All Episodes

November 10, 2025 153 mins
Monday – We discuss; Trump getting booed at a football game, the new Frankenstein and other horror movies, airport divorce, our weekend projects and decorating for the holidays, weddings are more expensive, and Uber drivers are being scammed. Attorney Ray Traendly on the state of Florida suing Planned Parenthood and the U.S. Supreme Court reviewing voting by mail. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
For advertisers.

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

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Bad's right, guys, here were go on a Monday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
Thank you so much for tuning in.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
We appreciate that, as we do every single day, we
do have a good program set up for you. This afternoon.
We will get you caught up on what's happening in
the world. Deb does that around three twenty with GCS
News four o'clock hours, just a whole bunch of us
and you Black Black Hours, Trevian. We'll end it up
with Ray Trendley no BK today as a magic game tonight,
so he's out. Well, do your heard it here first
here calls, text and talkbacks all day long. Welcome to

(00:39):
the show. I'm Jim to my love, my lovely, very
dangerous go host, Miss Deb Rouberts. Hello there, straight ed
producer Deck Bradshall. Good afternoon, Boors seven nine one 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 Show, on x
just at Jim Colbert Show and all day every day
edjemcoverlive dot com.

Speaker 4 (00:58):
It's where you can check us out on YouTube.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Watch us do our thing. You could also get involved
with our question today there and on our Instagram as well.
If you want to send a talk back, that's easy.
Grab the iHeartRadio app, go to Real Radio and use
that mike to send your comment over to Jack. We'll
get you on there no time and you're three o'clock.
Heyward his win wi in. Go to Real Radio, do
fhim and send that away for your chance at one
thousand months. When is the word, guys, go get that money.

(01:21):
Last week we had a bombastic week last week we did.

Speaker 4 (01:25):
Hoping to end up this last week with more giveaways
as well.

Speaker 3 (01:27):
It'd be nice to give out another four or five
thousand dollars a week before we get out of here. Oh,
I'm rooting for five to get us to twenty winners.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
That would be Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
We started off slow and then man, we had about
a ten day run there. We went a little crazy.
We're not used to being behind on this thing in
the building, but after the first two weeks I think
we had fewer than JRR.

Speaker 4 (01:47):
But then we just kind of went crazy. Yeah, that
was weird new.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
Territory, and I knew, you know, the guy over there
at JRR he didn't want to brag.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
But he did. But yeah, he wanted to brag, but
he didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:59):
Because he now in the dyew it's happening.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
We're gonna count, We're going to get it.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
We're closers.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
Yeah, everybody have a good weekend.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Yeah, yeah, see everyone wearing their warm clothes.

Speaker 6 (02:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:10):
I put on a long sleep shirt today because I
know when we leave the suity of today it's gonna
be about fifteen degrees Coldermill, we got out of here.
It's not just us, it's everyone in this building.

Speaker 7 (02:17):
Yea.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Everyone's like, oh everyone got their fall weather?

Speaker 1 (02:20):
Yeah, exactly exactly.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
It's gonna be good, though, man, I mean's it is
supposed to get pretty darn cold tonight down into the thirties.
I know you'll have an extensive story a little bit later,
but tomorrow the high is gonna be.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
In the high fifties, which is I don't. I don't.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Again. I say this all the time, but you know,
as I get older, I will conflate certain times of
my life and not be able to remember it accurately.
But I do not remember it being this chili having
a dip this hot this early in November. Although it's
the tenth it's still really early in the season for
cold weather for Florida.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
And we could be looking at record breaking cold, like
breaking a couple of records that have been standing since
like nineteen thirteen, really so over one hundred years. So
this is record breaking.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
And by the way, it's making news everywhere.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
The snow they're expecting in the north is supposed to
be like bombasic someplaces, fifteen inches in just a few hours.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Today's Jim Colbert Show brought to you by Bombastic.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
This weekend, just did some projects around the house, stuff
like that, nothing really big. Didn't really even watch anything
entertaining this week. A little bit of football, but we
were kind of busy around the house and didn't really
spend much time watching TV or movies or anything like that.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
What'd you guys do?

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Decorated a little bit for fall about our sparkly corn.
Sparkly corn yep yep, sparkly corn.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
Where does that go?

Speaker 1 (03:37):
It goes by the arbor?

Speaker 4 (03:39):
What's the arbor? What are you talking about?

Speaker 1 (03:40):
We have an arbor?

Speaker 4 (03:41):
What is an arbor. I don't know what that is.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
I don't know how to discribe arbor.

Speaker 5 (03:45):
Is a tree like arbor? Day has a tree? But
is it like an archway?

Speaker 1 (03:49):
It's an archway?

Speaker 4 (03:49):
Oh yeah, I've ever heard that term. I used like that.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
I hope I used it correct.

Speaker 8 (03:53):
Well, that's all right.

Speaker 4 (03:57):
What is glittercorn? What is that? It's just some reindeer.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
Stuff kind of. It's the stainless steel corn and it
was sprayed yellow and green and it looks like it
has glitter on.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
This is your Thanksgiving decoration.

Speaker 5 (04:08):
So I have you know those like copy paper comes
in that that office supply box. Yeah, yeah, that is
the extent of our Thanksgiving decoration.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
So I get an apple box out there. That's I
don't get it exactly.

Speaker 5 (04:21):
Yeah, yeah, and so everything that's in there is the
amount that we have. I see that can contain all
of our Thanksgiving decorations. So you hang that like the leaf,
you know stuff, and yeah, and my salt and pepper shakers.

Speaker 3 (04:38):
The public drums, yeah they are, man, they.

Speaker 5 (04:41):
Don't survive the winner too much. Now like the original Pilgrims.

Speaker 3 (04:45):
They're they come out all chipped and stuff. Are they Pilgrims?
You guessed that she knew. Oh okay, have you talked
about pilgrim salt chickens before? I've never heard that.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Come on, you see in a commercial.

Speaker 5 (04:56):
Where the infamous public salt and pepper shaker, I got you.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
Yeah, the man pilgrims over and.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
They're looking at each other. We got turkeys, Yeah you
have turkey? Ye, yeah, we got turkeys. You got a
turkey where the salt comes out of his head and
the pepper comes out of his back.

Speaker 4 (05:16):
It's kind of weird, actually.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
That sounds a little weird.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
And then we have we have fake leaves. We have
two fake pumpkins. Uh, and that we used to have
like a stalk of white like it looked like the
wheat or the or whatever, and we'd set it up
by the front. I don't think we even have that anymore.
I think we just I think we have the same
paper box.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Check.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
I don't think we have all.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
We have a couple of scarecrows and mister and Miss
the scarecrow, along with a black crow that's on a stick.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
We hit the f F.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
We fast forwarded right past Thanksgiving and we went right
to Christmas. We set everything up this weekend so.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
You really are prey too.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
The only thing missing is is we have a tradition
where the kids will come over the ones that can
and we'll put out on the ornament. So the only
thing missing from our tree is the ornaments. We have
a so we don't have to worry about all that.
But we do have a bunch of old ornaments that
we've had in our family for very many, you know,
for a bunch of years. I think the kids have
one for every year they were born. So we have
a bunch of those. And then check this out. So

(06:12):
we live in this fifties house, right, and I don't
know if you check my wife's Instagram. You can do
while we're sitting here if you'd like. But we have this.
Back in the fifties, the aluminum tree was like a
big deal, right, Oh yeah, it was very posh to
have an aluminum tree. Now it does not look like
any tree that it does not look like a tree.
But my wife's friend is into this thing where she

(06:33):
buys storage containers, right, storage units, and then she liquidates them. Right,
And in this storage unit she purchased recently was an
original nineteen fifties aluminum Christmas tree and even better, a
Christmas tree turner, so you mount it into this thing
and plug it in and it makes sure Christmas tree spin.
So we put that up this weekend and I'm sure

(06:55):
we'll be dead by abessos and by the end of
this week.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
Yeah. I can't see it on her Instagram.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Maybe she changed it or whatever, but it was on
her story that they get you. Yeah, but we did gone. Yeah,
we did that this weekend and but it was a
good time. She did most of the decorating. I did
most of the dragging stuff out party and then because
it was a Sunday thing during the rain and I
was watching football a little bit, so.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
Like on Saturdays, Thanksgiving stuff is out. My wife's like,
you know, I kind of want to. I want the
Christmas stuff out earlier this year.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
Our oldest is going to be on a cruise ship,
so but she'll be having Thanksgiving, so we kind of
want to get some Christmas in all together. And so
I'm like, Okay, Sunday, That's what I'm doing. And that
rain Sunday did not stop. Eric Burr said it would
be in the afternoon over there and what.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
All day long, so that Christmas stuff stayed right where
it was. Oh really, so it's in a place where
you'd have to drag it through the weather to get
it in the house. Yeah, I keep it out my shed.
Oh I see.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
Yeah yeah, yes, project avoided. Yeah look at that. Yeah, man,
thanks mother Nature.

Speaker 4 (08:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
But other than that, man, we didn't really do anything
like crazy. I didn't play golf this week or nothing.
It was just kind of a bum like not a
bummer weekend, but it was just.

Speaker 1 (08:10):
A chill weekend.

Speaker 4 (08:11):
It was a chill weekend for sure.

Speaker 3 (08:13):
Yesterday, the word of the day was gloom. I thought
it wasn't that bad or it was gloomy Jack, But
you're right. I mean, look that overcast you got. We
did not get after it blew through by early afternoon,
it was it was actually not bad.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
It's so strange how a couple of weeks ago the
storms were so heavy in Mount Dora area and Titusville
area but not everywhere else. And in Winter Springs area
yesterday we got hit pretty hard.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
It's wild just to think that that rain that came
through a couple of weeks ago and calls all the
problems out in Eustas in Mount Dora like just a
couple of neighborhoods over. They didn't get anything like that.
I mean, it was just it was just isolated in
that one bubble. When you look at the radar from
that day.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
It was literally over gym at my house.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
That white bubble right in that area. That was it.
I mean, if you were just ten miles north of that,
you were getting nothing and we were getting a thousand year.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
They still have the pumps going out forty six to
get rid of the today. Yeah, to get rid of
the water.

Speaker 3 (09:05):
All right, seven seven zero three to one. That's how
you text us. Call us easy at call us easily
at four O seven nine one six one o four one.
Today is the Marine Corps birthday. Oh wow, happy birthday.
I saw ay Buddy ken Miller, who was a former
marine or buddy that's been here, a local comedian legend
in central Florida, put up a big thing on his
Facebook today saying happy birthday.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
I'll have to text my brother and sister in law
they're both Marines as well.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Yeah that's awesome, man. I only have one marine in
my life that I know. That's an oral buddy Bow.
I've got some Air Force peeps and a couple of
army peeps. But he's the only marine that I think
that I know. Jack saw the new Frankenstein movie stric
to Netflix and the Guillermo del Toro version of it.
Also the new Brett Farb documentary. Yeah, it's called Send

(09:49):
Me a.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Peek, which he shouldn't have beatten.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
And he saw another thing called Death by Lightning, which
is kind of odd as well, because what is that
met allgian.

Speaker 5 (09:58):
Yeah, this is about and even in the beginning it
says two men forgotten by history. One was the twentieth
president of the United States. The other Wood was the
man who assassinated him. And it's about James Garfield.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
I mean, you know, he was a lesser a lesser
known president. Yeah, he's not one of those guys. Yeah,
because he was he assassinated early in his I doesn't know.
So it's a four part mini series.

Speaker 5 (10:25):
I watched the first part and this is so well done,
so cool. I'm very interested. That's cool and continuing. This
has a lot of stars in it. A lot of
people you recognize are in it too.

Speaker 4 (10:36):
That's awesome.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
I wonder what that is all because they just there
was a movie with a lot of ladies that were
very famous.

Speaker 4 (10:42):
It just came out recently. What was that one called
God dogg It?

Speaker 3 (10:46):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (10:47):
Man?

Speaker 4 (10:47):
Oh, Kim Kardashian was in it.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Oh and then like, uh, and I think it's just
called the Kardashian you know, it's not called She was
in the movie, but she It was also a big
ensemble cast, and I guess she got a lot of
accolades from the star of the thing.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Well, I know that her All's Fair.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
That's it.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
That's the one that's.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
Her new series that is being panned. Oh, some people
saying it's literally the worst show on television.

Speaker 4 (11:11):
What's it about trying to get her at degree?

Speaker 9 (11:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (11:14):
Right, it's an all female law firm.

Speaker 4 (11:17):
Oh I see.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
And yeah, there hasn't been a single single nice write
up about that show.

Speaker 10 (11:23):
That's funny.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
By the way, I guess she also failed the bar again.
She really this summer, so she's buckling down and studying harder.

Speaker 4 (11:29):
That's a shame.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
There's a thing called airport divorce. We'll talk about that
a little bit later. What the average wedding in America
costs these days? Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
of course you can't be mad. Yeah, you can't be mad.
I have three daughters. I can be mad. I can
be mad. You can't be mad. I can be mad,

(11:51):
and you're kind of locked in at this point.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
I seriously am you're doing.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
There's an uber an uber driver scam out there. Big
temperature swinging, like we talked about a serum that has
really promising signs to do something that a lot of
dudes would love to hear about for sure. Plus a
bunch of other things coming up as well. What do
you go for news?

Speaker 1 (12:10):
We're going to talk about the longest shutdown in history
could be coming to an end. Get ready for a
winter blast across Florida, And when you really really want
some pizza? We'll talk about that and more coming up
next during JCS News.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
You gotta don't forget your three o'clock keyword is when
wi in go to real radio dot FM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars back
in a second, depth news and more of The Jim
Colbert Show.

Speaker 8 (12:37):
Always a learning experience on your show, Jim, I always
thought glittercorn was something strippers got if they wore shoes
that were too tight.

Speaker 3 (12:46):
I stand corrected. Yeah, Well, the texting service is literally
handing me my ass on a silver platter because I
did not remember that Savannah from the Morning show is
a former marine. And I knew that because I've known
her since she was in her early twenty So my apologies,
young lady. I'll get I'll give you one guess who
texts me to tell.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Me that good job, Savannah.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
One guess called me out immediately. Also, Russ's father was
a marine as well. Got rest his soul, So no fire,
all right for our seven nine one. Your three o'clock
keyword is win wi in. Slide over to real radio
out of him and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars. She also told me she was
flying back from somewhere had three flight delay.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
She says, this is not a good time to fly.

Speaker 11 (13:30):
No, it is.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
My wife led to California this morning and there was
only like an hour or so delay and she got
out there. But I guess the route she's taking is
a little different. Who knows? All right, welcome back. I'm
Jim Jack is right over there and dead has your news.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
It's time for JCS news. Wow, this guy kind of
put his name on everything.

Speaker 3 (13:49):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim Colberg.

Speaker 1 (13:53):
Show, and JCS news is brought to you by that
mortgage guy. Don Yeah. The misery for American flyers and
others impacted by the longest shutdown in history will continue.
Even with the Senate breakthrough. House Minority Leader Hakim Jeffrey said,
most Democrats aren't fans of this legislation build blame.

Speaker 12 (14:11):
Majority of Senate Democrats, led by Leader Schumer, are opposing
this bill.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
In the Senate, the Senate still needs to rewrite and
submit the new text of the agreement for approval any signal.
Any single Democrat senator can delay that process for days
through procedural moves. Even if the Senate is able to
quickly act on the agreement, it still has to be
approved by the House and signed into law by President Trump.

(14:38):
Last night, eight members of the Senate Democratic Caucus joined
Republicans in advancing a stopgap measure that would fund the
government through January thirtieth. Meanwhile, thousands of flights are being
canceled nationwide as the government shutdown continues. The president of
the Air Traffic Controllers Association says many flight directors continue
to work, sometimes over time, despite not getting paid.

Speaker 13 (15:01):
We will continue to work with the administration, will continue
to fight for it, and will continue showing up to
work to ensure the safety of the American flying public,
and we will do everything to get it back fully
on track.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Meanwhile, President Trump is threatening to dock the pay of
air traffic controllers who don't return to work. He also
recommended a ten thousand dollars per person bonus for those
who don't take off, who don't take time off.

Speaker 3 (15:26):
Owers doing call him sick, Yeah, exactly. It was calling
out people for calling and sick.

Speaker 5 (15:30):
Yes, and then suggested they should quit their jobs without severance.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
And I didn't see that part. I just thought he
was calling people out for calling and sick. He has
a truth social post well.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
Travelers continue to feel the impact of the government shut
down at Orlando International Airport, where over forty flights were
canceled yesterday. Airports around the country dealing with staffing shortages.
Travelers at MCO say they feel frustrated and helpless. One
man tells New six it has been a brutal and
terrible experience. In fact, hurts rent a car said they

(16:02):
saw their their rentals go up like twenty percent since Friday.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Well, I can imagine just so people avoiding flying exactly.
Did Yeah, Well, our family is a rule, and we
have a when we have a trip that's over five
hundred miles, we rent cars. Yeah, we don't use our
own vehicle. We're five hundred Yeah, no, over five hundred.
If we're going over five hundred miles, we'll never use
our own car. Oh no, no, we rent a car. Understood that.

(16:27):
But I think what the point of the hike in
Hurts is. They're saying people are choosing to rent cars
instead of flying. Exactly.

Speaker 5 (16:34):
And when you came back, I believe it was from
Punta Kana. Didn't you fly to Miami and then rent
a car to drive home? What'sies?

Speaker 3 (16:41):
Yeah, yeah, we had to do that for sure. Yeah,
had a rent a car and then drive back because
of the flying in.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
And that's what so many folks say, especially if there's
something time sensitive like a wedding or a surprise birthday
or something. All Right, The FAA and NTSB have been
called in to investigate what's believed to be a small
plane crash into a lake in Florida today behind a
Coral Springs home. Coral Springs Deputy fire chief Mike Moser
admits they don't have much confirmed.

Speaker 8 (17:07):
We have not found an entire plane yet. We believe
that it may be broken into smaller pieces. We don't
know yet. Of course, again this is very preliminary. We're
not assuming anything at this point. But again, they did
dive the water. One able to find any victims at
this time.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
So a backyard fence has been destroyed, some palm trees
have been sheared, and a piece of landing gear was
in the backyard. There's no word on how people were
on board what went wrong. Officials, though with the City
of Fort Lauderdale, confirmed that the plane was a Beachcraft
King Air B one hundred headed to Montego Bay.

Speaker 4 (17:37):
Yeah, headed to bring supplies all.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Right for a Hurricane Melissa relief flight. State leaders are
trying to figure out how last night's US Senate vote
to and the federal government shutdown is going to impact
SNAP benefit program. The vote comes after the US Department
of Agriculture ordered all states to halt a full funding
of SNAP benefits. The directive followed a US Supreme Court
decision on Friday overturned a lower court ruling ordering the

(18:02):
Trump administration to fully fund Snap again. An estimated three
million people just in Florida currently receive those Snap benefits.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
You don't read any Snap story. He's gonna wait now
because you know what I do. You have no idea
what court's going to do, what or when's going to exactly?
I don't know. I mean the story has like fifty
iterations before you get to the.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
Truth, and so many you know, food banks are just overwhelmed, overwhelmed,
all right. A teen's death on a cruise ship is
being investigated by the FBI. Eighteen year old Anna Kepner
was reported dead on the Carnival Horizon on Saturday. The
ship returned to Miami on Saturday as scheduled from the Caribbean.
The cause of her death hasn't been released, but Kepner

(18:42):
was set to graduate from her high school in Titusville
in May.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
Damn. Yeah, and they have no idea what happened.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Nothing has been released. Wow, nothing has been released, all right.
The suspect in a deadly crash at a Tampa night
spot is staying behind bars. A judge yesterday denied bond
for I List Samson.

Speaker 12 (19:01):
Mister Samson, you are charged with aggravated fleeing to elude
with serious bodily injury or death one, two, three, four
counts of that, which is a first degree felony.

