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January 5, 2026 162 mins
Monday - Our first show of 2026! We review on holiday breaks. How will A.I. make money? RIP Adam the Woo. How do you like your coffee? Brandon Kravitz on a wild final week of the NFL season. Attorney Ray Traendly on a lawsuit against McDonald’s of the contents of a McRib. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Management 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 (00:16):
That's where I guys if we go on a Monday
edition of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much
for tuning in.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
We appreciate that, as we do every single day, and
we do have a banger for you this afternoon. We'll
get you caught up on what's hatting in the world.
That will do that around three twenty with JCS News
four Black Hour It's just a bunch of us and
you five Black Hours Trivia. We'll ended up with sports
with our buddy Brandon Kravitz. Free Trendley drops by from
TK law and we'll do you heard it here first,
your calls, text and talkbacks.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
All day long. Welcome to the show. I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
To my left, my lovely very Dangerous co hoses is
Deb Roberts. Hello there, Traps your jack job afternoon four
seven nine one six four one, text seven seven zero
three one. Find us easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at
The Jim Colberg Show, on ex just at Jim Colbert Show,
and of course all day every day at Jim Coolberlive
dot com. That's where you can check it out on
the YouTube beed. You can also go to Real Radio

(01:02):
dot Fm slash Watch. If you listen to talk back,
you could do that as well.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
It's free.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
Just grab the iHeartRadio app, go to Real Radio and
use it Mike to send your comment over to Jack
and we'll get you on the air.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
You took me a radio superstar, superstar. How you guys
doing today?

Speaker 5 (01:15):
Good?

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Yeah? Twenty twenty six? Wow, No, I don't know about
you guys.

Speaker 4 (01:21):
Did you ever remember as a kid thinking about the
year two thousand?

Speaker 3 (01:26):
Yes, yeah, I remember.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
My grandmother actually told me she didn't think the Earth
would make it to the year two thousand, which is
a wonderful thing to tell in the earl.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Not only that, there's something that messed me up in
nineteen eighty and that was the no Stradamus special yea, well,
oh yeah, dude. And I believe it was on HBO
at the time, and that thing and it predicted the future,
I warn you, The quatrains, yeah, the quad trains, and
the you know, the men from the Middle East with

(01:54):
the blue turbine, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, And it was
all supposed to be dystopian mess, you know, you know,
thank you ver close to that. We're getting there. Give
us out of the time, man, timeline level off, he
dropped a zero or something. Yeah, it's really good to
be back.

Speaker 4 (02:11):
We've been off for a quite I think this is
the longest Christmas break I think we've ever had.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
I think you said that last year and the year before,
and they've all been the same. Seventeen days. We had
seventeen days, got two weeks, and we try that's when
we're able to wrap him around a weekend. So sometimes
we get the extra two days because of the extra week.

Speaker 6 (02:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Yeah, yeah, everybody have a good Christmas. We saw each
other for New Years and by the way, for everybody
who came out for New Years at Mount Dora, thank
you my god.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
What a party. Yeah it was.

Speaker 7 (02:37):
It was a good time.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
That was a good ass time.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Look, I gotta tell you something.

Speaker 8 (02:40):
You know.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
Chris Carson deborahs fiance is he also the events coordinator
out at in the city of Mount Dora, and man,
what an incredible job he does throwing a good party. Afterwards,
after the fireworks went off, I cornered him off to
the side and I thanked him profusely for what a
wonderful evening at I mean, he really does a good job.

(03:02):
They really know what they're doing. And throughout twenty twenty six,
of course we'll be in Lake County a number of times.
Mount Dora will be out there as well. We urge
you to come out, even you guys on the coast
who think it's too far man get a rum or something.
This place is really fun and the gentleman organizing those
parties really knows what he's doing.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
What a blast, so much fun.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
It was a good time.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
We had one situation that was a little sketchy for
us as a show, all right, And again now the
cole is fine, and it's one of those things that
you can't really meet her because you don't know what's
going on on the stage. And for people who don't know,
you know, we get when we get hired to do something,
we show up. You know, we get our show notes.
We go up, we do our thing, We welcome everybody,

(03:41):
We do all the announcements we're supposed to do, thank
the sponsors and whatnot.

Speaker 3 (03:47):
And so there was a band on stage.

Speaker 4 (03:50):
The band on stage had like a had a set
of dancing girls, right it was like a it was
you know, it was a really cool thing.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
It was.

Speaker 4 (03:57):
But they had a female lead singer and then two
side singers. But they're all dressed to like, and they
did dance numbers and stuff. They were backup singers exactly.
So during our second set of announcements we were scheduled
to go up, the crowd had gotten exponentially bigger. We
went up first at nine, good crowd, nothing like when
we reappeared at ten fifteen to do the second set announcements.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
They were liquored up and feeling warn No, they were all.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
It was a much different experience when we got out
there and we get up on stage and they've been
playing some DJ stuff and the song they were playing
is is it the wobble Wobble song?

