the clock. And he's like, no, let's don't drive around. Bradshaw.
Where is this place? Where is his place? And we
were two blocks away from him when I called Jack,
I'm looking as It's like I could have waited and
how did we just driven the two blocks? I would
have seen like four people I know, like Penny uh
and Darylston outside you Mulda, just waited three more seconds.
I wouldn't have that hanging over my head where Bradshaw
has it on me for the rest of my life.

(02:23:27):
Now you know how much I love that?

Speaker 4 (02:23:29):
Well, then just ask him how much he liked your wedding.

Speaker 2 (02:23:33):
Good one. Oh my wedding was so good. I don't
even know where it was now. I thought I was
going to find out it wasn't it happened.

Speaker 25 (02:23:41):
It wasn't.

Speaker 2 (02:23:41):
In that yacht room I've been. That yard room is
the joint. We could add it there. That yacht place
is great. Reception was a lovely vane, Oh my god, perfect.
It was absolutely the greatest.

Speaker 5 (02:23:52):
It was.

Speaker 3 (02:23:53):
Food was good, especially that sunset over the lake.

Speaker 2 (02:23:56):
Tori go Get said, a big old slab of brisket
she puts on a plane. I'm like, what are you doing?
You don't need that actually goes You're right here eth this.
I'm like, thank you, because I did not want to
make two trips. You don't want to be the two
trip guy to the wedding buffet. That's bad. That's a
bad look.

Speaker 10 (02:24:10):
No.

Speaker 3 (02:24:10):
I wanted the buffet open so if people wanted seconds
they could grow get it.

Speaker 2 (02:24:14):
It was so good, you know, oh we getting We
were counting the tables. Yeah, and then you call the
next table and that cater You had a caterer come
in and they just used that kitchen tom to make it.
It wasn't it wasn't there catering. No, No, we went
with a caterer. That's kind of wild.

Speaker 9 (02:24:31):
They do that.

Speaker 2 (02:24:31):
A lot of places do not do that. A lot
of places make you use their menu. One of the
reasons it's been so difficult for us to build a
golf tournament is because we have connections in trade with
food vendors. But the problem is is these golf courses,
because a lot of them are set up to do
this very thing, will not let you third party the food.
They want to produce the food. But the problem is

(02:24:51):
is they able to charge you thirty five dollars for hamburger.

Speaker 3 (02:24:54):
Yeah, well this you know, keeping in mind that the
yacht Club is a private club. Yeah, so we had
run into that with the bar service, so they took
care of all of the alcohol. But because we had
like a vodka spritz, we had to be the ones
to supply the lemons, the cucumber and the mint. Right
because it's a private club, they wouldn't have had that
on hand as regularly. But working with Chelsea and everyone,

(02:25:14):
it was just it was there were some snaffoos, but
every wedding is going to have that.

Speaker 2 (02:25:19):
Couldn't tell man from our From our perspective, it was
absolutely great. I'd go again tomorrow. It was great. Yeah,
get married again. Debe another one seven seven zero three one.
That's how you text us. Don't forget your six o'clock
keyword is family. Fam I l y go to real radio.
Dont of him and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars, What do you get for news?

Speaker 3 (02:25:39):
Kid, We're gonna talk about Pope Leo celebrating one year
as pontiff. Calls grow for a Lake County journalist to
be inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of fame. Oh
cool and sorry gamers, but Nintendo is raising the price
of the switch to.

Speaker 2 (02:25:54):
Oh we heard about that last week. More is it?
More of them are race using the prices of existing technology. Yeah,
this has never happened before. Itsually goes down. It's almost
like they know you nerds will pay it.

Speaker 5 (02:26:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:26:08):
Yeah, Well we'll talk about that next during You heard
it here first, all right, sy.

Speaker 2 (02:26:11):
Lbrey will come back and get Deb's news. Get the
hell out of here. On a Friday, Woo.

Speaker 1 (02:26:14):
Real Radio was on Facebook at Real Radio one oh
four one, sponsored by the law offices of aner Jar
and Levine. Accident attorneys called the law Offices of Anna
Jar and Levine at one eight hundred seven four seven free.

Speaker 3 (02:26:25):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven three seven
three three.

Speaker 2 (02:26:29):
From the ODO dot com Weather Center ode dot com
the only business software you will need.

Speaker 27 (02:26:37):
Hey, they're Central Florida Fox thirty five Storm Team meteorologists.

Speaker 2 (02:26:40):
Laurel Blanchard here.

Speaker 5 (02:26:42):
With your friend.

Speaker 24 (02:26:46):
W were so spot on driving in England as terrible
was just over in London last month and drove from
London to Edinburgh and that was the longest six hours
of my life.

Speaker 9 (02:26:58):
I'll never do it again. Zero out of ten do
not recommend.