Speaker 3 (19:12):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
Yeah, this is a guy on the West Coast, YEP.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
He's charged with vehicular homicide for Saturday's crash at Bradley's
on seventh and Ebor City. Four people were killed when
Samson crashed into the bar's patio. Tampa police say he
was speeding, refused to pull over, and lost control. He's
due back in court again on Thursday.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
Wow man, yeah, this, I mean again, it's so wild
when you talk about these police chases. You know, you
kind of wonder, obviously, this guy's a purp and needs
to be pulled off, and you know, I wonder what
the protocol is kind of figuring out how dangerous the
person is, like in other words, like if this person
just went on a shooting spree, you gotta do whatever,
I guess, But you know, the if there was a
robbery or something like that and you're chasing a guy

(19:52):
one hundred miles an hour through residential areas, I mean,
you know, I just wonder how how officers feel about
the protocol of that, because they understand how inherently did
a dangerous and is now we know we have four
dead people.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
Well, they had stopped their pursuit once they saw him
heading towards Seventh Avenue. Yeah, so, I believe Tampa officers
as well as FHP they tried a pit maneuver that
didn't work, and then when they saw him barreling towards Seventh,
they went, okay, now, let's let's not continue this chase anymore.
But he did. He just lost control and then hit

(20:22):
this outdoor bar where you know people just sit for
four people Yep, kill three right there on the scene.
One later died at the hospital, and I believe there's
nearly a dozen more people that were injured.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
Unbelievable. But he's okay.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
But he's okay. Why does it always happen that way?
All right? Winter's coming. A cold front arrives in Orlando
in central Florida today, bringing with it arctic air that
will drop temperatures to potentially near freezing or below freezing
in some spots for the next forty eight hours. Now,
while it's not likely that we'll see any falling iguanas
in Miami, north of that, maybe a different story.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
Look like the coldest part of Florida will be in
the Panhandle, could into a lower thirty connect.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
National Weather Service meteorologist Georgia Rizzuto says freezing is below
thirty two degrees, so cold blooded iguana has become dormant
or cold stunned and fall from trees when temperatures drunk
like that.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
It's still funny, though, is just the point where iguana
is just like this tree.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
Is houk right exactly right out.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
And look, gotta tell you, if you're standing under one
of those things, you catch an iguana to the head,
it's not gonna be it's not gonna be fun No,
get big af don't they Yeah they do. They gotta
be eight or ten pounds. Are those the ones they
say we should exterminate?

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah and eat.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
Well, what do you do if you have them frozen?
If it thaws out, it's coming back a lot.

Speaker 4 (21:41):
Oh, absolutely, it's not.

Speaker 14 (21:42):
It is.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
They reanimate once they warm back up again.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Yeah, but they're they don't die, right, they don't die, Yeah,
they just freeze up.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
Yeah, So they're frozen.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
You think they're dead, don't bring one in your house.
They're in a state of something. I don't think they're frozen.
They're in a state of froze or whatever.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
That's an official term, y'all.

Speaker 4 (22:05):
It's like when you get brain freeze. You're in a
state and something.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
You know it's gonna go away.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Well, cold weather is moving in this week in Marion County,
so the National Weather Service has posted a freeze watch
from tonight through tomorrow morning, sub freezing temperatures as low
as twenty seven degrees as possible. The National Weather Service
advises taking precautions to protect your plants, don't forget your pets,
bring them inside. Highs are expected to be in the
low sixties today and high fifties tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
Is it true that it gets colder like in a
forest area? It is that true. I remember camping in
the Kala National Forest and hearing people say that, hey,
you know the cold front coming through, and you gotta
barrel down because you know, in the forest it's it's
colder than it is out and around.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
I would imagine, because you know, just track or something,
or you know, concrete absorbs all of that heat.

Speaker 4 (22:52):
Yeah yeah, out in the woods.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
Yeah exactly. So Lucia County is trying to give the
homeless a place to go when the temperatures drop. The
county is opening a cold weather shelter. This is into
Land at the neighborhood Center's the bridge that's on South
Palmetto Ave. It'll be open tonight and tomorrow night from
six thirty pm to eight o'clock in the morning. Breakfast
will be served in Lake County Life Point Church in

(23:15):
Eustace on East orangejav will open at five pm today.
All right, bad weather is forcing NASA to delay the
launch of two Mars probes from Cape Canaveral. Blue Origin,
which is using its huge New Glen rocket to take
the probes into space, made the call Sunday. The launch
is now planned for Wednesday between two point fifty and
four seventeen pm. Nice chrispy to do it, Yeah, exactly.

(23:37):
The twin probes are designed to orbit the red planet
and study the atmosphere.

Speaker 3 (23:42):
Nice.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Speaking of something that's pretty nice. Lakeland is getting a
new prototype public store this week.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
What are they doing. That's where they're based, right.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
Yeah, that's where they're based, and of course some of
the fastest growing area in the country.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
So it's going to offer expanded deli options like bowls
and pizza nice as well as smoothies and asie bowls.

Speaker 4 (24:04):
Yeah, I think they're a little behind on that.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
To be honest with you, I think Publics probably should
have shifted to this four or five years ago because
other places, even like we were talking about the Key Foods
one the other day, they had these little cafes where
you can go and b to so Bafet and sit
there and eat. And I'm telling you, that's a built
in winter for Publics. If they had an area where
you just go to their hot barn now and they
had a little area, people would go in there and
stop and eat lunch, that would probably be one of them.
It's great because their Boho pork there by the way,

(24:27):
is delicious. That's one of the best meal cheats of
all time is buying a pounder and a half or
so of Bolo pork and just make tacos out of
that with some pickled slaw and pickle red onions and
a little bit of slantro. That's a dinner right there, dude.
I'm telling you, that's a grand total of like fifteen
bucks to.

Speaker 4 (24:46):
Feed four people. Pickled yeah, yeah, black beans and rice.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
There you go. Two three of the cheapest things in
the entire joint. Right, well, this is delicious.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
This store is set to open on South Florida Avenue
on Thursday. All right, Florida gas prices are at a
twenty twenty five low. Triple A report Sunday state average
was two eighty six, the cheapest since December twenty twenty three.
Today's average is even lower, at two eighty four, down
twelve cents from last week and twenty seven cents from

(25:13):
this time last year. Triple A says prices may rise soon,
as Florida's familiar cycle of short term declines followed by
sharp increases appears ready to repeat.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
By the way, that's not a day or so. I
mean we've had people like you get up in the
morning it's like two ninety nine, and that afternoon it's
like three fifteen.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
I can't wait to read the texting service because before
the news is done, they'll tell me that gas prices
have gone up another twelve cents.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
All right.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Ron Desantas feels the frustration of many football fans across Florida.
Governor DeSantis went on X yesterday to complain about not
being able to see the Bucks Patriots game on his
local TV something that Jack You's now I pact same things.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
So I listened to on what's that STESSI real radio
one of PRID. That's right.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
So CBS broadcasts the game to much of the country,
but in Tallahassee and in other parts of the state,
the network shows to air the Jaguars Texans game. Desanta
says he's a Bucks fan and yesterday's game was a
marquee matchup that was nationally televised, but even though he's
a Florida resident, he couldn't watch the game without a
subscription to NFL Sunday Ticket. He adds, quote, what a joke.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
This is not new.

Speaker 5 (26:23):
This is the TV contracts that they've had forever, and
it's when the AFC team is visiting or the NFC
team is visiting, determines what network has it and the
secondary markets for the Jags a priority over the Bucks.
This is not new. It happens a couple times every
single year.

Speaker 3 (26:41):
It's annoying every time, but it does to watch the
Jags players. He should have gone the Froggers. Yeah, he
watched the game there.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
Well, speaking of those you know, television packages, YouTube is
starting to issue twenty dollars credits to YouTube TV customers
who still don't have access to Disney own own channels.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
Oh they're screwed. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
The two companies have been unable thus far to reach
a deal that would continue to let YouTube TV customers
seek channels like ESPN, ABC and others. Both sides have
been in talks since the channels were pulled October thirtieth.
The credits start going out today if no deal is reached.
And then finally, this woman must have really been hungry

(27:24):
for a pizza.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
It's bad when you know you heard finally and then
some keyboard stuff, you know, that's what she's got a
really gear up for.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
All right, let's have it go well, Panella's Sheriff's office
says twenty one year old yasmin Erazo of Holiday was
arrested last week for going one hundred and seven miles
per hour along US nineteen.

Speaker 4 (27:42):
Damn really, She told deputies.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
There was no emergency or other justification for her excessive speed.
She just wanted to make it to Little Caesar's before
it closed for the night.

Speaker 4 (27:52):
That's good. The Halloway nineteen is it like a little
two late roads?

Speaker 1 (27:57):
The one hundred and seven miles an hour. Now you're
like a super speeder, right, your cow's car is going
to be impounded for thirty days.

Speaker 3 (28:04):
Look in no disrespect for that pizza. But on nineteen
that that's O Califars right. Well up there is the
OCALA National Force. It goes through there, but ninety and
nineteen goes up. Yeah, but nineteen A goes to the back.
Where'd you say it was a panelas is up in Tampa. Yeah,
but it goes over that way as well.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
Like for forty one goes from New York all the
way down here.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
You know that right right, So it's like it's like
that kind of yeah, I did not know that. Yeah,
four forty one goes all the way over to New York.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Well, hot damn either way. That concludes your JCS news Lily.

Speaker 3 (28:32):
Speeders, all right, four seven nine one text us seven
seven zero three one win is your three o'clock heyword,
w I N go to real radio Dot I five
and send that on for your chance in one thousand bucks.

Speaker 4 (28:43):
Back in a second with more of the Jim Coward Show.

Speaker 8 (28:49):
This is Danny Panella's county is not in Tampa.

Speaker 3 (28:53):
Vandola's county is Saint Pete. I know Bill Water. I
know to in on up.

Speaker 10 (29:01):
Jack, queue up that buzzer.

Speaker 12 (29:03):
Highway four forty one runs from Miami to Tennessee.

Speaker 3 (29:07):
Coudn't go all the way up to New York. What
do I look like, Rand McNally, I don't know. Welcome
back to the Jim Colbert Show. Roll Radio one oh
four point one. Uh, seven seven zero three one. That's

(29:29):
how you call us? Text us easily at seven seven No.
I just said that seven seven zero three one. Now
you're three o'clock. He would just win. W I n
got a real radio dott Emsen that offer your chance
at one thousand dollars. There you go.

Speaker 4 (29:40):
I'm Jim, there's deb he Jack is here as well.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
Yeah, I gotta tell you know what happens is I
consider the Tampa, Saint Pete Clairwater area all one place,
and I know it's uh, it's uh, it's what is
the other? Yeah it is that what is the edit's
Hillsborough panelas in Hillsborough County, Right, I kind of lump

(30:06):
that in as one thing. That's why I say that
about the Tampa area, because I do that well. And
they said that the road's really big down there. I
did not know. I only know this side of the
four to forty one from like the the Lake County area,
going north up through that area.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
I get suffer wrong all the time.

Speaker 5 (30:23):
All you have to do is throw the word area
after it. Yeah, yeah, Penelosa, Yeah that's Tampa area.

Speaker 3 (30:31):
Yeah. But if you live over there, you're gonna take you'll,
you'll take exception to it that much like you said
the Cocoa beach cocoa thing. And that's why you say, oh,
I didn't say Tampa, the Tampa area.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
It's a good good covers.

Speaker 5 (30:44):
It's kind of like we're in Maitland. We're in the
Orlando area.

Speaker 3 (30:52):
You're correct. I have the worst gas today. Great so no, no,
not Farty gas, Purpi gas. It's way different. It's one
of the other.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
Right, yeah, just keep it coming up.

Speaker 3 (31:05):
What it is. I made a big, old, big huge
pot of corn Chouner this weekend, which is absolutely delicious,
by the way. But I think it's burpie, that's the thing.
I think it's a little burpie.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Awesome, all right.

Speaker 3 (31:18):
Four oh seven nine six four one text seven seven
zero three one. Jack, you said, saw the new franken
Son movie this weekend? I did it.

Speaker 5 (31:25):
I believe Friday was released on Netflix. It is directed
by Guillermo del Toro. This is one of his passion projects.
He's but he's always been one with monsters and stuff.
And you know, the Shape of Water is about the
creature of the Black Lagoon and you know this, and
he did Pinocchio and not that Pinocchio as a monster,
but it's still kind of weird.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
He was a Pans Labyrinth as well.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
Right, that's goods yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. So but this
was starring Oscar Isaac as Doctor Frankenside. Okay, and I
thought it was great, really enjoyed it. Two and a
half hours long. Watch it Saturday night. Aren't many modern
There aren't many when you considered Vampire and all the

(32:08):
other classic monsters, Like there's been plenty of Mummy movies,
tons of Vampire movies, but the Wolf Man, I think,
and Frankenstein have the least amounts. I think Frankenstein probably
has the few fewer like renditions of that story than
any of the other monsters. What's interesting and where this
one turns a little bit, It's something that the others

(32:30):
don't offer, and that's Frankenstein. The monster's perspective. Oh really,
which you get for part of it? Oh?

Speaker 4 (32:38):
Wow, really that's cool.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
Yeah, Oscar Isaac is a small guy, though, isn't Frankenstein
supposed to be an imposing figure of like seven and
a half. Oh, he's the daughter, he's not the monster
act who plays the monster.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
I don't remember the actor's name. He yeah, please, he's
a bigger guy. He's been in some things that I
remember looking him up because my wife asked the same thing. Yeah,
and I recognize some of the shows he was in.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
There's only so many big dudes in Hollywood though, yeah, like,
like literally, there are only so many guys who were
like have imposing height and builds like that. Yeah, he's tall,
but the bill I mean he was strong. He was strong.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
But Jacob Belordi.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Jacob ELORDI. Where's that guy from?
I remember that name? Yeah, that's why I saw the name.

Speaker 5 (33:26):
I'm like, wait a minute, and then I looked it
up and I remember there was something that I saw
that he was in, but he didn't stand out as
this giant guy in it.

Speaker 4 (33:36):
Oh yeah, no, this is this is not the same
guy I'm thinking about.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
He's young too, Yeah, I guess with with prosthetics and makeup,
you can do anything you want with anybody you want, right.
They just want the acting ability. And do you have
to be a really good actor to be Frankensigin's monster
in this you do?

Speaker 2 (33:50):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (33:50):
Really? Oh yeah? Is he is? He like he talks?
He does not normal talk, right, Franken sein talk like
I see you type thing or like you know, talks.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Like a Willem Dafoe. One time.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
I don't think Dafoe was. He was a vampire guy.
I think he did the Curse of the Vampire or something.
That's the movie I yelled at him in the traffic
about it's still terrified about it.

Speaker 5 (34:14):
So Jacoblori he was. He was in Saltburn. That was
an interesting one. But also Euphoria. Oh that's the show
with us. Is Sidney Sweeney was in that one? She
was correct the HBO. My daughter was showing me clips
over the weekend because I remember watching the first episode
and I'm like, this show is not for me.

Speaker 3 (34:34):
It just felt like, well, it's a teenage girl show,
is it not? Or it's a young lady show is.

Speaker 5 (34:39):
And they're pretty promiscuous and stuff, and I'm just like,
this show is not.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
For me, and it's wild right to see girls that
young doing stuff like that. Doesn't make you feel uncomfortable.
It did, yeah, which is why I said it's called euphoria.
This show is not for me. Yeah, yah, yeah, good
for you. Yeah yeah yeah, but you're already watching that
and have things happen. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (34:57):
My daughter showed me some scenes from it, and there
was one just acting.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
Would you know?

Speaker 5 (35:03):
The acting in that scene was just really phenomenal and
because she was asking if it won awards, so it
did win a few Emmys. Yeah, but I don't know.
I think Zinda she was talking about Zindaa's performance. H yeah, yeah,
but none specifically for her that I saw.

Speaker 4 (35:20):
Well, I was way off by the way.

Speaker 3 (35:21):
I go to Wikipedia and type in like it just go,
you know, give me iterations of Frankenstein's Monster movie and
there are as many as you could possibly want. Now,
I mean, I'm not talking, I'm gonna castello. Can I
tell you there are at least two hundred before I
even make it to the forties. Who to the nineteen forties.
I'm not kidding. It's just on and on and on,

(35:43):
but it includes everything that has you know, a mention
of Frankenstein or Frankenstein in any way, shape or form,
like Monster High is in here, Soul Eater is in here,
Transylvania Television is in there, so anything like that. But
I think when it comes to major movie stars, even
the Wolfman has a major movie star doing it, like
Anthony Hopkins was in the Haby and Benicio del Toro,

(36:05):
were they not correct and that was an iteration of that?
Is the Howling considered like a is that that's not
a Wolfman movie, that's just a that's just like a
transformation into it. Well, maybe it is a werewolf in
the American Werewolf in London, Yeah, yeah, yeah, Werewolves of
London was the original in the thirties Wolfing, which was

(36:25):
I think one of those movies. Is one of the
wolf movies or wolf Man movies, is considered a breaking
point for Hollywood makeup effects, I believe because that one,
maybe it's Howling where the guy literally in real time
turns in from a person into a wolf with his
face stretching out, that's considered like a that's considered like
a breaking point. I believe in American cinema makeup artistry.

Speaker 4 (36:50):
I really do. I think that's if I remember right,
that was like a major player point at that time.

Speaker 3 (36:54):
An American Werewolf in London, Yeah, I think it was
Wolfing that has the one where you see the where
you see the person actually into a wolf in real time,
which it hadn't shown before. They would cut away and
they cut back and all of a sudden, the person's
a wolf, like with Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde. But
I believe in Wolfin or one of those movies like that,
they actually show the person turning into a wolf. And

(37:15):
I think that's considered one of the great you know,
jumping points for American cinema makeup effects. And then Frankenstein's
had a bunch of them.

Speaker 5 (37:24):
Yeah, Wolfen came out in eighty one and about the
same time as Yeah, American Wolf, Yeah, came out maybe
a year or two.

Speaker 3 (37:30):
Yeah, And I know American Werewolf was a real controversy
one because I think the dude got like beheaded in
that movie.

Speaker 1 (37:35):
Oh wow. Yeah, it was a good movie though.

Speaker 4 (37:37):
It was a damn good movie. Terrifying. They need a
job of that movie.

Speaker 3 (37:40):
It's like really good and I haven't seen it, like
we watched a many years back during Halloween Code Black,
and I with all of the neighborhood kids, we set
up an outside screen and showed the nineteen thirties. I
think it's the thirties the real famous Frankenstein was. Was
it Boris Corloff that played him in that movie or
was it what was the other big actor at that time?

(38:03):
There's a there was changing. Yeah, but I think it
was Boris Korloff. Korloff got it. Why can I say that?

Speaker 8 (38:07):
Right?

Speaker 3 (38:08):
I think Boris Karloff, Carloff, Carloff, Yeah, yeah, I think
he's the guy who played him, so real quick.

Speaker 5 (38:14):
American Werewolf in London nineteen eighty one, same year as
Wolf in American Werewolf in London was directed by John Landis.
John Landis also directed Twilight Zone.

Speaker 3 (38:24):
The movie. Right, that's where you had the beheading of
Vic Morrow, right, brother Chopper, Yes, so that. I don't
know if that's a different I don't think both movies
had a beheading associated. I thought the American Werewolf in
London had a scene where when the thing tore through
the movie, it swapped the dude and knocked his head off,
and that was it might happen. Yeah, And that was

(38:46):
like a big player in that movie because you don't
see a lot of that. In the early eighties, people
were getting beheaded in movies, especially in movies like that.
So it was American Werewolf in London that Rick Baker
won the Oscar for the transformation.

Speaker 4 (38:59):
So it was that movie.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Yeah, but I remember one of those movies was a big,
big deal and they both came out the same year. Yeah,
it was a really big deal. That transformation into that
monster was a game changer for makeup and effects. I
believe there all right four O seven nine one six
four one. You can always text us at seven seven
zero three one. Do you know what an airport divorce is? No,
it's an interesting concept, and I was.

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Thinking it's because of all the travel delays that's going on.
I'm seeing an increase in divorces.

Speaker 3 (39:27):
I think I have a guess, right, Yeah, I'll tell
you what it is next.

Speaker 6 (39:35):
Also, the Thriller video was also directed by John Landers,
and that had Michael Jackson turning into a were wolf,
and I believe it was the same makeup effects artists
because it looked about almost exactly the same as the
American Wolf in London transformation scene.

Speaker 4 (39:51):
What's up covert show.

Speaker 15 (39:53):
But if you haven't seen it yet, you have to
check out Sound Gardens Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Induction Ceremony. Yeah, Brandy Carlile and Taylor Mountson absolutely shredded
Rusty Cage and black Hole Sun.

Speaker 3 (40:07):
Check it out. I saw clips from the Brandy Carlyle
performance for Black Hole Son. It was a little different
for me. I like her because I do too, But
Cornell's voice was considered one of the top three rock
voices of all time. It is so good, it is
so unbelievably good, and what makes it even better is
how well it compliments the band, like how well the

(40:28):
music is written. Because grunge in those days, which they
were kind of in that world, but really I thought
they were the least grungey of all the grunge bands
because they weren't like a there was no thrash element
to them. They were really good songwriters. Cornell's was a
brilliant songwriter.