Speaker 3 (04:32):
What's that called? What is that song? Wobble wobble?

Speaker 4 (04:35):
And it's like a line dancing tune right because they
did the electric slide right before sing.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
A little more wobble wobble. You guys know what I'm
talking about, right, It's the Wobble Wobble song. Eh.

Speaker 4 (04:47):
Yeah, So here's what happened. The lady one of these
dancers gets the crowd like into it. They're doing the
wobble wobble dance the whole nine yards.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
And then they're like, gotta bring up the radio people
right now. Shut off the music, shut the dancing down
so that we can come up and tell them about
the Saunters.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
I'm like, Luke, they're coming out.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
But I was like, as she was walking off stage,
I was walking on, I'm like, I guess we have
to follow that.

Speaker 5 (05:12):
Now.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
You get the crowd and pissed off at the wabble
wobble dance. So the the guy running the sound he's like, Okay,
it's time for them to go, and they're on a schedule. Dude,
I'll cut this. They'll go up and then they'll introduce
the band. Meanwhile, that backup dancer, she was interacting with
the crowd because the girl was playing. They're dancing, so
she was getting going and when it stopped, she's like, no,

(05:34):
bring it back, bring it back. And then we walk out.
It's like, hey, it's just.

Speaker 4 (05:39):
As we're walking up to the bike, because there's enough.
There's enough silence, right, it's silenced enough. As we're walking
up to the mic, she looks at the guy who
is the band leader, who makes all the decisions and says, oh.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
Come on, give the people what they want.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, we're taking the mics. In other words,
it's not them.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, it's not though they don't want them.
They want this wabble wobble to anyway.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
I don't blame them.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Still a gracious crad.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
Yeah, it was really fun. We had a good ass time,
so much fun. We do have a bunch of stuff
to talk about today. I saw the Chevy Chase documentary
that's been making so much noise on social media?

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Where is that? CNN? Actually CNN produced it?

Speaker 4 (06:16):
Interesting, so I just just go to But you can
see it on Hulu. Yeah, yeah, man, you and your
Hulu portal to the world. If it's just forget who Actually,
there's a number of places you can see it.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
We had to see it on CNN. That's where we
watched it. Like CNN, stuff populates on HBO Match it
does that.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
They're going to release them in HBO Max. Okay, but
it wasn't gonna be on their last night because it
was the debut. We watched it live or a little bit.
We got in a little bit late. We were able
to fast forward through the commercials and it kind of
painted Chevy as being a really bad guy.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
I will tell you I had mixed reviews on that.
We'll talk about it a little bit later. Christmas. We
haven't really discussed Christmas with each other. Even though we.

Speaker 4 (06:53):
Really saw each other for New Years, we didn't really
have a chance to talk about what we did for Christmas.
My daughter had a baby shower of sixty people this weekend.

Speaker 5 (07:00):
That's a who.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
I saw the movie one bat one battle after another.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
And I think just last night of the People's Choice Awards,
it was Picture of the Year or something or whatever
it was, I was I didn't even know those awards
were on. A good friend of ours passed So I say,
a good friend and a quaenance of ours that we've
known through the entertainment business passed away.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
He's a local guy. We'll talk about that as well.
And I want to know who can get me into
the PGA show this week. I want to lean on
somebody out there to get me in the PGA show.
Actually have a bunch of other stuff to talk about
as well, coming up a little bit later.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
Just try and get media passes.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
Well.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
I don't know if I can do that or not.
I guess I could call. I know, we have a reputation.
All you have to do is follow it, like if
you went there, they have a press contact, reach out
to them. All you contact them say hey, I'm pretty
sure do you know who I am?

Speaker 9 (07:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (07:48):
Yeah, you give them that nonsense and you say I'd
like to attend. Should before I do it? You got
to spell it out in an email.

Speaker 4 (07:57):
But of course, all the news right now and we
will talk about this a little bit later, is h
You know the Venezuela raid of you know, America goes
in there and take out the president or the non
de facto president Maduro and his wife and bring him
back to the US. They went to US court to
face the charges. They both pled not guilty. Today, I

(08:17):
know you'll have a lot about that news. Yeah, it
is interesting though, because you know there's a lot of
stuff going on about that, and you know, you can
hear any angle you would like, any opinion you would
like about you know, how people feel about that. But
I have a friend from from Venezuela actually born in Caracas,
right and I text him this morning and I said, hey, man,

(08:39):
you know, and he's he's an adult, probably ten years
younger than me, right, And I emailed him this morning
whipper snapper, Yeah, and I said, uh, And I said, hey, man,
you know what, you know, what's the feeling of people
from this country about what happened, regardless of how it
happened or anything like that. You know, let's take all
of the uh, all of the the protocol out of