Speaker 19 (02:27:03):
Hey, I just want to say I went to London,
flew from San Francisco with up all night, stayed up
and partied with the crew on the seven forty seven,
went to see a Imax theater, fellowsleep, missed the whole show,
woke up and I asked the guy what happened to

(02:27:23):
the movie?

Speaker 9 (02:27:24):
Why I didn't start? He said, you slept through the
whole show. London's a great city.

Speaker 2 (02:27:29):
Check it out, all right, testimony there.

Speaker 25 (02:27:33):
Hey, what you guys are missing is that the price
of memory has over quadrupled in the past a couple
of months because of AI data centers buying all of it.
So every piece of tech out there that has any
type of memory or storage in it, the price is
going away up and it ain't gonna stop anytime soon.

Speaker 2 (02:27:52):
Okay, thanks for that's.

Speaker 25 (02:27:54):
Up by it.

Speaker 3 (02:27:56):
I just wanted to send in a little talk back
and tell you guys that you have had that's an
awesome show today.

Speaker 2 (02:28:01):
It has been absolutely great. I've been following along as
I am pressing shirts custom shirts.

Speaker 3 (02:28:07):
For the mow Bowling Jour tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (02:28:11):
I'm so excited. I can't wait to give Jack a
great big hug. But I just wanted to tell you
guys that you're all amazing.

Speaker 5 (02:28:17):
I absolutely love the Colbert crew.

Speaker 2 (02:28:19):
Keep up the good work and have a fabulous weekend.
We love you as well. Ange, thank you, we do.
You're a good girl. We love having you around. We're
actually Devin and I were just talking about this yesterday.
When we do the Margaritaville gigs, we have the most
wonderful group of listeners that come out and hang out
with us all day long, and some of them even
a little longer, and we've kind of, I think we've
kind of acclimated ourselves to a couple of people out

(02:28:41):
there that listen to the program who are just real cool.
We like me in around.

Speaker 4 (02:28:44):
Oh yeah, we miss you when you don't get to
see you.

Speaker 2 (02:28:46):
She's definitely one of them for sure.

Speaker 3 (02:28:48):
By the way, I did want to let folks know
that Welcome to Rockville is paused right now due to weather.

Speaker 4 (02:28:54):
Fans are in fact being asked to find shelter.

Speaker 2 (02:28:57):
Yeah, there's some nasty thunderstorms movie and you definitely need it.
Where did eighty thousand people go?

Speaker 3 (02:29:03):
I don't know, you're in the middle of they don't
Marion Lucia and Flagler County's currently dealing with severe thunderstorm.

Speaker 2 (02:29:09):
I know this one Airbnb they hold eight, so they're
gonna be a little short there. Welcome back to the
Jim Kolber Show. We're all radio one to four point one.
Got a few minutes left for your six o'clock keyword.
It's family, fam I l Y go to real radio
dot I FIM and send that away for your chance
of a thousand bucks. And don't remember Tom and Dan.
They'll also have a couple And those have been a
little treasure chest in this game. So fewer players, better

(02:29:32):
chances to win.

Speaker 3 (02:29:33):
So if you've been playing this game for years and
it seems like you never get a chance to win,
don't sit on those later keywords.

Speaker 2 (02:29:38):
Seven, eight and nine pm. They have less play. Yeah, yeah,
and they hit man last last time we did this game,
they hit hard, so good A good job there. And
by the way, like I say one hundred times, phone
on phone up, anytime you're playing this game, you've got
to have that thing near you and you've got to
pick it up or they will not. And we've had
people miss it and it just breaks their heart, you.

Speaker 3 (02:29:57):
Know, and you got to turn it up to you
because I mean, I know, I've sat with my phone
right next to me and thought, oh, i'll see the
face when it lights up.

Speaker 2 (02:30:04):
I won't miss that call. Always miss the call. All right,
let's get some news, dav you got.

Speaker 1 (02:30:07):
It good time for You heard it here first on
the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (02:30:13):
Bob Leo the fourteenth was elected a year ago today,
the first pope born in the US has called for
an end of the war in Iran, drawing the ire
of President Trump and members of his administration. Saint Leo
University theology professor Stephen Oki says the pontiff is following
at least a century of precedent from leaders of the

(02:30:33):
Roman Catholic Church.

Speaker 12 (02:30:34):
The fact that Poblio is concerned about the war in
Iran and the way it's being conducted is consistent with
his predecessors, at least as far back as Benedict the fifteenth, who.

Speaker 3 (02:30:48):
Was last pontiff in nineteen twenty two. By the way,
all popes are anti war, yeah, shocking. WI Immigration enforcement
has also been a flashpoint, but the professor says Pope
Leo is following the lead of US bishops on that issue.

Speaker 2 (02:31:04):
His brother has been making the media rounds of you.
Have you seen any of the interviews. Yeah, very interesting
because his brother has some cool stories about him trying
to get the insurance company or the phone company to
change his number. So the bank, Actually, that's the one
I saw from my priests recently. Yeah, Pope Leo calls
you know, I'm Robert Provost and he does all the
security questions and the bank is representatives.