Speaker 5 (40:43):
You couldn't come out of Seattle in the early nineties
and not be considered grungy.

Speaker 3 (40:47):
Yeah, yeah, you're right, you couldn't. But there are a
lot of bands like you know, Screaming Trees, never mud Honey, yeah.
They also they never really got the the do that
they deserve because Nirvana and you know, and parljal Jam
and Allison Change, they kind of sucked.

Speaker 4 (41:01):
Up the all the life of that.

Speaker 3 (41:04):
That whole movement. So this aired on Disney Plus, and
I found out Disney Plus that my sister was subscribed to,
and I went to click it on and saw that
it said, hey, do you want to log in or subscribe?

Speaker 5 (41:14):
I'm like, oh no, I don't want to do that,
so I couldn't watch it. But then and I know
they're going to air a edited version in January on ABC.
But then I heard today that it's you can watch
it on Hulu, So yeah, Hulu, you can watch it
as well. I heard twenty one pilots and I'm not
even sure what band they were performing or helping with,

(41:37):
but they did a performance. Someone texted me over the weekend.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
I wonder how those are chosen. I wonder if the
artist really reaches out and say you know and says, hey,
you know, Soundgarden was a giant influence for me and
my band, And if they're big enough, then maybe the
people would consider that, or maybe the estate of the artist,
you know, makes that decision.

Speaker 4 (41:55):
I wonder how that kind of goes down.

Speaker 3 (41:56):
That is an interesting concept of howl and who performs
for those those induction ceremonies.

Speaker 5 (42:02):
Because I always wondered the exact same thing about the
Kennedy Center honors y Yeah, and then found out that
it's it's all people relate like they know that people,
they have a connection with them. But the artist, the
honoree does not know who's coming out, which.

Speaker 4 (42:17):
I think that's cool.

Speaker 3 (42:18):
I think it's awesome. Yeah, because obviously the Zeppelin one,
that very famous one where heart does Stairway to Heaven.
I mean that's a game change, but there are plenty
of those. I have to check that out. That's cool,
all right for US seven nine one six one four
one again, always text US seven seven zero three when
you're four o'clock.

Speaker 4 (42:32):
Keyword is bills. That's b i LS.

Speaker 3 (42:35):
Slide over to real Radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand bucks.

Speaker 4 (42:38):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 3 (42:38):
There's dev hello tech us here as well. Yeah, Hey,
don't forget to check us out on our streaming service.
Make us your number one preset if you don't mind.
That helps out a lot, And if you want to
watch us on YouTube. You do that as well.

Speaker 4 (42:48):
A lot of people in there checking us out as
we do the show.

Speaker 3 (42:50):
You can get involved with our question of today. We'll
have that up in just a few minutes, and you can.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
Do that as well.

Speaker 3 (42:54):
We are going to talk about Trump at the NFL
football game that happened this weekend. He was booed mercilessly
at the Commander's game. But there was something else happening.
And I got to tell you I agree with two
riders I read today on that. But we'll get to
that here in just a few minutes. All right, Airport divorce.
Airport divorce. Now, let me ask you a question. When

(43:15):
you fly, Jack, what kind of person are you?

Speaker 4 (43:16):
When you fly?

Speaker 3 (43:18):
What do you mean? I'm very conscient and when you
get very cheap when you get into the airport, you
get early, Yes, how early? If your flight's at eleven,
one time you get there.

Speaker 5 (43:27):
Matter of fact, my last flight was at eleven, and
I was there by eight thirty five in the airport,
in front of your game, ready to go to thirty five,
not in front of my gate on getting drop off
property more than two hours before my flight got it
one hundred percent deb same same, So I'm the same,
like I am a I'm a neurotic flyer because one of.

Speaker 4 (43:49):
My worst one of my worst fears.

Speaker 3 (43:52):
Is getting left or being late to a flight. So
I am I am overly cautious when it comes to flying.
My wife, on the other hand, is that she has
that TSA pre check and she flies all the time,
so she knows kind of exactly when they get there,
exactly how she can go through. And she will leave
like I mean, if her flight's at eleven, we're an
hour from the airport, and her flight's at eleven, luke,

(44:12):
she'll take off at like maybe nine, nine fifteen, oh wow,
and she'll get there and and it'll the guy could
never do that. The airport divorces this. How about your wife?
What does she do when you guys fly? She's the same,
stand by my side. She just talked about it. If
she were alone, would she do it the same way?
She might even go earlier. She go earlier.

Speaker 4 (44:30):
How about Chris? He hits me as that kind of guy.

Speaker 1 (44:32):
Yeah, yeah, he's the same, He's gonna be there.

Speaker 3 (44:35):
See I I She isn't like that. And airport divorces it.
When you get to the airport.

Speaker 4 (44:40):
What do you do?

Speaker 5 (44:41):
So we first thing, we go through security. Once we
get to our gate, we will get a spot and
then we'll either get something to eat, get coffee, or
do whatever we're gonna do, because that's where we're just
gonna you know. Yeah, we set up can we plan
to you know, we prepare to be there for at
least you know, an hour before right the flight?

Speaker 4 (45:01):
Right, you do same thing?

Speaker 3 (45:02):
Oh yeah, do you guys stay in the same area
or do you guys do the same thing?

Speaker 1 (45:06):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (45:06):
You do?

Speaker 4 (45:07):
Yes, So this is where.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
The airport divorce part comes in, right, Because what they're
saying the airport divorce is is once you get through
the gate, and once you're through to pre check, like
you go separate ways, Like one goes to the lounge,
or goes to the bar, or goes shopping for stuff,
and the other one goes and does exactly what all
three of us would do. We would go to the gate,
we would set up shop and we would not move.
We would protect our stuff. We would get a plug in,

(45:30):
We would get an advantageous seat area, either near a
plug in or a phone charger, or on an end
so nobody can sit next to you, and then the
other person just walks all throughout the airport like crazy,
and they call that an airport divorce.

Speaker 4 (45:45):
Oh wow, Like.

Speaker 3 (45:46):
It's like you you have completely different ideas of what
you're gonna do when you get there, and I don't.

Speaker 4 (45:52):
I'm there to fly, I'm not there to shop or
get hammered.

Speaker 5 (45:55):
Well, that's there to entertain you when you're stuck there,
right it gives you options.

Speaker 3 (46:00):
In the new C terminal at at MCO Orlando, and
I haven't seen it.

Speaker 5 (46:05):
I flew Jet Blue coming back, so I got to
go throw it on the way in, and it's like, oh,
fancy mall.

Speaker 3 (46:12):
That's what it felt like, a fancy mall. She's got
a cover charge marble. But the so I think with
tsa PreCheck, you see this war and more where one
person in a couple might have the pre check and
the other one does and so that automatically creates the divide.
So then if you have PreCheck, then you're through right away.

(46:34):
Why are you gonna sit there and wait for someone
to maybe thirty minutes to get through security. So I
can understand the PreCheck person say, you know, I'll catch
you later. I'm gonna go do this stuff. And because
my wife has that TSA pre check, right, I mean,
she doesn't even slow down. She just kind of walks
up there, puts herself in a basket. Next thing knows
she's gone. And I have to go through the entire

(46:54):
line of walk through because I don't fly enough to
justify buying and or getting in a pre check. And
like Jack said, she will be all down there and
I've got to do the whole trip by myself. Mar
you'll sit there and start just tapping your watch and
laughing at me.

Speaker 4 (47:06):
I'm like, you're the ones getting screwed. I'm sending up
here hanging out with the drug dog.

Speaker 3 (47:12):
And man, let me tell you something, there's nothing better
than being in line when they roll that drug dog through.
There is nothing because you can tell people are like,
you're a bad poker player. You're a bad poker player.
You're a bad poker player, because, man, when they bring
that dog out and they'll they and there's no warning.
You could just be standing there lining with your flip
flops on, ready to go, or like most people now,
in your gd pajama pants and you're sitting there and

(47:36):
you're waiting for your plane to come and they roll
that dog through there, and man, you see some buttholes pucker.
It is fun to watch. I'm like, oh, you're holding,
you're holding, you're holding, You're holding. What you got dog?
What you got?

Speaker 4 (47:46):
Who you hold? It's kind of fun to watch it.

Speaker 3 (47:48):
Part like the Red Sea people trying to get their
bag as far away as possible. I remember when they
did that when we were doing the the Phillips style
cruise the Key West for Fantasy Fast and they brought
the drug dogs in and everyone's like, oh.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
My god.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
That was the biggest, one of the biggest, like one
of the biggest questions. When we first started cruising. You'd
go to these blogs and they'd be like, everybody, it's
the same thing. How do I get weed and alcohol
on this thing? How do I get weed and now
caho on this thing? I mean, over and over and over.
That's all people wanted to know is how they can
get weed on the boat.

Speaker 5 (48:21):
And how many people put coffee grounds around their stuff
based on Beverly Hills, like a thousand of them doesn't work.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
Yeah, the dogs just smell coffee exactly.

Speaker 3 (48:35):
Well, that's right, And ironically that's where I learned how
sensitive drug dogs noses are. Because our cabin was right
next to somebody who was sailing with us who happened
to be an old DEA agent who actually trained dogs
to do that. I'm on the balcony of my of
my cruise and I'm having a like a cigar or whatever,
and the guy next to me, because he only had

(48:57):
like this metal partition so you know, if you ever there,
and uh, I think the person said, man, that smells good,
and I you know, I told him I got a cigar,
was and I said, uh. He goes, hey, U a
great time. Because I didn't know he was with us
at the time. He goes, I said, oh that's good,
that's cool, glad you can make it and you're having
a good time, and he says yeah, And we got
a new a conversation and I said, well what do
you do and he goes, well, oddly enough, I used

(49:18):
to train Dea dogs to smell you know, drugs. And
I go, oh, really, I said, you know, there's a
lot of uh, there's a lot of misinformation about how
sensitive or how good they are at it.

Speaker 4 (49:29):
And he looked at me and he goes, what do
you mean by that?

Speaker 3 (49:30):
And I go, well, you know, people, you're just hearing
people talk about how they were going to get weed
on the boat and blah blah blah blah blah. I said,
is it really is? Is it really that bad? He goes,
He goes, The dogs I trained could smell a one
germinated marijuana seed in the dead center of a large suitcase.
So if you put one, if you could do your
suitcase right, it's got in halves, filled it completely up.

(49:52):
Tape the seed to one side of it, roll it up,
zip it up. That dogs didn't be able to smell
like it was basically taped to his nose like it
might as well be it might as well be a
plant growing out.

Speaker 4 (50:02):
Of it, he said.

Speaker 5 (50:03):
Darryl Payne from Perfection Dog Training can talk about the
just the ability for dogs because he did the exact
same thing.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
He had the same job. And when you think about
bloodhounds on how they could just like take a quick
little sniff of a sock and then track somebody through
like five acres of you know, wooded area and not
even pause. That's incredible, man, it is all right. Four
oh seven nine six four one text us at seven
seven zero three one don't forget your four o'clock keyword
is bills. That's b I L l S. Slide over

(50:31):
to real radio dot if FIM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. We'll talk about
the Trump at the football game next.

Speaker 16 (50:53):
He Ohanna, I hope everybody had a great weekend. Sounds
like you got a lot more weather than what snuck
up on us last night. Anyway, boy, they didn't get
this forecast right. Anyway, The iguana when it becomes in
that stun the cold state, it's actually called brumation. Brumation,

(51:13):
So call out all the West Indians, tell them to
gather them up. That's a delicacy. There ain't no shame
in that, man. That's real food.

Speaker 4 (51:21):
Aloha, Aloha, Hey JC and Posse.

Speaker 3 (51:25):
I just realized what I really want to see is
old Jim Cantre doing a weather report with an umbrella
and fallen iguanas. That's a bucket list. Keep drove sid down,
he would. He's a gamer Cantoran.

Speaker 5 (51:45):
He's retiring right yeah, if he hadn't already.

Speaker 4 (51:50):
Bills is your fourth lucky word. That's b I LS.

Speaker 3 (51:54):
Kick it over to real radio out of him and
send that away for your chance of one thousand bucks
bills is the word, guys, go get that money.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
Kick it.

Speaker 3 (52:00):
I'm Jim. There's dem Hello, Jack of Ears one, howdy
big thanks to our friends over at to hard Rock Live,
Hard Rock Cafe there, Man, God almighty, they killed it
for us. Today they're honoring our country servicemen and women,
military and first responders with a valid id both past
and present, with a complimentary classic smash burger on Veterans Day.
That's tomorrow. We had it today. Oh it's so good

(52:22):
with their their very very famous mac and cheese, the
Otown macagechee, and it's those little World War II helmet pastas.
I don't know if that is. I don't know what
that is that I love it. It's like those little
World War two Coasta helmets. That's what it is. It's
exactly what it looks like. That is really a perfect
description for that shape of pots set and it cups

(52:43):
the cheese.

Speaker 4 (52:43):
Oh yeah, it does so good.

Speaker 3 (52:45):
The offer is also redeemable with a fifteen percent discount
on food and non alcoholic beverages for everyone in the
party all day long, every day, three hundred and sixty
five days a year. Hard Rock Cafe, salute you guys.
So we get if you want to take advantage of that.
If you're a military or SPON first responder with a
valid I D. Past or present, you can go over
to Hard Rock Cafe and get yourself one of their

(53:06):
classic smash burgers.

Speaker 4 (53:07):
And it is delicious. It's a it's a formidable burger.

Speaker 3 (53:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (53:10):
And so they do that tomorrow free for those folks,
and then that fifty percent discountants all the time. But
what our friend Leah lt also did was showed me
that they have a new collection coming in their rock Shop.
Their rock Shop is a gift shop in the Hard
Rock Cafe. It's the Bruce Springsteen Capsule collection. And she

(53:31):
brought me a shirt on the front, look at the back.

Speaker 3 (53:34):
Oh look you're there. Membership has its privileges, no doubt.

Speaker 5 (53:40):
They have three different styles and available at the rock Shop.

Speaker 3 (53:44):
Very nice. Cool, Thanks you guys being to taking advantage
of that. I'm Jim, There's deb Hello. Jack is here
as well. Rock on all right. So Donald Trump goes
to a football game this past weekend of the Commanders
versus the Detroit Lions. It was the first time since
night eighteen seventy eight, which I did not know. The
last time that a president went to a football game

(54:05):
as a sitting president was Jimmy Carter in nineteen seventy eight.
He went to the Super Bowl. Who President Trump?

Speaker 4 (54:11):
Yeah, it says our ap says Trump.

Speaker 3 (54:14):
Boot is the first sitting US president at a regular
season NFL game since Jimmy Carter in nineteen seventy. Am.

Speaker 4 (54:20):
So here's the thing, right, So, you know.

Speaker 3 (54:23):
Obviously the country is in a real kind of weird
spot when it comes to, you know, support of the
presidency or this administration. There, you know, there is no
great area. Most people either love it or hate it.
I mean, can we agree with that?

Speaker 9 (54:34):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (54:34):
Yeah, here's the problem with this, right, And I understand
people are very passionate. You're at a football game, you know,
the president comes there and you feel this is your
opportunity to let this guy know how you feel, and.

Speaker 4 (54:47):
You boo, and I mean it is did you guys
hear it?

Speaker 1 (54:50):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (54:50):
Oh yet did you hear it?

Speaker 3 (54:51):
Jack? I know I have no. Yeah, if you want
to bring it up, you're welcome to do that. It
is you know, it's overwhelming. I mean, it's it's very loud.
It's you know, it's just obviously a rebuke of that
particular president and the administration from this crowd. I mean,
overwhelmingly bad. Right, Jack will bring it up in a second.
And I could not disagree with this more. I just

(55:14):
couldn't disagree with it more. And the reason why is this.
Do you know what was happening when they were doing him.

Speaker 1 (55:20):
He was swearing in members of the military.

Speaker 4 (55:21):
He was swearing in recruits to the military.

Speaker 3 (55:24):
Now, look, man, listen, you can have you can have
your attitude about the presidency. You can have your attitude
about how he does things, or how this administration handles
itself or whatever.

Speaker 4 (55:35):
Those are men and women. Look, I've been to one
of these.

Speaker 3 (55:37):
You know. My daughter was in the Air Force and
we were there when she got sworn in. We were
there when she graduated from boot camp and made it
into the big Air Force. And those are very very
very important times for friends and family, really really important times.
These are gigantic decisions from these people to go into
the military and serve their country. And for people to boo,

(55:59):
why all that's being read is so classless? You know,
if you want to boo the guy, let him do
his thing, let him do, let him read the thing,
Let these kids get sworn in, let them do their duty.
Let him do his duty. You know, he flew there
as the president to do this. And I couldn't disagree
with this guy much more than anybody else. But this
guy went there to swear these dudes in and ladies in,

(56:21):
and they should have given them the respect of being
sworn in.

Speaker 4 (56:24):
Before they led him. He could have.

Speaker 3 (56:25):
They could have booed afterwards. They could have booed before,
But booing during that, I think is classless.

Speaker 5 (56:33):
Gab it not yet, I've got I guess he was
hanging out in the booth for a while.

Speaker 3 (56:38):
So yeah, I mean they have it. They have it
cut up there somewhere. It says uh but it was
huh okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's that's disgraceful. That's disgraceful.

(57:09):
It really is. I mean, you know, I understand your anger,
but that's disgraceful.

Speaker 5 (57:12):
So you should they were doing swearing in in the
stadium in the state was.

Speaker 3 (57:17):
At halftime, halftime. I don't know if it was better before.
I don't know if it was that or before. I've
actually been to a couple of baseball games where this
is happening. You know, here in Orlando there's a double
A team, the Orlando Twins, which was a minor league
of the Minnesota Twins. Yeah, and and they used to
swear recruits in before the game. It was a real
big thing to do. And uh, you know, man, that

(57:37):
you couldn't really experience or respect much higher than that.
You know, today's the birthday of the military, tomorrow's Veterans
Day or the marine Tomorrow is Veterans Day. And for
those people not to be able to just for for
eight minutes, yeah, for eight minutes. You couldn't you shut
up for eight minutes and let these recruits get their due.
That's going to be remembered by these guys as much
as anything else. And girls, I should say, these people, Yeah,

(58:00):
but they know they they weren't getting booed. Yeah, but
but it also it does mar the ceremony. But so,
I mean, I didn't even know that's why he was
at the game. Well, but they said they showed him
on the jumbo tron. Did they also let everyone know
why what was happening? Yeah, I mean I think it
was pretty obvious because he was telling them to he
was reading the thing, you know, say your name, you know,

(58:22):
and then and basically doing the swearing in.

Speaker 4 (58:24):
You know, Mike Johnson was in the suite with him
as well.

Speaker 3 (58:26):
Uh, and the photographs or the film, you know, the
the video they were showing, you could see everybody in
the suite and and you know, you could obviously hear
the response people. Some guy just texted and said he
wasn't booed. I got bad news, dude. He was booed relentlessly.
It was booded mercilessly.

Speaker 4 (58:40):
He was booed.

Speaker 3 (58:41):
It was everywhere in the news this morning, and that really,
to me wasn't even the story. I don't expect him
to you know, you don't expect some markets to you know,
accepting with with glowing fatman.

Speaker 4 (58:51):
If he goes this in Birmingham, he's not gonna get booed.

Speaker 3 (58:54):
You know. But in d C and Washington, he's gonna
get booed just from the nature of the office really
and unfortunately it happened during something that was very solemn
to a group of people there in their and their families,
and that sucks that had to happen.

Speaker 1 (59:07):
That's going to be their videos.

Speaker 3 (59:09):
Yeah, classless man, They couldn't shut up for just a
few minutes. This is amazing to me that people don't
have the decorum to understand what's happening there. Those people are,
you know, are committing their lives at least for a
short period of time to defend this country, and the
best that they could do was to boo the president
while he's doing that. I don't know, man, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (59:36):
I wonder why they did it at a football game though.

Speaker 4 (59:39):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (59:39):
I mean, it happens at sports events. I told I
just said, you know that we I've had it happen
at a minor league baseball game.

Speaker 4 (59:46):
I mean, I don't know that. Why why does it
matter where it is?

Speaker 5 (59:49):
What Texas says, Jack, you do show it defend the Dems.
I'm sorry, what all?

Speaker 4 (59:53):
I was doing nothing doing it.

Speaker 5 (59:54):
I did not even see this event, and I am
just asking questions about it.

Speaker 1 (59:58):
Yeah, that's all I'm coming out of the wood where.

Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
Yeah, well you know again I I here's the thing.
Like I said, you can disagree with everything this guy does,
but when it comes to this, I think this is
one of those times you just have to shut your mouth.
Let this thing happen, and then you can boo as
soon as they're sworn in. You can start booing as
bad as you want. You can boo outside when he's
going to his car, you can boo on his way in.
But when that guy's issuing that that uh, that swearing in, man,

(01:00:27):
I just think you gotta be cool there. Yeah, I
think you just gotta be cool. You gotta show more
class than that. M all right, four oh seven nine
one six four one. Yeah. I better not ask any
more questions. You know, I'm a crazy liberal. No, you
can ask all the questions you want. I mean, it's
a true story. We're talking about a story that's I mean,
we're not I'm not even taking an anti Trump point,

(01:00:49):
and this is on an anti Trump thing.

Speaker 5 (01:00:51):
So you go to a football game, Yeah, I don't
know where are.

Speaker 3 (01:00:55):
These people, Like, do they explain what's going on? Because
guess what, a swearing in during a football game is
out of the ordinary.

Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
So if you go to football games all the time,
that's something you never see. I've been to plenty of games.
I've never seen that, right, I know they do these
public things every once in a while. I think it's
pretty cool when they do that and you get to
experience it. My simple My only question was did everyone
in the stands understand what was happening at that point

(01:01:26):
when they show the President of the United States on
the jumbo tron, did they understand that people were being
sworn in?

Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
I mean he's reading the statement. I mean he's reading
the swearing in ceremony. He's reading it verbatim, saying I
and then state your name.

Speaker 4 (01:01:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:01:39):
I mean he's doing that right, I mean he's doing
it over the loud speakers. Oh, the entire stadium can
hear it happening?

Speaker 5 (01:01:46):
Yeah, But they they show him on the jumbo tron,
realizing he's at the game.

Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
There are people who are reacting to that immediately. Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
And now it's like, you know, the I state your
name thing. It's like, okay, maybe it dawned on them
halfway through. Maybe that's why they shut up.

Speaker 4 (01:02:00):
And it says here.

Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
The event was part of the NFL's year round Salute
the Service program, which aims to honor service members and
their families. Yeah, Pete Hegsath was there. I guess that
Mike Johnson was there as well. So when they showed
a picture of the suite. You could see everybody there

(01:02:20):
and he's sitting there, you know, clearly reading this thing
and just trying to swear these recruits in so they
can go and protect their country. He was administering the
US Armed Forces oath of Enlistment with Secretary of Defense
Pete Hegsith was there as well. You think he was

(01:02:41):
in a if this was a smaller venue and everybody
kind of and even if they announced it that people
would chill, like you think if they at the stadium.
Announcer came on and said, and now the President of
the United States to swear in recruits from the all
branches of the US military. That was set there quietly
that No, there's to be some people, you know, who
speak up. It might not have been as loud, you know.

Speaker 5 (01:03:04):
Yeah, there's there's gonna be some who just have it,
you know, the visceral hate and say this guy, he
brought it upon himself, you know, release the snap benefits.

Speaker 3 (01:03:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:03:15):
Yeah, you know, people are gonna have that reaction regardless
of where they because they're like, when else are they
going to have that opportunity to be in the same
place as the President of the United States.

Speaker 3 (01:03:29):
Yeah, and my point would be, you can wait the
six or seven or eight minutes it takes to do
that and then let your and then let it rip.
You know, I just think you doing this during these
time is you know, it's awful.

Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
I just bad.

Speaker 5 (01:03:41):
Look the only I heard that he was at a
game yesterday. I didn't even know why he was there. Yeah,
I heard it, this sport soil. You just mentioned it now, Yeah, yeah,
I just saw it this.

Speaker 4 (01:03:50):
Morning when I woke up.

Speaker 3 (01:03:51):
I didn't know that he was scheduled to do this either,
to be honest with you, And then I woke up
and I saw that. You know, of course a lot
of the media will be like Trump gets booed relentlessly.
They won't say what's going on. When you read the
real story from you know, real source like the AP
or whatever, it tells you that he was there, and
then you see the video and he's there and he's
trying to read this this salute in this oath, and
you know it's just the booing is so loud. You

(01:04:13):
can hear him still over the over the booze. But
I mean you can obviously hear what he's doing.

Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
I think they should have put more pomp and circumstance
into it.

Speaker 4 (01:04:22):
Yeah, maybe so maybe they should. I mean, I don't
know that.

Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
Like I said, I'm not one hundred percent sure that
even if they would have done that, it would have
changed the scenario. But I mean, I think the announcer
could have said, you know, hey, and now you know
and now a moment of silence. As the President of
the United States swears in new recruits to the US Marines,
the US Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Coast Guard,
and maybe even spaceports, whatever the case may be, Please

(01:04:47):
a moment of silence while this solemn ceremony continues. And
you know, again, I think most people would probably be quiet.
You're gonna have some outliers are going to scream and
yell because they feel they need to be seen and heard.
That's understood. But I mean, you know, if you don't
give them any I don't know. I can't imagine that
you could hear that. It would be like this to me, Deborah,
and I just understood if you started playing the national anthem.

(01:05:09):
We know what I'm gonna do, right, I'm gonna stand
up and I'm gonna put my hand over my heart
and It's not because I'm more patriotic than anybody than
anybody else.

Speaker 4 (01:05:17):
The fact is I was just raised to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:05:19):
So when the national anthem plays, I take my head off,
I stand, I find the nearest flag I can, I
face it and I cover my heart. And it isn't
because again of anything, that I'm not a better person
than anybody. I was just raised that way. And it
would be like any solemn regardless of who was in
charge of it. I would any solemn oath being administered
on behalf of our military in our country. It deserves

(01:05:42):
it to due respect, regardless of who's sitting in that chair.
That's my opinion. I mean, I think you've got to
look past your their differences with people at that point
and just respect the oath that's being given and not
be secreted by booing.

Speaker 5 (01:05:57):
Well, if the oath is that important, maybe it shouldn't
be done at a football game.

Speaker 3 (01:06:01):
Yeah, but it was part of the NFL's thing that
they were gonna do it. This guy's this guy's the
guy that gets out and around. He's gonna have a
UFC fight at the White House. You can suspend all
rules of what you thought were normal with Donald Trump.
It doesn't work like that, right, So I mean, you know, again,
if you want to having a football game, I think
you bring your respect to the football game, regardless of
where it is. If he hasn't had an if he
has it had an armory during a twa match, shut

(01:06:23):
your mouth while he's doing it, and then you can
scream when he's done. That's my opinion, all right, four
oh seven nine win six one four one text us
seven seven zeroth I want to get No, I was
just when you said, m I thought you heard him.

Speaker 4 (01:06:39):
Are you read something?

Speaker 2 (01:06:40):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:06:40):
Yeah, no, No, I was just wondering how it was
set up.

Speaker 4 (01:06:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
See, somebody said a free speech and action, no question.
I'm not saying that. I'm not saying you can't do it.
I'm not saying you should be dragged out of there
and putting and putting cuts. That's not my point. My
point is just have a little class, because there are
kids there that are about to dedicate their lives to
the United States of America to.

Speaker 4 (01:06:56):
Protect this and you should do a little better job
for them.

Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
And no, we'll go lesson that.

Speaker 5 (01:07:00):
Maybe is that what they're doing is protecting the Constitution
guarantee guaranteeing the right for free speech and speaking truth
to power.

Speaker 3 (01:07:08):
Ye, yeah, I mean I guess you could say it
that way I did.

Speaker 4 (01:07:13):
Yeah, would you have bude?

Speaker 3 (01:07:16):
Oh if I was yeah, yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:07:18):
Without it looks again, this is a ceremony. I didn't
know happened until you just said it ten minutes ago, right,
So I don't know what they said, like how they
presented that to a football stadium, that hey, this ceremony
is taking place. And if that was the case, I

(01:07:38):
would not have boded during a ceremony for those people.

Speaker 3 (01:07:43):
But I'm not convinced that.

Speaker 5 (01:07:45):
I've been at places where it's like it would be like, wait,
what's happening here?

Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
If he if he was doing a prayer, would you boot? No?
But that's me know, if he knows a prayer. But
at my point, I'm just trying to obviously draw the
parallel between something that you consider solemn and what other
people may consider solemn, right, because other people have been
in the military or in that stadium were probably disgusted

(01:08:10):
and had it, you know, and like if you were
at a at an event and he was saying a
prayer and other people were screaming and yelling and booing
you would be disgusted because it was during a prayer.
That's my point. I'm trying to say to to you
know what, you can not wouldn't consider or put a
lot of value in because it doesn't you know, you
don't really have a connection to it.

Speaker 5 (01:08:26):
No, no, no, no, no, no no no that that I
feel like you're putting words in my mouth saying I
don't have a connection with this ceremony.

Speaker 1 (01:08:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:08:32):
Yeah, I already said that I would not have booed
during this ceremony.

Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
Oh I thought you just said you would no, but
not during this Yeah, Okay, I thought you were saying,
would you have booed during I mean, obviously, if you're
at the stadium, boo's ass off if you want. That's
my point. My point is during the ceremony, I think
you should chill out a little bit.

Speaker 4 (01:08:51):
That's just my opinion.

Speaker 5 (01:08:52):
Yeah, And frankly, I'm not convinced that everyone knew a
ceremony was happening.

Speaker 4 (01:08:56):
And that may be the case.

Speaker 3 (01:08:57):
I don't know. All right, four seven nine six or one.
You can always text us at seven seven zero three one.
Don't forget your four o'clock keyword is bills. That's b
I L l S. Just simply go to real Radio
dot FM and send that away for your chance at
one thousand dollars back in a second with more the
Jim Golberg Show. I guess I hope you guys are
doing well. Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy TSA pre check

(01:09:20):
is like fifty bucks for five years, so easy, and
you can get it free with your AMAX.

Speaker 10 (01:09:25):
Thanks bye, thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:09:28):
But a lot of people don't want to do It's
what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:09:29):
They don't.

Speaker 4 (01:09:30):
They don't like the government knowing what's left?

Speaker 3 (01:09:36):
What's left? Piece of information are you holding on to?
How do you think no one knows? I was thinking
the other day, when we finally do sell this house
and move, you know, there's a thing that we can
do because well, my wife and myself have unique circumstances
where we can file with the county we live in
to have.

Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
Our personal information taken offline.

Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
Right. Yeah, And and I've talked to Ray about it
and I said, well, you know, should we do this?
And he looks at me and he goes, I don't know.
I'm just thinking this week I'm like man, if you
want to know, I mean, if you want to know,
I mean I don't know that is there anything you
can't find if you really want to know it? It's
out there, right, Yeah, sure out there. If you're determined,

(01:10:17):
you're going to be able to find it.

Speaker 17 (01:10:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:10:18):
Yeah, it's just how.

Speaker 4 (01:10:21):
Hard or easy do you want that to be?

Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
Yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:10:24):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:10:24):
The funny thing is is I do you guys ever
get prank phone calls or anything like that. I've had
some interesting situations really, Oh yeah, I've never had a
I've never had anything like that.

Speaker 5 (01:10:33):
I'd someone show up at my door once. Oh, I
got someone called me after I had an op ed
air in the Orlando Sentinel. Yeah, mill bills by the way,
b I probably I probably shouldn't have come to your door.
And I'm like correct, yeah, yeah, yeah, whoa yeah, considering

(01:10:56):
I'm looking.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Through the people with my forty five right up against it.

Speaker 4 (01:11:00):
There's dev hello here Florida law.

Speaker 1 (01:11:03):
I don't know if it's Floria law enforcement, but I
know kids are being worn. Don't do digging dong ditch
in Florida.

Speaker 3 (01:11:09):
Oh yeah, yeah, do not do that.

Speaker 4 (01:11:11):
Yeah, I don't know if you.

Speaker 1 (01:11:11):
Know law do exactly. We're pretty big on the standard
ground thing.

Speaker 4 (01:11:15):
Right exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:11:16):
Yeah, and they'll buy a new front door exactly. All
we have to say is we didn't know your attentions.
I was in fear for my life. Yeah, that's all
you have to say, right, I didn't know your intentions.
I was in fear for my life.

Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:11:27):
Although fortunately that excuse did not work for the woman
she's part of that documentary.

Speaker 3 (01:11:34):
Yeah. Yeah, but I mean she had a lot of
prior stuff going into that LEGITI believe that she was
a malicious person to begin with. Yeah, I mean shooting
through the.

Speaker 1 (01:11:41):
Door is a locked door? Yeah yeah, yeah, wow with
children standing there.

Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
Yeah yeah. Bills, by the way, you only get about
five minutes. It's seven seven or excuse me, go to
real radiodependence and that away for your chance at one
thousand bucks. You did get a lot of talk backs
on the last topic. Ye, A lot of text about
it as well. Yeah, I mean even you know, even
people who are text the show all the time, who
we know are not big Trump supporters in any way,
shape or form. We're saying they thought it was classless.

(01:12:10):
And then we had other people text in who were
not big Trump fans just said they thought it was
perfectly fine, And we had Trump followers say it was
perfectly fine. Taboo because if you it is a you know,
like Jack said, it's a you know, it's a free
speech thing to a lot of people, which I completely agree.
We've never really you know, when you come to the
free speech thing. One of the big kind of separators
that people don't seem to kind of put into play

(01:12:32):
there is like, yes, you can say what you want,
but there are consequences just saying certain things. So you
have to be very careful with that, I would say,
especially now, maybe.

Speaker 4 (01:12:39):
More than ever.

Speaker 1 (01:12:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:12:40):
Probably, Yeah, all right, seven seven zero three to one.
That is how you text us? What do we have
here to this thing? Let me see here? Oh, by
the way, you know what the funny I'm going to
talk about gambling. Have you guys seen what's happening with
professional sports here recently? Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
Yeah? Likely?

Speaker 3 (01:12:58):
Let me tell you something you and kind of we
kind of knew this was going to be inevitable, right
did you kind of know that?

Speaker 1 (01:13:05):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:13:06):
That the idea that gamblers are going to start reaching
out to players and saying, hey, look, you know because
and I will tell you. It's the prop bet stuff
that really makes it difficult to But here's what happens, right,
So this is the story I have. It's a couple
of pictures, right, guardians right and there, Yes, and they
were from I think one of them is from the
Dominican or Puerto Rico, and once.

Speaker 4 (01:13:27):
From another place.

Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
And they noticed a flurry of gambling on these two
pitchers and this one game at this one time, and
they actually isolated the pitches and the gam The bet was,
you know, if he throws it at the dirt, or
if he throws it high wide, or throws a curveball
instead of a fastball or whatever. And what they're saying
is the pictures were basically tipping people off so that

(01:13:49):
they could gamble and they could put these prop bets
to win hundreds of thousands. We're not talking winning a
couple grand We're talking about I think the one guy
should have win like over four hundred thousand.

Speaker 5 (01:13:58):
But the pictures aren't getting much and I don't know
if they were see And that's the thing. You you
have all of these access points, right, and with prop bets,
it is just on individual performance. It doesn't have to
be I need you to make the team lose. It's
I need you to, you know, throw one pitch here
or there. Right, Oh, it's and they figure it's harmless,

(01:14:19):
you know, they're going to help their friend, or whether
there is other types of pressure being put on them too,
you know, behave in a certain way.

Speaker 3 (01:14:28):
I mean, you look at the basketball when the basketball went,
you know, as we start looking around, it turns out
the one guy's like, had just had a giant tax
lane put against his house or whatever. And we know
for Phil Michelson back in the day. And I'm not
saying he's part of any of this by any means.
I don't want to get sued by Phil Mickelson. I
think you just followed the lawsuit today of the defamation
on somebody really. But yeah, but this guy, you know,
there's a book about it. This guy was a big

(01:14:49):
time heavy gambler. He's self admittedly was was a big gambler.
And one of the big things of him going to
the Live is because the giant signing bonus would help
him get out of the gambling debts. And I will
tell you just from my personal experience, I had a
buddy that played on the PGA Tour is a two
time UCF All American, and he went up there. He
played for probably eight or nine years on tour. And
when he came back after his first year on tour,

(01:15:11):
we went to shoot pool one day and we're sitting
a shooting pool and I said, okay, spill it. Tell
me all about this, right, I was dying to know.
We're all, you know, golf freaks or whatever. He goes
everybody's way better than you think, and Phil Mickelson will
play you for anything. Those are the two things a
guy who played all high school, all college, all American,
he gets on the tour. I asked him what the

(01:15:32):
experience is about. This is the guy waiting his entire
life to play PGA Tour golf. And those are the
things he told me when he got on tour. He goes,
everybody's way better than you think, and Phil Mickelson will
play you for anything.

Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
Damn.

Speaker 3 (01:15:46):
And that was in the early nineties. And this guy
gambled at that level for you know, two decades, so
we know that's out here.

Speaker 1 (01:15:53):
He's got any money left.

Speaker 3 (01:15:54):
Yeah, But when it comes to like you know, baseball, football, basketball,
it's so easy. I think even with the basketball stuff, Jack,
did you see some of the clips where they were
showing the guy on the bench and when the team
started losing and he knew that his game it was
out of his hands, that he was sitting the while
everybody else is going crazy. When the team's coming back,
he's just sitting on the bench on doing anything, or
he's not playing defense, or or he screws a pass up.

(01:16:16):
They started isolating these moments, you know, in these games
where they can almost use his evidence and go, oh,
come on.

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
Man, I think no matter whether it's just the one
pitch or whether it's more egregious, ban them for life
from the game, regardless of what happens legally. And they
need to pursue all that, they need to have the evidence,
but ban them from life from the game. But you
need you gotta have zero tolerance, like Pete Rose.

Speaker 1 (01:16:42):
Yeah, yeah, but don't you think, like with ESPN teaming
up with I mean exactly exactly. Every time I see that,
I'm like, that is so irresponsible.

Speaker 5 (01:16:57):
Billions every ad, You're not going to get a commercial
break without an ad for some type of gambling.

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
Even though it's crippling young men. You're gambling in class
and losing money they don't have. Yeah, it placing a bet.

Speaker 3 (01:17:13):
No, I'm actually trying to figure out how much money
is gambled in the US online gambling platforms every year.
Oh buddy, just legal. Yeah, actually now that you can
track legal gambling, because it's been happening forever. But it's
just the ease of it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:28):
And when I ran my account down I started the season,
I had leftover winnings from the year before. I got
down to nothing. I'm like, I'm not putting money into it,
you know, because if the money's into it, then I'll say, oh,
I think they can win, you know, and you know.

Speaker 3 (01:17:44):
April sixteenth, twenty twenty five a snapshot IMG US online
gambling market size twenty five to twenty nine. Online gambling
market in the US size is forecast to increase by
how much between twenty twenty four and twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (01:18:01):
A percentage? It's a number.

Speaker 3 (01:18:03):
Five billion, eleven.

Speaker 1 (01:18:06):
Billion, fifty four.

Speaker 4 (01:18:10):
Point eight billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:18:13):
Nailed it, fifty four billion dollars, guys, just have When
we talked to that teacher, I thought that was the
most giving thing, right when the teacher, when that thing
first dropped the hard Rock Betting app, and the high
school teacher asked the kids how many kids in her
class had it, and every male the exception of one,

(01:18:33):
at the age of sixteen years old, had the hard
rock betting app on their phone.

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
And already developing an addiction to gambling before you're even
out of high school.

Speaker 5 (01:18:42):
This is it's an addictive behavior now made accessible to everyone.

Speaker 3 (01:18:48):
It will ruin.

Speaker 5 (01:18:49):
Lives if it had it already has. Yeah, yeah, but
you're just going to see more and more lives ruined,
at least the financial and then you know what, what,
how does that change the rest of their life when
they fall into such a great pit early on.

Speaker 3 (01:19:08):
I know a buddy who did I don't think he
did it on I don't Well, he did it online,
for sure, but I don't think it was through the
hard rock app. And he lost tens of thousands of
dollars and it changed his life. He had to, you know,
he had to regress and for five years or so,
I think he moved in with his mom. You know,
I had to kind of rebuild his life over it. Yeah,
over playing.

Speaker 5 (01:19:24):
You know, we play cards with people who talk about
gambling with numbers that I'm just like yeah, yeah, no.

Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
We went out like we all we all look at
him the same way, like, where you getting that money?

Speaker 18 (01:19:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:19:35):
You get that money?