Speaker 3 (02:31:24):
Is IM sorry, so you're going to have to come
in and I can't do that, And he said, would
it help if I if I told you I'm Pope
Leo and click hung up on him.

Speaker 2 (02:31:34):
The dude's brother had to call the bank like some
bank president or whatever to get him through to make
it happen for him. Crazy, It is crazy, all right.

Speaker 3 (02:31:41):
There's a renewed effort to get a Lake County woman
some statewide recognition. A local chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution announced yesterday they're trying to get the
late Mapel Norris Reese inducted into the Florida Women's Hall
of Fame. For those who do not know, Reese was
a journalist who investigated the Groveland four case for a
newspaper called the Mount Dora Topic. Four black men were

(02:32:04):
accused of raping a white woman in nineteen forty nine.
In Reese's work is credited with helping get their convictions overturned.
Her supporters say she persisted in her work despite threats
like a burning cross on her lawn, her dog was poisoned,
her house and her office were firebombed. Reese died in
nineteen ninety five. And then, finally, Nintendo is hiking the

(02:32:25):
price of its latest console. The video game giant announced
today that it switched to will now sell for around
five hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 (02:32:34):
In the US.

Speaker 4 (02:32:35):
That's about fifty bucks more than the current price.

Speaker 8 (02:32:38):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (02:32:38):
Just like Jack said, you've never seen this before. They
always go down. But like the caller just said, with
the memory needs right. The company also forecasts a decline
in sales of the system within its next fiscal year.
Nintendo is pointing at the rising cost of memory chips
and tariffs as reason for the financial impact. And you
heard it here first on the Gym Culbert Show.

Speaker 2 (02:33:00):
Thank you, deb su Who do we have to think today?

Speaker 3 (02:33:03):
We want to thank Corona Cigar Company. Tell the people
once again about that great deal.

Speaker 2 (02:33:07):
Yeah, that is the Corona Gold Series eight five, eight
eighty eighty eight.

Speaker 3 (02:33:11):
Fifty and it's a really good smoke and I think
you'll enjoy it and you can get that at Corona
Cigar Doc. I also want to thank Fayezkara, restaurant critic
for The Orlando Weekly. Just in case you missed his
reviews of local Eatey Says podcast has already been posted
to The Jim Culbert Show. Also want to thank DeAndre
for sharing her mother's heartbreaking story of having her driveway

(02:33:32):
torn up. I go, and then, last but never least,
Sam Bow and Candice Rich and Alicia Bullwaer for running
our YouTube check Yes.

Speaker 2 (02:33:39):
Thanks guys, thanks for a great week. We appreciate that,
as we do every day. Jack question of the thing,
Sure does it bother you if cards use your driveway
to turn around? You know what, I'm gonna go out
on a limit. I'm going to say this really this
kind of irks people. I'm going to say, I'm going
to say sixty eight percent of the people say yes,
it makes them angry. Thirty nine percent said yes.

Speaker 4 (02:33:58):
How many did you say it was going to be?

Speaker 2 (02:33:59):
Thirty four I think is what I remember. I think anyway,
it was something like that.

Speaker 3 (02:34:02):
Any stry talking apparently because someone just texted us less
players jesus h fewer players consider.

Speaker 4 (02:34:11):
Me a former listener. Had enough, can't take it.

Speaker 2 (02:34:15):
Bye bye Felicia, exactly, Bye Felicia. All right, big weekend
coming up, you guys. Have a nice, safe one out there.

Speaker 3 (02:34:22):
Happy Mother's Day to your wife and to Naomi Bradshaw
dot Com, to toy Caitlyn.

Speaker 4 (02:34:28):
Yeah, yeah, thank you very much. You're welcome them.

Speaker 2 (02:34:30):
I'll be having Devin Jack, I'm Jim. We follow the
new Shuk. They follow the Monsters of the Morning. After us,
it's Tom and Dan with the Corver Time, the Orlando
Shine Show. What the Hell's angel listening to all day
tomorrow it smells like the nineties, And of course Sunday
Morning in His Captain's aug Radio with Jack Bradshaw and
first mate Naomi Bradshaw dot Com leading right into the
legend Joseph Martin's and Sunday Morning coming down. We'll see

(02:34:51):
you Monday at three for more than Jim Corbord Show.
Until then, have yourself a safe, nice weekend, guys, and
happy Mother's Day. See you Monday. I haven't worn underwear
since like eighty five.

Speaker 1 (02:35:04):
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.

Speaker 2 (02:35:16):
A Corporate Time with Tom and Dan is coming up
next on Real Radio. One oh four point one.

Speaker 3 (02:35:23):
From the Klosman Law Traffic Center car crash called Klosmanlaw
Klosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 27 (02:35:30):
We're still working on clearing up an accident bloc to
right lanes Greenway northbound at Orange Blossom Trail. Also another
crash Beachline westbound between five twenty and down
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