Speaker 19 (01:19:36):
Dog?

Speaker 3 (01:19:37):
I just think to myself, I'm at the wrong game.
Where are you getting that money?

Speaker 9 (01:19:41):
Dog?

Speaker 4 (01:19:42):
All right, let's take a little break. We're way late.

Speaker 3 (01:19:43):
Back in a second. S.

Speaker 10 (01:19:47):
I'm sorry, but if you are going to have.

Speaker 14 (01:19:50):
The opportunity to boo a precedent that he is doing
a really bad job in the country, you're going to
take it. They should have thought about doing that ceremony
knowing that the country is a hitting pot right now.

(01:20:11):
I'm sorry, but that was a mistake from the organization.

Speaker 17 (01:20:14):
Good after morning, Colbert carew all right, So while I
don't care about Trump being in a football game because
it literally has no bearing on my life whatsoever, what
those people did was gross.

Speaker 19 (01:20:23):
It was classless.

Speaker 17 (01:20:25):
Here's those people were all essentially cave men and women
that don't have the capacity to think of others. And
if those people really wanted to say something to get
pissed off about, they should have tried what I had
to do today and waiting into three and a half
feet deep water to pull the main drain out of
a pool in fifty degree weather.

Speaker 10 (01:20:42):
Picked me out.

Speaker 20 (01:20:44):
Hi, guys, happy day. I say, booze draft Dodger. He
wraps himself in the American flag just to kind of
ingratiate himself to the his base. And it's bs. He
doesn't care about the military, he doesn't care about Americans.
And you keep saying it's a somber event. It's not
a somber event. It's an exciting event. They're throwing their

(01:21:05):
caps in the air. What's so somber about that? I say,
boo the orange.

Speaker 4 (01:21:08):
Bastard, Oh Colbert crew, Hey.

Speaker 19 (01:21:14):
Guys, air Force veteran here, brogister Republican. Not that it matters,
but just wanted to give my insight real quick. I
was watching the game yesterday when President Trump was on there.
Obviously they didn't broadcast the sparing in with the recruits,
but it was briefly mentioned that there was something going
on before the game that involved the President throwing them in.

(01:21:38):
I have to be honest, watching it on my TV,
it was a little.

Speaker 3 (01:21:43):
Oh, it was a little lie. What you got thirty seconds?

Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
Oh God, my night.

Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
I love as you can make it so the last
word makes everything like it. You don't truth was going
to go. Truthfully, the way she set it up, you
really have no idea.

Speaker 4 (01:22:04):
I know how she's gonna go there.

Speaker 1 (01:22:07):
Call us back and finish it.

Speaker 5 (01:22:08):
Yeah, please, We'll got more talkbacks coming. But that that
was the block on talking about president.

Speaker 3 (01:22:15):
All right. Credit is your five o'clock keyword?

Speaker 4 (01:22:18):
C R E D I T. You know what to do.

Speaker 3 (01:22:20):
Go to real radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Remember, if you're
playing a game, phone on, phone up and answer it
when it rings, even if it says no caller ID. Guys,
that's how they tell you you've won. So it's a must
that you picked that phone up again. Your five o'clock
keyword is credit.

Speaker 4 (01:22:36):
Good luck.

Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
We hope you win.

Speaker 4 (01:22:37):
I'm Jim. Deb and Jack are here as well.

Speaker 3 (01:22:40):
Yeah. Deb gets married April twenty fifth, a date which
will live in infamy infamy. I will not boo, I
will not boo.

Speaker 1 (01:22:53):
I promise that's all right, we'll handle it.

Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
How many how many people are coming to your soire
about fifty fifty?

Speaker 10 (01:23:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:23:02):
Is that is that me? In a plus one?

Speaker 10 (01:23:04):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:23:04):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (01:23:04):
Jack and a plus one?

Speaker 1 (01:23:05):
Of course?

Speaker 3 (01:23:06):
Well?

Speaker 5 (01:23:07):
I thought Jim agreed to pay for your cash bar
if you blocked me from going, and as a wedding
gift to you, I suggest that to.

Speaker 3 (01:23:15):
Make him pay for your cash bar. Are you having
a cash bar?

Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
I forgot about that?

Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
The open bar? What's what's the set up there?

Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
You guys doing cash We'll have a signature cocktail.

Speaker 4 (01:23:25):
Okay, a smart move.

Speaker 1 (01:23:26):
But then anything outside of that that's right for.

Speaker 3 (01:23:29):
Yourself, champaign base or liquor base.

Speaker 4 (01:23:31):
What are we doing here?

Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
Can we ask what the cocktail is?

Speaker 1 (01:23:33):
It's going to be an old fashioned Is it.

Speaker 4 (01:23:35):
Really no booing for you? Young lady? Hey, I'm coming,
I know where I'm camping out.

Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
Was right exactly. Note that'll be the mister and missus
Carson cocktail.

Speaker 4 (01:23:49):
Nice. I like that.

Speaker 3 (01:23:51):
Wow, look at Jim.

Speaker 1 (01:23:52):
But we're going with the micro wedding, which is you know,
that's kind of the trend right now, wedding you.

Speaker 3 (01:23:59):
Take micro down for that too. That's like a party.

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
Let's go now, just trying to keep the cost down.

Speaker 3 (01:24:04):
Yeah, so micro wedding means fifty players or fifty members
or are under generally.

Speaker 4 (01:24:09):
Yeah, really I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (01:24:10):
Yep.

Speaker 3 (01:24:10):
So the days my daughter's baby shower is going to
have more people than that. Got mighty, I got no chance.

Speaker 1 (01:24:18):
You have no chance.

Speaker 3 (01:24:21):
Well, weddings can be very expensive and uh and stressful.
Has yours hit that realm yet? I mean you guys
have been playing this for quite a while.

Speaker 1 (01:24:28):
Yes and no, yes, and.

Speaker 4 (01:24:29):
No paying for it by yourself?

Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:24:33):
Yeah, yeah, that's the I mean, that's the drag of
adult weddings. It is, Yeah, it is because I mean theoretically,
you know, traditionally you would be paid for it, like
your father would do this exactly. Yeah, yeah, I say
that tradition is passe and it's long. God Jack says
that with two daughters, right exactly, that could get married

(01:24:55):
anytime now three actually.

Speaker 4 (01:24:57):
Really I do have three.

Speaker 3 (01:24:59):
I also have three. What do you think the average
wedding is these days? What do you think the two
million weddings take place in the US every single year.
They're very much an international affair, from the engagement ring
all the way to the cake, chairs, florals, the dress, guests,
the dinner, the whole nine yards. That all adds up,

(01:25:19):
like I think per person now, I think you can
almost bet it's like one hundred dollars a person or
something like that for a wedding anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:25:26):
Yeah, yeah, it's about thirty five thousand, is it? Is
it the average cost?

Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
What do you think, Jack, I'm afraid.

Speaker 1 (01:25:35):
It's got to be more than that though.

Speaker 3 (01:25:37):
Yeah, it's got to be closer to fifty It's why
he's asking.

Speaker 1 (01:25:40):
Yeah, exactly, it's got to be. It's probably seventy five thousand.

Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
Yeah, come on, no, no, no, no, I'll guess forty seven
thousand steps close thirty three thousand dollars. Really, it's uh,
it says a cost of a US wedding, which have
already risen by eighteen percent to thirty three thousand over
the last five years. A global wedding planning and vendor
marketplace says that terra frates as high as fifty percent
for some countries are going to cause this rise. Now,

(01:26:05):
of course, we I mean, we don't know what's gonna
happen with the terrorists as a long time, long term goes,
But it doesn't really matter. It's just how much everything
has gone up, you know, from dresses to bookings. And
I've heard really the nightmare stuff is renting anything for it,
whether it be a tent, chairs, tables, any of that
stuff for us was in that business for years and
it was a very good business. But it is so expensive, man,

(01:26:29):
so expensive because everything costs money. Yeah, and you know
in the venue another. I mean, just getting a venue
these days is difficult. Look, I gott tell you, I'm
gonna be honest. About two years ago, I think it
was maybe two years ago out in that Geneva Ostin area,
there is somebody that I don't know if they bought
the land to do this or they just had the land,
but they built like a giant barn on the land

(01:26:52):
and they basically turned it into a country wedding mecca
where you come out there. Everything's plug and play. You
bring your color schemes and your people, and we have
everything else. They had the dressing rooms, I think, cottages
on property for people to stay, parking, catering was all
plug and play. You just pay your money and you
show up and you can have your dream country wedding

(01:27:14):
type thing.

Speaker 4 (01:27:15):
I have to tell you, that's kind of an enticing
business idea, to be honest with you.

Speaker 3 (01:27:19):
It really is to create a place like there's that
place that were Ross and Olivia got married was basically
that same theory, isn't it.

Speaker 9 (01:27:26):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:27:27):
Yeah, it's a venue, that open space venue. They ran
it for whatever r yes.

Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
Yeah, yeah, But do you want to deal with Bridezilla's.

Speaker 3 (01:27:34):
Oh, I wouldn't do it. I wouldn't deal with them.
But let me tell you something. What you have to
realize when it comes to business and weddings is they
I mean some of these places. I mean, they don't
spare any expense. You know, you gotta remember if that's
daddy's little girl and Daddy's got some coin, you know,
a little girl gonna get what she wants, right, I mean,
it'd be nothing to spend sixty to seventy thousand dollars
on a wedding. I wouldn't mind being on a receiving
end of that. I mean, I'll hire somebody to deal

(01:27:55):
with Bridezilla or Spike the Punch.

Speaker 5 (01:27:58):
My niece doyes it. She's a wedding planner in North
Carolina and Virginia. She writes for a magazine about weddings,
and right now she's in Vegas speaking at a convention
really about yeah, weddings.

Speaker 3 (01:28:12):
Yeah, it is such giant money, it really is. I mean,
would you know how much those Disney weddings are now?
Oh oh Disney forget and if you want Mickey a
Mini to show up, no chain, Yeah, I mean that
may be though, that may be the most expensive a
la carte menu in the city of Orlando is having
a Disney wedding, because I mean you can add, you
can just start adding. Oh you want a stage coach

(01:28:32):
ride to the stage. Oh you want Dinny, you want
Disney characters to show up? Yeah? Well, not to mention,
I mean if you have it on property, I think
the beginning price, like the entry level price is like
fifty or sixty grand, and that's like twenty five or
thirty people deb's years are there?

Speaker 18 (01:28:46):
Is that?

Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
What yours is? Disney?

Speaker 1 (01:28:48):
No? No, yeah, listen.

Speaker 4 (01:28:50):
If you had an unlimited budget, where would you do it?

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Oh, good question.

Speaker 3 (01:28:53):
If you had an unlimited budget of where you could
get married, where would that be? Shrek Swamp?

Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
No forest, City of Virginia. I just saw a it's
called the Vaughan House.

Speaker 4 (01:29:02):
The vaugh House. Is it haunted?

Speaker 1 (01:29:04):
No, it's this gorgeous little like micro wedding venue, absolutely
stunning out in the wood. What's your algorithm?

Speaker 3 (01:29:14):
Well, when my daughter got married in Colorado, there was
a venue just like that as well.

Speaker 4 (01:29:18):
You used to be an old church.

Speaker 3 (01:29:20):
Yeah, and it was a chapel there and it was
just set up, and then off to the side there
was these little cottages and then there was a place
where you could go and have your reception. So you'd
get married. Everybody would go to the reception hall and
then you would basically walk across there after changing and
do the whole thing and just walk into the venue.
It was all self contained and Dude again booked almost
every day of the year.

Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Jack, we will be getting married where Jim and Tory
got married. Oh, the same church, Are you really Yeah, it's.

Speaker 3 (01:29:46):
Gonna be almost like I was there, Jack. I'll tell
you what I'll do. I'll bring some pictures of our
wedding and then you can beforehand, you can hold them
up and act like you were there for.

Speaker 1 (01:29:57):
Yeah, full photoshop you and them.

Speaker 4 (01:29:59):
You guys doing a k they're doing like cupcakes or
something like that.

Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
We'll do a cake with you know, an idea with
the cupcake, well flavor with d We haven't decided that yet.

Speaker 4 (01:30:07):
We'll do it then.

Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
I need to know.

Speaker 4 (01:30:09):
It's gonna be big, big decider on what an not
a show up.

Speaker 1 (01:30:12):
So you're in Jack, Jim is out.

Speaker 3 (01:30:15):
Yay, no free bar, no free bar. All right, Your
five o'clock keyword is credit c R E D I T.
Slide over to Real Radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand dollars back in
a second with more than Jim corbt Show, Real.

Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
Still to come, legal stories and more with ry trend
to leave for tk low today at six twenty on
The Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 4 (01:30:55):
Hey, the problem with having the same.

Speaker 16 (01:30:58):
Venues for weddings.

Speaker 2 (01:31:00):
People like to have different.

Speaker 20 (01:31:03):
Locations.

Speaker 4 (01:31:04):
Not people in the bus don't women are don't want.

Speaker 3 (01:31:07):
To have the same witty as somebody else had. So
it's always a problem. What didn do like that?

Speaker 21 (01:31:14):
Because just the other day Russ was talking about your
wedding and he said that him and uh, I don't know,
drunkie and Dan just kept getting lit on the open
bar and ran up a massive tab I guess.

Speaker 3 (01:31:29):
On the the father there.

Speaker 21 (01:31:31):
It was way worse that he kind of felt real
bad about it now, but at the time they thought
it was super funny and they thought they were goofing
on you pretty hard by running up like another fifteen
dollars bar tab at your wedding.

Speaker 4 (01:31:41):
Yeah, I thought that was funny.

Speaker 5 (01:31:42):
Yeah, Rush, he was showing regret at the time. I
did tell him to make that a show promo though,
however we did. We did hear back from our air
Force vet who was cut off.

Speaker 19 (01:31:53):
Yeah, oh, that was painful to listen to on the radio.
Just out okay, just to wrap it up. Sorry I
was talking too long. It's the Michigan thing I got. Anyways,
I digress. It was a little uncomfortable, you know, like
it wasn't Trump Hour. It was supposed to be about
the veterans, and he made it about himself a little bit.
It was kind of strange. But anyways, I don't know,

(01:32:14):
go air Force, and I love everybody, and I'm trying
to put up my husband from the airport because we're
going to the Magic Game tonight and I'm lost at
the airport.

Speaker 3 (01:32:22):
Oh, and you get into that loop of death out there. Man,
I've got that mastered, because when my wife comes in,
she will go to the what she'll do. She won't
go to the gate that she's assigned to. You just
go to the gate that's the least busy. Usually that's
b so it doesn't matter where she's excited the side
of the airport. So usually I tell her just go
to B and I'll pick you up at B. It's

(01:32:43):
just the easiest way to do it. And we've gotten
a really good system. But I've learned how to circle
that airport. Let me tell you something. If you don't
know where you're going at that airport, you make the
wrong turn, you're in Titusville. Like I'm telling you, you
can make a wrong turn. I think it'll spit you
out on the four twenty nine or the or excuse me,
the five twenty nine. You have no idea where turn around. Yeah,
it's a joke. Yeah, and it.

Speaker 5 (01:33:03):
Only got a little more complicated now that terminal see
opened as well. All right, welcome back to the Jim
Colbert Show. Credit is your five o'clock keyword cr E D.
I T slide over to real radio data of him
andson that I offer your chance at one thousand bucks.
I'm Jim, there's dead Hello, Jack is here as well.
Go magic, Yeah, go magic for sure. Had a tough
night against the Celtics on Saturday. They won Friday and

(01:33:24):
then lost Saturday. Yeah, yeah, and those torn like there's
a cup match happening in the regular season which is wild.

Speaker 3 (01:33:31):
It's wild.

Speaker 5 (01:33:31):
But those count for regular season games, right, Okay, they
just have select regular season games that are also part
of this Cup series.

Speaker 3 (01:33:40):
Yea, yeah, yeah, which I don't understand. I don't they
do the floor different. Yeah, it's wild. So an update
on his story, I just got if you guys will remember,
a couple of weeks ago over in the Daytona area
in Lucia County, somebody went out onto the Venetian golf
course and did a bunch of donuts on their second
hole green. No. What that story taught a lot of people.

(01:34:03):
That was October nineteenth. By the way, what that story
taught a lot of people is they had no idea
how much it costs to upkeep a golf course green.
A lot of people just thought it was a piece
of grass, your water, You put some fertilizer on it,
off you go.

Speaker 4 (01:34:15):
It's no different than your lawn.

Speaker 3 (01:34:17):
It's not. It's very expensive. I've been told by a
greens keeper years ago it was about ten grand a
year per square foot to maintain a golf course green
throughout the year. Whoever damaged this one did a lot
of damage. About one hundred and sixty thousand dollars. And
what I think that is is basically a complete replacement
of that green complex. And it's not just the grass.

(01:34:40):
You have to understand, the entire thing is built from
the bottom up, so it drains properly, so it slopes properly.
There's a lot of engineering that goes into building these
golf course greens. It's a lot more complicated than people believe.

Speaker 1 (01:34:51):
I think it's like five thousand square feet he Torah.

Speaker 3 (01:34:54):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, So they'll have to go in and
rebuild the entire structure of that. They have to lay
you another layer down and then put the grass on.
The grass has to grow or they'll sought it. It'll
have to grow in. It won't get play for months
because of this, especially the time of year that this happened.
And if you remember the story, he said the damage
was about one hundred and sixty thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:35:14):
Yep.

Speaker 4 (01:35:15):
Well there's an update.

Speaker 3 (01:35:17):
We have a suspect and the suspect is the worst
kind of suspect you could have, especially if you're the
parent of said suspect, because the suspect.

Speaker 4 (01:35:26):
Is seventeen years old.

Speaker 3 (01:35:27):
Yeah, that means I believe that in this state his
parents could actually be on the hook for the damages
caused by their actions. Now there was another person in
the car. They said they were just they were bored.

Speaker 5 (01:35:40):
Say take them away, like, I don't want to pay,
you can have my son exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:35:44):
Well, there's there's gonna have what's the word It starts
with an R when you have to pay somebody back
for stuff like that. Butte restitution, right, the restitution will
be you know, either this dude worked at this golf
course cutting grass for free for the let's say six
or eight years, or somebody's going to have to do
something because they're going to wind up suing this family.

Speaker 4 (01:36:01):
They're gonna wind up suing this kid and he's he's
a minor.

Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
You know, they're going to go after the parents.

Speaker 3 (01:36:07):
Look, here's the thing again, this is gonna sound funny. Duddy,
what are you doing out at two point thirty in
the morning as a seventeen year old driving?

Speaker 4 (01:36:16):
What are you doing?

Speaker 1 (01:36:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:36:18):
What are you doing?

Speaker 3 (01:36:20):
Like when my kids were seventeen years old, they had
to be home at midnight. That's it, midnight. Even as
seniors in high school, you had to be home at midnight.

Speaker 1 (01:36:28):
So apparently they put some videos up, yes, of the
vandalism on social media, and that's I guess how police
were able to kind of narrow it down to figure
out who was the perpetrator.

Speaker 3 (01:36:41):
Yeah, because they the guy in the and they're looking
for the other guy. Now, the seventeen year old.

Speaker 1 (01:36:45):
Confessed yep, and you know, thinking that because they took
the videos down that you know, but they did a
forensic analysis of their phone yea, his phone and found it.

Speaker 3 (01:36:56):
The student now facing charges of criminal mischief and they
which is a second degree.

Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
Felony at seventeen.

Speaker 3 (01:37:06):
We're looking at the passenger in the car who actually
videoed the vandalism. We're waiting to see what comes back
from the historicals on his cell phone to see if
he'll be charged as well. He wasn't driving. But you know,
we've learned the laws can be very weird depending on
what state you're in, you know, if you're you know,
one of the craziest one. You know. When we started
talking to lawyers professionally here on the station, one of

(01:37:27):
the most difficult things for me to understand would be this.
Let's say you and me and Jack and Ross go
out for a night. We're riding around I pick you
guys up. We're gonna go hit a couple of bars,
and then we're gonna go to a show. Right, let's go, right,
gonna have a good time. We go to the first bar,
have a couple of drinks. After we leave that bar,

(01:37:47):
I drive by, I say, hey, I gotta make a
quick stop and get some cash out of ATM. Instead,
I walk into the bank and I rob it. I
come back out and I get my car and we
drive away. All three of you guys are as guilty
as I am.

Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
That's why I would have jumped out before you had
the key in the ignition out, I'll get into I
had an.

Speaker 3 (01:38:05):
Uncle that get caught up in that. They were riding
around and a guy shot a gun out the window
and my uncle did a year and a half in
Rayford for that. Really wow, no idea the guy even
had a gun, no idea any of it was going on.
Now that's different in this case because obviously the guy,
the kid, knew what was happening. He was videotaping it, right,
so there's no way for him to go. I didn't
know this guy was going to be drug on his
golf horse and ruin it. You're videotaping it, so there's

(01:38:28):
no way out of that. I have a problem with
your hypothetical. Okay, he why is that?

Speaker 5 (01:38:36):
So if we're going out, we're going to we go
to we're going out for the night, We drink in
a place, and then you rob a bank.

Speaker 3 (01:38:44):
So why would we be leaving the first bar before
five o'clock because no bank is open past You could
say grocery store, you could say if I could say
Dollar General, you could say whatever you want. I walk
in and I rob You could be seven eleven. Now
I accept your premise. I walk in and I rob it.
You don't know what's going on. I just come out
and I've got a fistful of ones and a die
pack and some Marlboros a diepack.

Speaker 1 (01:39:08):
Exactly what?

Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
I can't say. That's the craziest thing ever, that that
law is crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:39:14):
You think about it.

Speaker 3 (01:39:15):
You can just get out with a couple of friends
looking at have a good time, and you got one
rogue a hole in the group, and he decides he
wants to arm rob a convenience store. While you're in
the car. You're a getaway accessory to a crime, to
an arm robbery.

Speaker 1 (01:39:27):
Now just drive him straight to the police station.

Speaker 5 (01:39:30):
And that sound uncommon to have a rogue guy in
your group that is just hanging out for the night.

Speaker 3 (01:39:36):
You know, you, I can smell those dudes though, Oh,
you can smell those guys who don't know wrong from right.
A little sketch I had. Some of my family did
know how to make a good decision. Really, yeah, And
it turned out to be way, way, way, way true,
way true. Uh. But yeah, this cat was. After one
night out with him, I'm like, never again.

Speaker 4 (01:39:57):
Really, yeah, it just doesn't you, I tell you he was.

Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
He's one of those dudes who I've learned about this
personality trait. If you ever meet anybody who tries hard
to impress people that you wouldn't even be around, that's
a bad sign. And this guy loved to impress the
lowest on the on the bar. He wanted to impress
the bad guys, so he would always they would always
do stuff to make him seem like a tough guy

(01:40:21):
and try to impress people who are in that world.
And and he was bad at it because he always
got caught and he spent he spent most of his
life in prison.

Speaker 1 (01:40:30):
Yeah, definitely not a yeah, I knew that.

Speaker 3 (01:40:32):
At fifteen years old, You're pretty easy to tell this
cat didn't have that ability to back off that kind
of behavior. He just wasn't gonna be able to do it.
I think everybody kind of knows somebody like that. I
don't know anybody in my life like that right now, though,
I don't have anybody in my life right now, I
think to get flipped this switch and just go crazy.
Right now?

Speaker 1 (01:40:48):
Do you part from you?

Speaker 4 (01:40:49):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:40:50):
Yeah, yeah, I'm the same person.

Speaker 1 (01:40:53):
You're the closest.

Speaker 3 (01:40:54):
I think I'm the safest cat. You know, I have
too much to lose. I don't want to do anything
stupid and lose anything. But we all I mean, I
think everybody in our group at least had that one
dude or that one girl.

Speaker 4 (01:41:04):
Doesn't have to be a dude.

Speaker 3 (01:41:05):
Oh yeah, I think I probably know more sideways girls
in our group that have the ability to do some
really crazy stuffing. I do guys really Oh yeah, yeah yeah.
I was trying to figure out who it is right
now because we we we know a lot of the
same people. I've got it narrowed down. Hey, yeah, yeah,

(01:41:29):
I think everybody does, right. I think if you were
caught up. If the audience were able to call up,
they could I guess and just go, hey, yeah, this guy,
this guy Phil No good, Yeah, I love him, fun
to be around. He can come to the house during
the daytime. Right, But we had we had somebody in
our group. This is the truth, right, We had somebody
in our group then that we couldn't not invite because
they were kind of integrated into our group, So not

(01:41:52):
inviting them to a group event when all those people
would usually come over. But I will tell you we
did make a decision that once we did that, we
would lock certain doors in the house.

Speaker 4 (01:42:02):
Really, yeah, we would.

Speaker 3 (01:42:03):
We would take certain stuff and put it in rooms
and would lock it because we just didn't know.

Speaker 1 (01:42:09):
Do you ever have stuff disappear before?

Speaker 3 (01:42:11):
No, but we knew something was going on. We would
take all like the guest bathroom had had a medicine cabinet,
we would take everything out of that.

Speaker 1 (01:42:18):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
We just kind of knew that there was a history
of some sideways behavior and we just didn't want to
be a target, so we would just you know, we
just kind of took the we took the situation out
of play before it possibly became a play. We just
did that smart move? Well, I mean, I don't, I
don't know, but you just here's the thing. You don't
want a situation to cause a big problem in your

(01:42:39):
friends group, right, And that's what we were trying to
really trying to defend because we would only see this
person occasionally, so that we didn't want to cause a
situation where where that was a situation where you know,
it was uncomfortable for everybody because we knew if we
just protected ourselves that we would you know, we wouldn't
be a target.

Speaker 1 (01:42:56):
That'd be a non starter.

Speaker 3 (01:42:57):
Yeah, yeah, nothing crazy though, just maybe sideways a little bit.

Speaker 1 (01:43:04):
That sounds crazy enough, right, four.

Speaker 3 (01:43:05):
O seven nine six four one. Texts us again seven
seven zero three one. There was a really big story today.
I'm gonna bring this up because when we have a
few minutes here, but I think it's important to say.

Speaker 4 (01:43:15):
My wife had text me.

Speaker 3 (01:43:16):
Uh during the break and or during the break a
couple of breaks ago, and said, this is a great
day for women and uh, And I said, why there
are decisions being made, you know, on the daily from
courts across the nation. And she said that hormone replacement
therapy lost their black box warning and I didn't even

(01:43:36):
really kind of know what a black box warning was,
so I asked deb, I've not heard it referred to
as that, And a black box warning basically means that
the whatever the black box is on has the possibility
of causing cancer.

Speaker 1 (01:43:49):
Yeah, specifically breast cancer.

Speaker 3 (01:43:51):
So hormoner therapy placement has been a big time player
my wife's sanity for the last number of years. And
she would not like, she would not scoff at me
saying that because she went through a hysterectmy she was
very young because of some complications during her during her
second childbirth, so she had to have a full hys
direct me like twenty two years old, twenty one years old,

(01:44:12):
so from that age obviously not producing any hormones that
could be a big problem. And we went through a
really difficult time in a relationship because she was having
symptoms and she did not not explain it, doctors couldn't
explain it. Then we found out she had hashamotos and
other situations like that and got on hormone replacement therapy.
A lot of women who are experiencing the same exact

(01:44:33):
situation would steer away from that therapy because of this
black box designation, they were afraid there's possibility that they
in other words, they were going to deal with the
lesser of the two evils. They would just kind of
use what they could to maintain their behavior, the hair
falling out, the hot flashes it. Yes, it would be
use her menopause in perimenopause, yes, yes, yes. And when

(01:44:53):
you find if you're a woman, praise it for a lot.
And if you're a woman and you're going through those
things like you're pre pair a puzzle or you're having
situations where you don't understand and you know it, your
hormones are out of balance. Man, when you get that
compounding pharmacy to build that one that really works for you.
After testing it took us about eighteen months to find it,
it was a complete life changer.

Speaker 4 (01:45:15):
It wasn't a game schage.

Speaker 3 (01:45:16):
It literally changed her life and it has been a
godsend for her. And to have that designation taken off
of it so women who would possibly use those therapies
to make their lives easier, better and normal now have
that green light to be able to do that and
not have to worry about that possibly causing cancer down
the road.

Speaker 5 (01:45:33):
I know my wife had that worry when it was
talked about that being used because of like if you
use it for a while, you don't want to use
it too long, right, Yeah, And these are the balances
that women that reach out certain age and women that
have issues as they get a little older, if they
deal with things like this. And it's maddening because you
don't there are no other symptoms you caet Like we
would go to the doctor and the doctor would be like,
you're fine, your blood work is fine, everything's fine. And

(01:45:55):
then we started doing some reading and she act to
tell you what it was. She joined a Facebook group
of women of women who were going through this, and
it was like an encyclopedia. It was like it was
like having AI before AI, because all these women who
would live through this for so many years had the
ability to say, hey, you got to do this, you.

Speaker 4 (01:46:12):
Gotta do this.

Speaker 3 (01:46:13):
And again, a complete and utter game changer for her.
And she actually went on a bit of a.

Speaker 4 (01:46:20):
What is the.

Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
Like a like a campaign for these therapies when that
was going on, because she wanted as many women as
possible to know about that.

Speaker 1 (01:46:30):
Yeah, it's also used to treat conditions like the thyroid
or peticuitary gland.

Speaker 3 (01:46:35):
Yeah, that's exactly who. She had the thyroid issues as well,
because she had hyper hYP hyperthyroidism, I think.

Speaker 5 (01:46:42):
Yeah, yeah, all right, four seven nine four. You have
a signed HIPPI document from her, right, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:46:48):
She's good. We told her.

Speaker 3 (01:46:49):
Look here to tell you this is stuff she shared
for the sole purpose of having other women understand that
their lives is gonna be better because of it. She
was gladly the guinea pig in this, and she was
so happy to tell people that it helped her and
hopefully that bled over and helped somebody else so they
can have a normal life for sure. All right, let
them up, Temper Tribute, take a little break. We'll be
back in a second and give some stuff away.

Speaker 22 (01:47:20):
So yesterday, going do my hard rock app. I've noticed
I finally got the casino slots feature and I went
to go try it, and I was just doing dollar
slots June.

Speaker 4 (01:47:30):
I went through thirty dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:47:31):
In about a minute and a half. Yep, and what.

Speaker 10 (01:47:33):
A joke that was.

Speaker 22 (01:47:35):
Never doing that again. Seems very irresponsible to have. I
know it's gonna screw over a lot of people, so
be responsible.

Speaker 9 (01:47:46):
Yes, Hey, jcscrab what's going on? This is Ray Mellow
heading home. I watched the limited series on Netflix, Dad,
you guys should watch. It's called Death by Lighting. It's
about the events leading up to the assassination of President
James Garfield. Michael Shannon plays Garfield. Matthew McFadden from Severns
he plays his assassin, and Nick Offerman steals the steals

(01:48:07):
the limited series as Chester b author. It's a great,
great limited series.

Speaker 3 (01:48:12):
One love, but thanks really appreciate that. I think Jack
mentioned that at the beginning of the show today. Yeah,
that must be damn good, dude.

Speaker 5 (01:48:18):
I watched the first episode and it's really good. And
by the way, it's Matthew McFadden from it's from Succession,
not Severance. But what's really interesting about Matthew McFadden is he,
you know, plays an American in both shows, but he's
really a British actor. So it's one of those remember
the first time you found out Hugh Lourie, that's the

(01:48:40):
very one, and then you feel like you were like.

Speaker 3 (01:48:43):
Deceived, you deceived?

Speaker 1 (01:48:45):
Yeah, like Tony in sixth sense, for sure, she's like
a New York native idea, she's Australian yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:48:51):
But in Death by Lightning, the acting is great. It's
a period piece. James A. Garfield. We're learning history, which
I absolutely love the same Here was he an interesting guy?
That what makes it so interesting is the fact that
he was unique or something so far well, I had
no idea, Like they just showed him to get the
nomination and it's like he didn't even seek it in something.

(01:49:11):
You know, someone kind of nominated him and then it's
snowballed and then it was suddenly out of his control.
I was reading the other about something and I get
on these I don't know. You guys do tangents where
you'll see a name you're like litst learn about that person.
Oh yeah, you'll go to Wikipedia and do that. You
know what the weird thing is is how many people
we do not know who lost elections to people we do.
That's the thing that kills Like You'll look at the

(01:49:32):
election of Brotherford B. Hayes, right, and you don't even
even from like the sixties, like you know, you don't
even know who the vice president was.

Speaker 4 (01:49:39):
You maybe heard the name.

Speaker 3 (01:49:41):
Some of them are so crazy, you're like, that person
ran for president in this country here aggurate exactly all right,
welcome back. You're five o'clock. Keyhere, you know about five minutes.
It's credit cr E D I T. You know what
to do real radio FM. Send that off for your
chance in a thousand bucks. I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (01:49:56):
There's deb Hello. Jack is here as well. Oh yeah,
and he has the Jackie sack.

Speaker 3 (01:50:00):
What's in there? Jackson? Oh? All aboard check it, check it,
click at it, check it out.

Speaker 5 (01:50:05):
First, congratulations to the Orlando Pride. They won their they
advance this Sunday. They're playing again at Entering Co Stadium.
And we got a pair of tickets. If that's what
you choose, you can go see the Orlando Pride. If
you want to get your tickets, go to orlandodsh Pride
dot com.

Speaker 3 (01:50:24):
Also, I have a tickets. Oh it's a new week,
So here we go a four pack of tickets and
pit passes. Why Monster Jam at Camping World Stadium, It's
coming January tenth. Nothing bears to the one and only
Monster Jam Austin trucks, amazing stunts, big air and actually

(01:50:47):
packed excitement. If you've never been, oh you got it,
I will tell you.

Speaker 4 (01:50:51):
It's so funny.

Speaker 3 (01:50:52):
There are a lot of musts in your life as
an American, And I don't care how you feel about it.
I don't care if you think it's the dumbest thing ever.
I don't care about any of that stuff. You got
to go to at least one monster truck show and
appreciate the engineering, win those balls. It takes to do
these things until you realize that when at your seats
you're forty to fifty feet above the field, and when

(01:51:14):
the trucks jumped their eye level yeah, and you're like,
that's a truck that when you stand, you could walk
upright under it, and that thing's fifty feet in the
air flying.

Speaker 5 (01:51:22):
I went to the Arena show this past summer, but
I definitely prefer the one the Stadium show, and that's
coming January tenth. Ticketmaster dot com if you want to
get tickets. But that's not all. A third prize, that's
an option for our winner, a pair of tickets to
an evening with Toto at hard Rock Live Orlando. They're

(01:51:42):
coming March first. We talked to Joe Williams last week,
great guy. You could get tickets now at ticketmaster dot com.
I heard from a little birdie that ticket is selling well.
That show is selling well, so if you want to go,
go to Ticketmaster or maybe you win them right here.
It's an evening with Toto with the hard Rock Live
and you can also get him at the hard Rock
Life box office. Those are the prizes in the Jackie Sack.

Speaker 1 (01:52:04):
So back to you, Colicky Knack one, two, three, four
or five. That's Monday. Let's go easy one one?

Speaker 3 (01:52:09):
Right up?

Speaker 4 (01:52:10):
Tight, Mike t how's it going?

Speaker 3 (01:52:11):
Mike?

Speaker 19 (01:52:13):
Hey?

Speaker 10 (01:52:13):
How you doing good?

Speaker 4 (01:52:14):
Buddy?

Speaker 3 (01:52:14):
Want to play a little game with us?

Speaker 4 (01:52:16):
Yep?

Speaker 3 (01:52:16):
All right, yeah, yeh, but I call it.

Speaker 10 (01:52:20):
For Is he the guy who's credit writing today's game?

Speaker 2 (01:52:22):
Can he be both?

Speaker 10 (01:52:24):
Let's find out?

Speaker 3 (01:52:24):
Okay, time for JCS trivia? Yo, yo, all right, Mike,
pretty easy game here, buddy, got a question for you.
Four answers. One of these answers is not true? What
if you can find that one?

Speaker 2 (01:52:35):
Mike.

Speaker 4 (01:52:35):
I'll send you over to Jack and he's got something
nice for you. Are you ready? Yep? Here we go, buddy.

Speaker 3 (01:52:40):
On this day in nineteen ninety yep, smash hit Home
Alone premiered on this day in nineteen ninety.

Speaker 1 (01:52:47):
Oh wow.

Speaker 3 (01:52:47):
Here are three fun facts about the movie Home Alone
and one latch key lie. All right, we're talking about
a home alone, which one of these is not true?
Number One, during the shoot, macaulay Caulkin, Joe Peshy, and
Daniel Stern had breakfast together every single morning. Number two,
most of the snow in the movie was fake. It
was actually instant mashed potatoes and plastic pieces. Number three,

(01:53:10):
the movie Angels with Fifty Souls that McCauley Caulkin used
to scare the bandits isn't a real movie. Or Lastly,
while shooting, the family that owned the house still lived there.
They lived in the master bedroom. Which of those is
a lie?

Speaker 4 (01:53:26):
H Man, that's tough. The mashed potatoes are definitely throwing.

Speaker 3 (01:53:31):
Me off because that sounds like it could definitely be fake.

Speaker 8 (01:53:35):
But you know what I'm gonna go with Number one,
that's the one.

Speaker 3 (01:53:43):
Sweet Yeah, we tell you what's weird about it. Joe
Peshey never spoke to mccauleay cauchin the entire time the
movie was being filmed. No, he never said a word
to him, And the reason why he wanted mccaullay Caulkin
to be actually scared of it. He wasn't doing he
wasn't being mean. He just wanted mcaulay culkin to have
a natural reaction to him, and at that young Joe

(01:54:05):
Pesci was a scary character. But the whole thing, even
though he's a smaller dude, he just wanted him to
be scared of him, so he.

Speaker 4 (01:54:11):
Never spoke to it.

Speaker 1 (01:54:12):
Wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:54:14):
Yeah, the most of the snow in the movie was fake.

Speaker 3 (01:54:15):
Now, I've read battling instances that it was a mix
of uh mashed potato flakes like instant mashed potatoes, and
then also little pieces of plastic. And the reason why
is because there's one place that says that the snow
used in like three other movies that you know about
was also the snow used in Home Alone.

Speaker 4 (01:54:36):
Oh wow, I'll tell you something else about that.

Speaker 3 (01:54:37):
One second number three in the movie Angels with Fifty
Souls is the movie that was playing that mccaullay cauckin
turned up so that the bad guys would hear the gangsters. Yeah,
that's not a real movie. They shot that just so
they could play it on TV for that.

Speaker 1 (01:54:52):
Oh wow.

Speaker 3 (01:54:53):
Actually, in Home Alone two they shot another one to
go into Home Alone two. Another clip of that movie
movie doesn't.

Speaker 4 (01:55:00):
Exist, Oh wow, did not know that, by the.

Speaker 3 (01:55:02):
Way, until today. I am surprised by that. Yeah. And
then while shooting, the family that owned the house actually
still lived there. They primarily lived in the master bedroom
while they were doing it, and they were there for
a month. Yeah, yeah, yeah, some other things you may
not know about home alone before we get to the
top of the hour, I don't forget. We have very
trimley on the other side of this. Uh, snow wasn't
in the budget. What do you think caused them to

(01:55:25):
use snow? If it wasn't in the budget? Why would
they do that? Why would they off? Why would they
why would they put that known expense into the budget?

Speaker 1 (01:55:36):
Chicago, It's it's a Christmas movie.

Speaker 3 (01:55:39):
Because the second day of shooting, a blizzard hit the shoot.
So because it snowed during those scenes, they had to
order snow for the rest of the scene. Oh man, Uh, Chris.
You know Chris Columbus, oddly enough, as the guy who
directed this movie, right?

Speaker 4 (01:55:56):
Do you know that he almost didn't direct this movie.

Speaker 3 (01:55:58):
He was actually scheduled to shoot and direct Harry potter
Christmas Vacation. Oh wow? Do you know what stopped that?
He met Chevy Chase? Really because Chevy Chase is known
to be such a douchebag and such an absolute and
I mean, I've heard one of the worst people. Now,
we had a buddy that listens to the show that's

(01:56:19):
friends with him, and he would combat this every single
time I say it. But apparently in the industry, the
guy is supposed to be a complete nightmare to deal with.
And he met this guy one time and he said,
I can't do the movie. There's no way I could
work with that guy.

Speaker 1 (01:56:32):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:56:33):
And he bailed on that, called and looked for some
work and they gave him home alone. And then not lastly, yeah,
not lastly, the flooding scene was achieved. How they did
not flood the real house obviously it's a multimillion dollar house.
They built it in the swimming pool of an abandoned
school right next door to it. Yeah, oh really yeah,

(01:56:54):
and you can see the shot of it. Then they
built a house replicant in this pool, so when they
flooded it, he just went down the drain. And then lastly,
here who scored this movie, John Williams. John Williams scored
the movie. How crazy is that? I didn't know that
until the day either that he there was another project,
and I guess he came over to score this movie
because they were having a hard time getting the sound right.
And I guess Landis knew him or not, Columbus knew him,

(01:57:18):
and and he offered to come and do it. Kind
of crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:57:20):
There you have it now.

Speaker 3 (01:57:21):
I know we've done Home Alone before. But the funny
thing is is like there, we've done it before. I've
done I've done Home Alone before. But there were so
many other cool little facts about the movie. You could
do it one hundred times in a row.

Speaker 5 (01:57:30):
I think it was one of our what you do
that's new? Like h the remember wedd series about oh
Man Man. Yeah, that's how I knew about that. The
swimming pool.

Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
Yeah, very cool?

Speaker 4 (01:57:39):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:57:40):
Four seven nine one six four one. And got a
new keyword for you right now?

Speaker 9 (01:57:56):
You know him.

Speaker 3 (01:57:57):
You have Favorty bag over today.

Speaker 15 (01:58:02):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:58:03):
Today we raise a beard World Orphans Day.

Speaker 3 (01:58:08):
You know, everyone needs at home orphan and orphan.

Speaker 4 (01:58:13):
Wait, that doesn't make for the people, Jack.

Speaker 3 (01:58:18):
Cue the buzzer.

Speaker 10 (01:58:20):
What the hell is angels with fifty souls?

Speaker 9 (01:58:23):
Look?

Speaker 3 (01:58:23):
I read this story Filthy Animals, Filthy Souls. It said
fifty in the story. I knew I got it wrong
in a minute. I wrote it. Speaking of the villages.
My wife has a gig there tonight. She said it
is co Oh yeah, yeah. Somebody also texting. We were

(01:58:46):
talking about the Home Alone movie. Except the school they
used is Treer High School, which also holds the record
for the most twins and triplets in a graduating class
of any school because of all the mothers were on
hormone therapy to have children at the same time.

Speaker 10 (01:59:00):
Wow, never heard that.

Speaker 3 (01:59:04):
Yeah, people are asking for live tomorrow. We are live tomorrow. Yeah,
Veterans Day, we will be here live.

Speaker 5 (01:59:09):
However, there is a celebration happening and it is in
Mount Dora.

Speaker 3 (01:59:14):
It's their salute to service and.

Speaker 5 (01:59:16):
Our very own Alejandro, who occasionally sits in on the
Jim Colbert Show. He is a veteran. He will be
one of the honored guests there. They'll have guest speakers,
live music, complimentary food and beverages. It happens tomorrow at
Gilbert Park in Mount Dora. All roads lead to Gilbert
Park and that begins at eleven a m. It's the

(01:59:38):
salute to service in Mount Dora. And if you want
any details, you go to Cityofmuntdorra dot com. Nice easy website,
Cityofmuntdra dot com. It's all brought to us by Adult
Medicine of Lake County, Hillcrest Insurance and the City of
Mount Dora.

Speaker 4 (01:59:53):
All right, there you go, Welcome back to the Jim
Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (01:59:56):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (01:59:56):
There's deb Hello, Jack is here as well.

Speaker 3 (01:59:59):
You're six o'clock. He word is grand that's gr an D.
Go to Real Radio dot of him and send it
off for your chance in a thousand bucks. This is
the last week of the contest. So if you're out
there plane, you gotta be a little extra diligent as
you move around trying to get that cash.

Speaker 4 (02:00:13):
The word is grand gr a n D.

Speaker 3 (02:00:15):
Good luck.

Speaker 4 (02:00:16):
Get that money, Get that money.

Speaker 3 (02:00:18):
So I'm telling you guys at the beginning of the
show that there's a an uber scam out there. It's
not for riders, it's for drivers. Oh really yeah yeah,
and it's kind of wild. And again, man, I gotta
tell you I don't know about you guys. I am man.
When it comes to just being online or getting texts,
I have reduced it back to when I just had
a flip phone. If I don't know you. I don't

(02:00:39):
go to answer it. I don't click on anything I
don't know, no internet, and no email that I do
not recognize.

Speaker 4 (02:00:45):
I don't care even I got an.

Speaker 3 (02:00:47):
Email from my father in law the other day, and
because he's not the most tech savvy cat out there,
I thought he'd goten hacked and it'd sent me an
email on his behalf because he doesn't email me very much.
But it was a picture of him that a classmate
of him of his sent to him, and he was
just forwarding it to all of us.

Speaker 4 (02:01:03):
Didn't click on it.

Speaker 3 (02:01:04):
I waited for somebody else in the family to click
on it and tell me it was fine. Then I
clicked on it. Let them get the virus. I'm not
doing that here, I heard, Are you crazy?

Speaker 5 (02:01:12):
My daughter reached out to warn me of one that
she's been seeing going around and people getting text messages
about missing jury duty. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's one that's
not They will not be texting.

Speaker 3 (02:01:24):
You this one. If you're an uber driver out there.
I mean, I can't imagine that's you know, that's that's
got to be a relatively small family of people here
in Central Florida. I mean, what do you think there
are how many Uber drivers do you think there are
in Orlando? A couple hundred? I'd say maybe even a
little bit more than that, maybe what four, five, six
hundred something like that. That's still a pretty good group
of people that this has happened to. This guy named O'Brien.
I'm just going to call him Brian because I can't

(02:01:45):
even take a shot at that last name.

Speaker 4 (02:01:47):
You guys want me to just for fun?

Speaker 3 (02:01:49):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I love for it. Sorry, Lapper Serranery.
That's that's close. L A p E R so n
E r I E.

Speaker 5 (02:02:01):
It doesn't count till you say it a second time,
a totally different way.

Speaker 3 (02:02:04):
Labor Soonery. It's got to be close. It's got to
be close anyway. I like that because I know one
of them. We know Brian, Brian. There we go. He's
a forty five year old single dad who works three
jobs plus driving for Uber. He shared his experience to
other players out there.

Speaker 1 (02:02:21):
That's just what you want to hear, a single dad
writing three jobs plus. Oh you wait wait it's an
Uber driver.

Speaker 3 (02:02:27):
Yeah wait, it gets better. I just work part time.
As as people are being scammed for their hard earned money,
he explained how having his money took a toll. Right,
having this money stolen, he goes money that's helping me
pay bills, keeping me up with my child support, you know,
as a single dad. He was picking up a writer
when he got a phone call from someone claiming to
be Uber Support saying he was under investigation for allegedly

(02:02:50):
drinking on the job. He said, I was confused and
in shock. They were going to look into the actual
writer's account who made the report, and see if there
were in any similar reports that looked fraudulent. About after
a half an hour of questioning, the caller told him
the claim was false and offered to credit his account
for the time off the road. The caller had him

(02:03:11):
open up his Uber wallet and directed him to enter
what appeared to be a gift card number, but instead
of credit, they took his money. Oh four hundred eighty
nine dollars. Now it doesn't seem like a ton of money.

Speaker 1 (02:03:27):
Oh that's a ton of money when you've been driving
Uber and you've got three other jobs.

Speaker 5 (02:03:30):
Yeah, when you have three jobs, that's that's a ton
of money, right, a ton of money.

Speaker 3 (02:03:34):
I see zero balance. Now I'm in shock, total shock,
like Oh my god, what just happened. He immediately reported
the incident in Uber and filed a claim to have
his money reimbursed, but unfortunately he was denied because there
was no indication of an account takeover. In other words,
they didn't fraudulently break into account. He opened it up
for him right because he thought he was getting a
credit for He thought he was getting a credit because

(02:03:55):
they had taken thirty minutes of his time to explain
this fraudulent thing when all were really doing is trying
to take thirty minutes of time so they could quote
reimburse him for the time.

Speaker 1 (02:04:04):
And he thought he was on the phone with Uber
he did.

Speaker 3 (02:04:07):
He's since learned from Uber and lift Facebook groups that
similar schemes have happened to other drivers. New six reached
out to Uber but did not hear anything back. That is,
oh they did here on one seconds the very bottom
of the page here in my apologies, it says a
spokespon A spokesperson responded to the email quote. As scammers
continue evolving their tactics to lure in innocent people, we

(02:04:30):
urge drivers to use caution. Uber routinely sends reminders to
never share personal account information, passwords or verification codes with anybody,
and we will never ever ever ask you for that information. Man,
that I gotta tell you for I know people who
are scammed here at the station from our Instagram account
years ago. And the one thing Jack used to say,

(02:04:51):
and it was perfectly all the time because he's the PDE,
he was telling people, we will never ever ever ask
for any financial information from you ever. Yeah, don't want
your credit card, we don't want your credit card numbers,
we don't want your security number, none of that. We
will never ever ask. So if you ever run into
any of our brands, uh, and it seems that we're
asking you for anything like that, you know it's not right.

(02:05:13):
And that's like across the board for most people. Most
reputable institutions will never ever ask you for that info.

Speaker 5 (02:05:20):
Don't sleep on the social Security number one sometimes they
win big enough Friday.

Speaker 3 (02:05:25):
We need to get the tax stuff on that.

Speaker 5 (02:05:27):
But guess what, We're not going to reach you through
social media to ask for your credit card number.

Speaker 4 (02:05:32):
Yeah, that's that's what that was.

Speaker 3 (02:05:34):
The scam that was going because they will mimic our page,
they makes it look like and then they'll they'll look
for us doing a contest, they'll reach out to one
person and say, hey, you won.

Speaker 5 (02:05:44):
We just need this to process it. And no, we
do not do that. Remember when we did our Summer
of Stuff. Yeah, we were giving out like PS.

Speaker 3 (02:05:51):
Five, games, cvs and stuff like that, and we ran
it through Instagram, the instant that we started that. Literally
the next day there was a fake account out there
and it got a buddy of ours.

Speaker 1 (02:06:03):
That's right, it got a smart.

Speaker 4 (02:06:04):
Buddy of ours.

Speaker 3 (02:06:05):
Yeah, just because you know, he It seemed to fit
with what the station does when things hit the fan,
Like you know, when when we have hurricanes around here,
this radio station steps up and we send people out
in the community. That's exactly what they thought was happening,
because it was happening during COVID. And that's actually why
we were doing it. We were doing the Summer of
Stuff to get people, you know, but you know, just
kind of pet people up because of COVID, and and

(02:06:28):
the person thought it was we were being charitable and
they look at the picture, Oh it's them, yeah, because
they stole our bags. Yeah, it looks exactly like it. Yeah,
all right, people four O seven nine one six one
the one that's coming up does not suck, not at all. Yeah,
he's waiting in the wings right now, you guys, Ray
Trendley on the other side.

Speaker 4 (02:06:46):
But tklaw will do that right after this.

Speaker 11 (02:06:57):
I don't know what so cool I'm doing talking about
the new Frock This Time movie on Netflix. It is awesome.
I have never watched it from This Time movie that
makes me or made me want to just go into
the screen and hug him and tell him it's all
gonna be all right. I literally cried over this Wrong

(02:07:20):
This Time, Mavie.

Speaker 3 (02:07:21):
It was so dy wow, really felt movie.

Speaker 11 (02:07:25):
It's awesome.

Speaker 9 (02:07:26):
You got to see it?

Speaker 3 (02:07:27):
Jack, Did you get teary eyed and frame signed? I
did not. I didn't get teary eyde but I like it.
Could you see where somebody could get emotional at the movie?

Speaker 9 (02:07:34):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (02:07:35):
Yeah, it just gives you a little more depth into
the monster and he kind of like, Oh, man, isn't
that what he's kind of good at? Though? Yeah, but
you think about that he did He did that with
the Shape of Water, right. He made the he made
the bad guy or the monster kind of very lovable
and human. You know, I think that's his thing.

Speaker 4 (02:07:55):
Yeah, maybe it is all right? Your six o'clock.

Speaker 3 (02:07:57):
Keyword is grand g R A N D side of
her two real radio down and vimensen that away for
your chance in a thousand months. I'm Jim devis here. Hello,
Jack is here as well. Yeah, And every single Monday
around this time, we have a good friend drop By.
He owns a law firm, guys, TK Law one firm
forlife dot com.

Speaker 4 (02:08:12):
That's the website.

Speaker 3 (02:08:13):
And if you have any legal matter at all, let's
say that your wife was married to a complete douchebag,
and twenty years ago this douchebag did something extremely douchey
h with your wife's name, and let's say that comes
back to haunt.

Speaker 4 (02:08:30):
You twenty years later.

Speaker 3 (02:08:32):
The guy you call is the guy that's like literally
eight feet for me, because once you give him the particulars,
he goes, I am on it like Superman, and off
he goes. You, guys, give it up good loud for
mister Ray Trenley and gud. I'm gonna tell you all
the time that my family leans on this cat for
help for legal issues that we simply do not understand.

(02:08:54):
That is one hundred like Depkin confirm. We were just
sitting here before this talking about how we're supposed to
handle this case and that story. I just told you,
this is a debt that just came back to haunt
us from Actually it's longer than that. It's eight years ago,
during my wife's first marriage. And what a nightmare, dude.
This is kind of stuff you have to deal with
like all the time though, right, you know, the.

Speaker 10 (02:09:16):
Legal stuff, Yeah, I deal with all the time.

Speaker 7 (02:09:18):
And I have very high expectations of how the legal
process should work, from from the attorneys that are practicing
law to the judges that are presiding over cases. I
expect that everybody who's has a role that they're doing
their job and they're fulfilling their role, and so you know,

(02:09:39):
cases like this factually legally shouldn't really be that big
of a deal if everybody does their job.

Speaker 10 (02:09:46):
It's the problem is that you get people that are.

Speaker 7 (02:09:48):
Lazy and there's shuffling papers, and that's the reason why
you know, lawyers get a bad name.

Speaker 10 (02:09:54):
And this is why you know.

Speaker 7 (02:09:55):
The legal process has its its flaws, is because people
don't always do it.

Speaker 10 (02:09:59):
There's to do.

Speaker 3 (02:10:00):
And that's one hundred percent right. Actually, you are literally
doing the other attorney's job for them.

Speaker 10 (02:10:04):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (02:10:05):
We just talked about that, you because they're so unprofessional
in how they're handling this that they're sending over documents
that don't even really add up to what we're trying
to achieve, which is completely unbelievable.

Speaker 7 (02:10:16):
That's that's correct, And you know, I wish I would
say that that's the rarity, right, I've never done that before,
but unfortunately it happens all the time, and you know,
sometimes it results in slam dunk wins, and sometimes it's
just a little bit of extra frustration, and you know,
we just kind of have to grin and bear it
a little bit.

Speaker 10 (02:10:32):
But uh, you know, we're going to keep on fighting on.

Speaker 4 (02:10:34):
Yeah we will.

Speaker 3 (02:10:35):
Buddy Ray Trently is one firm for life dot com
tk Law. The offices are right there in out to
Mount Springs. Like we said, he deals with a lot
of things, whether it's divorce, estate planning. Situation Like I
have something to come back to haunt you from a
long time ago, you have no no idea of where
even to begin in, you know, kind of looking at
what this problem is. So the great thing is is
you have a lot of knowledge in that and anybody

(02:10:55):
can call you for issues and you at least have
some direction for them, which is a big positive. Dude,
I appreciate giant positve. What do you have first day? Big?

Speaker 7 (02:11:02):
Uh?

Speaker 10 (02:11:03):
So two big things coming up.

Speaker 7 (02:11:05):
One is, uh, the State of Florida has filed a
lawsuit against Planned Parenthood.

Speaker 10 (02:11:11):
I don't know if you saw that lawsuit.

Speaker 7 (02:11:13):
It dropped on Friday, and so the news is kind
of rolling out today, but yeah, State of Florida is
suing Planned Parenthood.

Speaker 4 (02:11:21):
For deceptive language, for.

Speaker 7 (02:11:23):
Fraud and misrepresentation and deceptive language. This is all part
of their safer.

Speaker 10 (02:11:29):
Than Thailand All campaign that they ran a few years back.

Speaker 3 (02:11:32):
Is the abortion pill thing.

Speaker 7 (02:11:33):
This is the abortion pill thing, and so they said
abortion was safer than Thailand all. And they've had several
social media posts, including one which you know, I thought kind.

Speaker 10 (02:11:44):
Of colored the loss it a little bit differently.

Speaker 7 (02:11:46):
They attached it into their complaint was that that you know,
safer than Thailand all.

Speaker 10 (02:11:54):
It was safer than.

Speaker 7 (02:11:57):
It was safer than you're GOP representatives. And that one
was allegedly by some written by somebody that was not
a representative of a Planned Parent, just an individual, and
it was also siffer than viagra.

Speaker 3 (02:12:15):
Yeah, because he says this quote from him, he says
it's vile. The Planned Parenthood cares more about lining their
pockets and providing women with factual information about the health
risks of chemical abortion drugs.

Speaker 7 (02:12:24):
And so in the lawsuit, they make reference to the
number of incidents of hospitalization including uses of tailanol and
it includes intentional overdoses, and compared that with the two
chemical drugs that are used for abortion, for chemical abortion,
And then they talked about the statistical relation between the

(02:12:47):
number of surgical abortions versus chemical abortions, how it's evolved
over the last ten years. Yeah, And basically because the
more chemical abortions are more financially beneficial to plan Parenthood,
that they're prioritizing these chemical abortions which have higher incidents
of hospitalization and side effects.

Speaker 10 (02:13:09):
And so they're.

Speaker 7 (02:13:10):
Suing for almost four hundred million dollars three hundred fifty
million dollars.

Speaker 4 (02:13:14):
To be exact, just trying to put them out of business.

Speaker 7 (02:13:17):
I mean, I could see that if this one goes
through and passes that you'll see similar lawsuits happening across
the country.

Speaker 3 (02:13:23):
Well, it's a precedent, right, that's right. That's exactly what happened.
You need one case to base all that on. It
says chemical abortions are very profitable for Planned Parenthood, which
provides motivation for the organization to continue peddling misleading information
as well as providing abortion pills via mail without even
conducting an in person consultation.

Speaker 7 (02:13:42):
And so one of the things that was interesting is
that these these chemical abortions have about a five hundred
percent return on their profit margin, and these executives for
Planned Parenthood are making seven hundred to eight hundred thousand
dollars a year for this nonprofit organization. And so there's
some pretty compelling, really facts if they're true. Obviously, haven't

(02:14:05):
you know, fact you know, done on the fact searching
on all of this, but some pretty compelling facts that
you know could certainly lead to some liability. I think
there's a stretch here that they also followed the lawsuit
for basis of the violation of the Rico statute.

Speaker 4 (02:14:19):
Yeah, I saw that, to which we saw with the.

Speaker 7 (02:14:20):
Ditty stuff, and again we stereotypically see that in organized crime.
I think it's a stretch to say that Planning Parenthood
is organ involved in organized crime, right, but you know,
we talked about with that case, with the Ditty trial,
was we're seeing an expansion on how the prosecutors are
interpreting the statute, and so you know, maybe we continue

(02:14:42):
to see that as a form of liability in some
of these cases.

Speaker 3 (02:14:45):
That's really interesting because you know, at first, when you
look at this, it looks like a culture World War class.
It doesn't really suit. It doesn't really look like something
that has a lot of validity, especially when you know,
we we have had medical professionals say over and over
that a scene of minefit island all whatever is perfectly safe.
There's no issue. There's no evidence at all that shows
that it affects any fetuses or well.

Speaker 4 (02:15:06):
I guess there is.

Speaker 3 (02:15:07):
All it's a small percentage based on dosage when it
comes to a scene of benifit.

Speaker 4 (02:15:12):
But talanholl is a safe drug. Even RFK, you.

Speaker 3 (02:15:15):
Know, said during a press conference just the other day,
there's no substantial evidence that shows that Tiler and All
is going to create autism or anything like that at all.
So if they're using that as the basis of their argument, though,
I mean, that's gonna be a problem right off.

Speaker 4 (02:15:27):
Rip.

Speaker 3 (02:15:27):
But I mean if you have Planned Parenthood people taking
an eight hundred k because the margin on is a
mill of what's it? What's the drug called mill? Is
something I had? I saved it because I couldn't. Yeah,
the missed. Yeah, that's what you got it. Yeah, you're
talking is like the head to Planned Parenthood making that.

Speaker 7 (02:15:43):
Uh, these are this is their executive board is making
seven eight hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 5 (02:15:47):
You know, I was kind of taking it back at that,
But I remember back when it was the Florida Blood Center.

Speaker 3 (02:15:55):
Now it's one Blood that's a nonprofit. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:15:58):
Do you know what their CEO makes a whole bunch?
It's almost a million, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:16:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:16:02):
And but and at the time when we were talking
about this fifteen years ago, it was Van Shinoda. She
was making about six hundred thousand, and everyone's like, wait,
you're you're selling people's donated blood and you're making you know,
all of this money and it's a nonprofit. And the
argument is you got to pay the people what they're
worth that they can get that at in the private sector.

(02:16:25):
Then that that's the going rate for someone to run
an organization of that side.

Speaker 3 (02:16:29):
Because it's a massive organization and it takes a it
takes a CEO of CEO brains to do stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (02:16:35):
You gotta pay them well.

Speaker 7 (02:16:35):
And I don't think that the pay is an issue legally.
We've seen that from nonprofits for a long time, right,
we don't think I don't think that's the issue. I
think though, that there was a I forgot what the
numbers were, but there was a there was a reference
in there about how much the doctor assisted surgical abortions
were and it was, you know, they make this much

(02:16:57):
money X dollars and then five hundred times that.

Speaker 1 (02:17:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:17:01):
I mean you think about the overhead of having an
abortion medically as opposed to just popping a pill, right, Yeah,
I mean you know you're not booking a room, you know,
no doctors involved, no NCZ involved, no other people involved.

Speaker 7 (02:17:10):
And then you know, essentially prioritizing profits over health because
they then they looked at the adverse health consequences, uh
to like a d n C versus the medication. Yeah,
And it was something like I think it was like
forty percent of cases have some type of side effect?

Speaker 4 (02:17:28):
Oh do they really?

Speaker 10 (02:17:29):
And it was like I think it was twenty four
percent have hospitalization after them.

Speaker 4 (02:17:33):
For the abortion pills for the abortion pill don't know that.

Speaker 7 (02:17:36):
And again I haven't fact checked any of this. This
is just based off what I read in the complaint
of the lawsuit. But it's I if that's true, and.

Speaker 5 (02:17:44):
That the State of Florida's Yeah, yeah, that is what
the State of Florida is saying.

Speaker 3 (02:17:48):
And if that's true, that's I mean, And if that's true.

Speaker 10 (02:17:51):
It's it.

Speaker 7 (02:17:51):
And again, assuming that the statistical rates including intentional overdoses
with tail and all where the numbers that they were
listed in the lawsuit, I mean, it seems pretty clear
that tailand All is safer than these medication.

Speaker 4 (02:18:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:18:06):
I don't even think that's much of an argument. That's
actually shocking if those numbers are anywhere close.

Speaker 4 (02:18:10):
Yeah, that seems like that seems.

Speaker 3 (02:18:12):
Irresponsible to put a product out on the street that
twenty percent of the people who take it went up
in hospitals.

Speaker 7 (02:18:17):
It was like point zero one four percent in likelihood
of going to a hospital by taking talent all, right,
when that includes the intentional overdoses.

Speaker 10 (02:18:25):
So it'll be an interesting lawsuit.

Speaker 7 (02:18:28):
I don't see this as one that settles, which makes
it even more interesting to me because I think you
hit the nail on the head.

Speaker 10 (02:18:35):
There's definitely a political yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:18:41):
Yeah, ideological motivation behind this, and so this one seems
like it's going to go somewhere. It'll be really interesting
to see what happens, because you know, if the courts
don't shut it down, and I think there's enough there
for to pass summary judgment and motions to dismiss, so
we might be talking about this in about a year.

Speaker 10 (02:18:58):
Is just groundbreaking lawsuit in verdicts.

Speaker 3 (02:19:01):
So yeah, it is interesting too when you get these
groups that are politically motivated and how they look at things.

Speaker 4 (02:19:05):
I mean, the facts are the facts.

Speaker 3 (02:19:06):
If they hold up to the case, you know, you
got to make the right decision to regardless of who's involved.
But you know, when you look at what Moms for
Liberty did for those few years and then look at
how they're doing in races politically now, I mean, they're
gonna be destroyed, right, They're gonna be literally destroyed. I
don't think they won one one position they were running
for over this last election cycle. So you wonder how

(02:19:27):
much of that will cycle in and out if it's
not accurate. But if it's accurate, though, you know, I
mean that those numbers are insane. I mean, I can
imagine any medication being improved by the FDA that has
that kind of those kind of numbers behind it.

Speaker 7 (02:19:40):
Yeah, it's gonna be a battle of experts, right, if
this death from a jury, Right, it'll be a battle
of experts. And there's gonna be people from both sides
that are gonna be, you know, testing the statistical probability
instead of the medications and saying, well, at the time,
we relied on this data, and this is how we
made that assertion.

Speaker 10 (02:19:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:19:57):
But you know, another thing that thought was really interesting
about this lawsuit was a lot of the assertions that
they are representing come from websites and from social media.
And I and I had a case probably about two
years ago, which at the time I had never seen
it done, where we referenced social media posts for a
misrepresentation case and and the court agreed with us that

(02:20:19):
that was an assertion just like anything else, and that
was it had to do with dogs and dog breeders,
which I don't know if you know much about those,
that they could be very competitive and uh and and
so I've seen this as something that the judges are
really latching on is when you're making these kind of
global public statements on social media that they're going to

(02:20:41):
hold you accountable, not accurate and true, and this is
obviously a big opportunity.

Speaker 10 (02:20:46):
They followed this also in the Panhandle.

Speaker 7 (02:20:48):
Interesting, so you know, it's conceptually it's going to be
a much more conservative jury than it would be let's.

Speaker 10 (02:20:54):
Say in West Palm Beach or Accounty or even Orlando.

Speaker 4 (02:20:57):
Yeah for sure, Orlando, for sure.

Speaker 10 (02:20:59):
And so it'll be really interesting to see what happens.

Speaker 3 (02:21:02):
Yeah, you have another case here it's interesting as well,
about the mailing voting in Mississippi.

Speaker 10 (02:21:06):
Yeah, so this is another one that came up.

Speaker 7 (02:21:08):
And you know, every time we talk elections, we thought
we start seeing stuff like this come in the news cycle.
But the United States Supreme Court accepted cerciori, which is
their their panel of judges that will review these cases.
This is a case that has to deal with these
mail in ballots. And so we saw this with the
last presidential election with Nevada and Arizona. They are still

(02:21:30):
counting ballots days after the election day, and so apparently
Mississippi also had that problem, though I don't remember Mississippi
being much of a problem because it turned red pretty quickly.

Speaker 10 (02:21:41):
But apparently there's a lawsuit that had been filed.

Speaker 7 (02:21:47):
Mississippi has said that the laws unconstitutional, that they cannot
count ballots that are coming and arriving after the election day,
and this is something that the law has changed in COVID.

Speaker 10 (02:22:00):
When everybody was memory ouse.

Speaker 7 (02:22:03):
In the United States, Supreme Court has said that they're
going to take this case up, So we probably won't
see this arguments until probably this early springs, just in
time for the midterms, and then probably by summer we'll
get a ruling. So it'll be really interesting to see
what ends up happening on this. This is one that
is one of those you know, let's let's listen and

(02:22:24):
wait to see how this is going to go, because
this could change election law in a very big way.

Speaker 3 (02:22:28):
Yeah. Sure, And you know, and just real quick, because
we have a couple of minutes left, I did want
to ask you about what you thought the Supreme Court
was going to do with the tariff ruling. Oh yeah,
you know, I've heard eighty percent chance that they overrule it,
and they consider the tariff's taxes, which would obviously defeat
anything that he was doing.

Speaker 10 (02:22:45):
They fall under the congressional powers and not the executive powers.

Speaker 4 (02:22:48):
Which is what they're trying to discern right now.

Speaker 3 (02:22:49):
Anyway, I'll tell you.

Speaker 7 (02:22:51):
Not for me to be political or not, I hope
that's the outcome because I want to see all the
branches do the things that they're supposed to do and
not have an expansion of power.

Speaker 3 (02:23:00):
Yeah, and that's what this is. This is, this is
basically a this is a handcuff on the expansion of
power on top of a bunch of things.

Speaker 4 (02:23:08):
But that's what this is.

Speaker 7 (02:23:10):
And just to be fair, I think every present that
I can recall from Clinton on has had some expansion
of power lawsuit that's gone to the Supreme Court. It's
just a very in size and intensity. But you know,
I'll tell you, I don't know. With the justices that
we have in Supreme Court now, they've come back with
some i'll call it interesting rulings. One that I did

(02:23:32):
not necessarily expect. And so like the immunity one immunity
was one of them. You know, there's some other rights
that we had seen that we thought were going to
be in place for like fifty years that would change.

Speaker 10 (02:23:47):
So I don't know, I really don't know.

Speaker 7 (02:23:49):
But we saw this Chevron, which doesn't mean anything to
anybody else. There's a Chevron case about executive power that
got overruled after thirty eight years of precedent, and so
I'm thinking this will follow the same direction. So that
eighty percent probability seems about accurate. I think it's going
to happen.

Speaker 3 (02:24:07):
And when you heard any of the arguments, which I
found fascinating. By the way, did you see who was
in the crowd because they were making a show about
the Supreme Court? No, John Mulaney, Oh really Yeah, John
Laney's in the development of a TV show about the
Supreme Court.

Speaker 10 (02:24:18):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (02:24:19):
Interesting, And it was very interesting to hear the arguments
from the Justice as a matter of fact, so much
so I told the guys, specifically, Jack, I'm like, you
want to hear some fascinating stuff. Go hear the arguments
against this listener general for the White House and the
Supreme Court and how they're questioning and how they come
to conclusions. It is absolutely riveting, dude. And there's no video,

(02:24:40):
you're just hearing it.

Speaker 4 (02:24:41):
It's riveting.

Speaker 7 (02:24:43):
There was a really interesting one about two years ago
about Native American treaty rights and the Supreme Court was
very active.

Speaker 10 (02:24:52):
You get a hot or cold bench.

Speaker 7 (02:24:54):
Sometimes they were very actively discussing these treaties from two
hundred and fifty four hundred years ago. And you're laughing
cause you like, it doesn't seem like something that they'd
be really interested in, but it had.

Speaker 10 (02:25:04):
It has a huge impact on law today.

Speaker 7 (02:25:07):
And so anyway, it is cool when you get a
hot when you get a hot bench, right, listen to
how they're asking questions, because.

Speaker 3 (02:25:14):
I mean, this White House is using some stuff that
hasn't been used for seventy five years me and so
I mean, we know some of these cases were passed
in the twenties. Yeah, you know, So it's it's interesting
how they do use these acts that have been haven't
been used for a while. So awesome stuff today, Buddy,
thanks absolutely all right for U seven nine one six
four one text US seven seven zero three one deb news.

Speaker 1 (02:25:31):
Yeah, we have a deadly deputy confrontation in Miami Dade.
Four year old twins are shot in Orange County and
Michael Jackson makes Billboard hot one hundred history. Yep, we'll
talk about that next during you heard it here first.

Speaker 3 (02:25:45):
I got it. Don't forget Grand is your six o'clock
key where you got about fifteen minutes to get over
to real radio dot of FIM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks back in a
second Dev's News and we'll get the hell out of here.

Speaker 4 (02:25:54):
On a Monday.

Speaker 5 (02:26:03):
Hey, boys and girls, our friends at TK Law want
to remind us to look ahead, So look ahead we shall,
and tomorrow on the Monsters, a Veterans Day tribute, plus
Detective Barb is expected to be in as well.

Speaker 3 (02:26:17):
Check it out Tuesday on the Monsters.

Speaker 5 (02:26:19):
And when it comes down to look ahead for you
and your family's future, whether it's a trust, living will
you name it?

Speaker 3 (02:26:27):
The person who can help you? It is very friendly,
is he right now?

Speaker 5 (02:26:30):
But also you find them online at one firm for
life dot com.

Speaker 23 (02:26:42):
Okay, So if the tariffs are overruled and they get removed,
what does that mean for the consumer?

Speaker 3 (02:26:49):
Because if the.

Speaker 23 (02:26:51):
Prices that we're seeing now are because of the tariffs
and they get removed, how long until we see the
price go down or the price is just going to
be this the new normal? Because if they're saying the
prices went up because of the tariffs, the prices should
go down because of the terffs, and if they don't,
that's because the bad corporations.

Speaker 3 (02:27:11):
Yeah, that's the big argument to begin with, is our
corporation is taking advantage of this who really weren't affected
by the terriffs, but yet they raise their prices because
other people did and they got away with it.

Speaker 7 (02:27:20):
Right, Well, it's supply and demand argument, and so yeah,
hopefully it goes down like we see gas prices go
down and feels plentiful, so.

Speaker 3 (02:27:27):
One hundred percent. Yeah. And then, by the way, that
gas thing is so weird to predict because they keep
so much in reserve that they can just release it.
It's like diamonds, right, you can. You can define their
own demand. You can create their own demand because they
have billions of gallons. It's just how much they're gonna
give you, and that's what determines the price for sure.
All Right, welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show. Real
ready one to four point one er bud it raise.

(02:27:48):
Ray Trinley's in here with us TK Law. That's one
firm for life dot Com. Their offices are easy to
find right they're out to month springs. Can't miss them. Awesome, dude,
Thanks for always good senior for sure. All right, welcome back.
I'm Jim, deb and Jack are here as well. Dib
let's do you heard it here first?

Speaker 2 (02:28:04):
Good time for you heard it here first? On the
Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 1 (02:28:09):
Memorial is growing in southwest Miami Dade, where twenty seven
year old Miami Dade Sheriff's Office Deputy Devin Jeremio was
killed Friday during a scuffle with a suspect while responding
to a traffic crash. Fromer, Miami Dade Police Director Juan
Perez is that appears Officer Jeremio followed training to control
someone on the ground.

Speaker 18 (02:28:29):
They're going to have to investigate everything right, how the
gun came out of the holster, or test the holster
hopefully to make sure it didn't have any malfunction or
anything like that. But he was doing everything right as
far as the physical part of it.

Speaker 1 (02:28:42):
The Sheriff's Office has identified the suspect as Steven Rustrian.
It's believed Restrian got Jeremo's gun and shot him multiple times.
He then apparently turned the gun on himself. Oh Man,
a friend of the suspect, says he had been in
the military and struggled with his mental health.

Speaker 3 (02:28:59):
Why shoot the cop if you're going to shoot yourself?
I mean, why would you take that life if you
know you're going to.

Speaker 4 (02:29:04):
Take your own life.

Speaker 1 (02:29:06):
I never understand that.

Speaker 3 (02:29:07):
Yeah, I mean obviously that's wrapped up in the mental illness.
But man, just to take that life when you don't
need to.

Speaker 1 (02:29:11):
You don't need yeah, all right. Four year old twins
remain in critical condition after they were shot in Orange County.
The twins were rushed to Arnold Palmer Children's Hospital on
Friday night. Their mom, Kishara Goodroom, admitted to drinking quote
large amounts end quote of booze and placing the gun
under a couch cushion. Both parents were arrested and made

(02:29:35):
their first appearance in court today.

Speaker 3 (02:29:37):
Twins, two kids, twins, they both get shot?

Speaker 1 (02:29:41):
I don't know. And then finally, man, oh man, oh man?

Speaker 5 (02:29:47):
Was was it one shot through two children?

Speaker 3 (02:29:51):
When are we going to go straight DYSTOPI and it
start qualifying people to have children?

Speaker 4 (02:29:55):
I mean, come on, what are we going to do?

Speaker 3 (02:29:57):
What are we just going to make that jump show
your license when some we could just look at somebody
go no, not you dog, exactly, it's not you you're
not there yet.

Speaker 1 (02:30:05):
And then finally, Michael Jackson still making history more than
sixteen years after his death. Can you believe it's been
sixteen years?

Speaker 4 (02:30:19):
Guy, I know it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (02:30:20):
His classic hit thriller re enters Billboard Hot one hundred
chart this week at number ten. It makes Jackson the
first ever artist to rank in the charts top ten
in six different decades.

Speaker 3 (02:30:32):
So now we have to figure out what social media
event or Netflix event is pushing this resurgence, because it's
always like.

Speaker 5 (02:30:38):
That, right, halloweeneen, just Halloween thriller. Yeah, but I guess
why not last year or the year before? Yeah, this
is the first time in the.

Speaker 1 (02:30:47):
In the history.

Speaker 3 (02:30:47):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:30:48):
Jackson last reached the top ten in twenty eighteen, when
he was featured on Drakes Don't Matter to Me. He
passes Andy Williams, who had placed in the top ten
in five distinct decades with its The Most Wonderful Time
of the Year.

Speaker 4 (02:31:03):
Dam good old Andy Williams.

Speaker 3 (02:31:05):
Uh one of the one of the oj krooners right
there with mel tourmae.

Speaker 1 (02:31:10):
Yep, and you heard it here first, I'm the Jim
Culbert being.

Speaker 3 (02:31:13):
Crosby thanks to appreciate that near he's a crooner? Is
he not being Crosbys tourmee was the velvet fog? He was.

Speaker 4 (02:31:24):
All right, dev Who do we have to think today?

Speaker 1 (02:31:25):
We want to thank the friendliest attorney, Ray Friendly from
TK line Firm Forlife dot Com.

Speaker 3 (02:31:32):
You think he's smart.

Speaker 4 (02:31:33):
That means he's got to be not a handsome guy.

Speaker 3 (02:31:35):
But it's kind the passage.

Speaker 1 (02:31:36):
He's got the whole package. He's got the whole package.

Speaker 10 (02:31:39):
Josh, so sweet.

Speaker 1 (02:31:40):
Speaking of the whole package, you want to thank hard
Rock Cafe Orlando once again for our delicious luncheon. If
you're a veteran, that would be a great place to
go tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (02:31:49):
Absolutely good. That complimentary classic smash burger.

Speaker 14 (02:31:53):
Yep.

Speaker 5 (02:31:53):
Absolutely And also on top of that, you get fifteen
percent off every day when you show ID.

Speaker 1 (02:31:58):
Which is awesome. That's in first repond and then last
but never leaves. Sam bow And and Canvas Rich for
running our YouTube chats.

Speaker 3 (02:32:05):
You guys appreciate that very much. Jack questioned, oh the
day in the YouTube chat, would you boo a president
during a swearing in ceremony in a football game?

Speaker 4 (02:32:16):
You know I'm gonna go right down the line.

Speaker 3 (02:32:17):
I say fifty percent, would thirty percent say yes. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:32:20):
Then some people started texting saying, hey, listen, I'd boo,
but unless I realized it was swearing any ceremony, then
I wouldn't boo.

Speaker 3 (02:32:28):
If it's just him, I'm bullying. Well, that's what we're
gonna say. You know, boo all you want. And when
we're doing when they're swearing, and people in the military,
be cool because that's their moment as well. We're literally
taking a life moment from a bunch of kids who've
made one of the biggest decisions in their existence, and
you're booing a guy that has nothing to do with that.
He says, dude, reading the damn thing.

Speaker 4 (02:32:46):
Let let him enjoy their moment.

Speaker 5 (02:32:47):
Then they say, when I'm going to a football game,
I'm not looking to see if there's a ceremony involved.

Speaker 3 (02:32:51):
I'm going to a football game.

Speaker 10 (02:32:53):
You can't miss that.

Speaker 3 (02:32:54):
I guess whatever. Great show today, Thanks guys, appreciate it
very much. Ray always gets see you to see as well.
One firm forlife dot Com all right, let's get the
hell out of here. On behalf of Devin Jack on Jim.
We follow a news junkie. They follow the monsters of
the morning. At for us, it's Tom and dam with
the corporate time and our friends from Real last We'll
see tomorrow three. For more of The Jim Colbert Show,
ut Lyndon, have yourself a fantastic Monday evening and stay warm.

(02:33:16):
Bye give me a freaking boy.

Speaker 2 (02:33:22):
If you missed any part 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
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Paper Ghosts: The Texas Teen Murders

Paper Ghosts: The Texas Teen Murders

Paper Ghosts: The Texas Teen Murders takes you back to 1983, when two teenagers were found murdered, execution-style, on a quiet Texas hill. What followed was decades of rumors, false leads, and a case that law enforcement could never seem to close. Now, veteran investigative journalist M. William Phelps reopens the file — uncovering new witnesses, hidden evidence, and a shocking web of deaths that may all be connected. Over nine gripping episodes, Paper Ghosts: The Texas Teen Murders unravels a story 42 years in the making… and asks the question: who’s really been hiding the truth?

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.