(09:03):
what's supposed to happen before something that happens like this.
You know, what is the vibe of people of that
country on the streets? And he said jubulant to say
the very least, and then went on to write me
a text that it took me a couple of seconds
to scroll through to read. Why and it is a
really interesting thing that happened down there because there are
a lot of moving parts. I know, a lot of

(09:23):
people you know, have made you know, we I think
everybody kind of knew really wasn't about drugs. I think
the first boat stride on September second, as soon as
we went to break, I walk into the room and
I looked at Ross and Jack and I said, we're
gonna invade Venezuela. We're gonna tell people it's for drugs,
but it's not.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
It's for oil.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
They're sitting on three hundred three billion barrels of oil.
That is the least tapped reservation of oil on planet Earth.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
I heard we went in there to get weapons of
mass destruy. No, no, no, no, right, no, it was
fake Gucci purses the whole time. But you know, three
hundred three billion barrels. And for people who don't know
or don't read about stuff like this, I don't blame
YEA wouldn't either. I hate that. I have to.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
That's a lot. It's like more than Iran and the
UAE put together. Like the next closest I believe is
Saudi And there are fifty or sixty billion barrels below
what Venezuela has. But the problem is an amazing amount.
But what the problem is is because of politics and
what Venezuela did to the oil companies back when Shavez
nationalized the oil companies. You know, it hasn't really produced

(10:26):
a lot of oil. That infrastructure is dying over there.
Those facilities are very old. It's going to take billions
and billions of dollars to bring them back to production.
And the oil they're selling is one of the cheapest
kind of oils on the planet. You know, it makes
like a I guess it makes diesel. That's a big
deal because diesel is actually in a shortage right now.
But there's a lot of moving parts there. We'll talk
about that a little bit later. So well, I know

(10:46):
you have that news. But some very interesting stuff happening
in the world. And they had a billion we had
a one point eight billion dollar winter in Arkansas.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
You know what he did?

Speaker 3 (10:54):
You hear about it?

Speaker 1 (10:55):
State anonymous?

Speaker 3 (10:56):
He bought Arkansas? What with the change was about a
little piece of Bana too?

Speaker 10 (11:05):
All right?

Speaker 4 (11:06):
For our seven do you know? For the in laws
four O seven nine four one. Again, you can always
text us at seven seven zero three one. That thing's
already flaming this morning. So we appreciate you guys getting
right back involved. Double do you have for news?

Speaker 11 (11:18):
Well, like you just said, we're gonna talk about how
the Venezuela situation will impact gas prices. A Swan docent
is baffled by a failure to release the cause of
Swan's deaths. And let's start the year off with a
Grady Judd. You can't make this stuff up. Story, Yeah,
sound biting all You're gonna want to pay attention to that.
We'll talk about that and more coming up next during

(11:39):
JCS news.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
All right, we'll take a little break, come back and
get Deb's news and do more of the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Thanks for tuning in. Welcome to twenty twenty six on
the Jason Show.

Speaker 12 (11:56):
Prain so the Iselands welcome, Everybody happy, and here we
go again, Jimmy, that time is a whole long time
done before. Maybe I just fought this more, but I
just wanted to say, make sure this Europe we have
more shows outside the station and show that doesn't involve

(12:17):
animals because I don't have animo. My culture forbid me
to have animals.

Speaker 9 (12:22):
Why we'll see you?

Speaker 3 (12:24):
Does he really I've never heard that. Yeah, I guess
I don't know. I did not know that. Is that right?
What's his culture? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (12:33):
Interesting? Now I've not heard of a culture that that
banned animal ownership.

Speaker 3 (12:39):
You're inviting another talkback, and that would have to go
against our one talkback or college All right for a
seven nine texts seven to seven zero three one.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show here on Real
Radio one to four point one. Happy New Year from
all of us. Have you had a wonderful Christmas and
New Year vacation? We are back at it Telia in
twenty twenty six, I am Jim Jackie is right over there,
and Miss Debrah has your news.

Speaker 5 (13:04):
It's time for JCS news.

Speaker 13 (13:08):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (13:08):
This guy kind of put his name on everything.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
My contract used to do.

Speaker 5 (13:12):
Who is on the Jim Colber Show.

Speaker 11 (13:14):
The only way to keep on it exactly including in
twenty twenty six. All right, as always, JCS News is
brought to you by that mortgage guy Don. Florida lawmakers
are in Durrel to thank President Trump for arresting Venezuelan
dictator Nicholas Maduro. Republican Congressman Carlos Jimenez says, this sends
a very strong message to all dictators across Latin America.

Speaker 9 (13:37):
Cuban people have been in this tunnel for about sixty years.

Speaker 14 (13:39):
The Venezuelan people have been in this tunnel for about
twenty five years.

Speaker 9 (13:43):
And now I can see both the Venezuelan people and
the queue of people can see a light at the
end of that tunnel.

Speaker 11 (13:50):
Now, he says, Cuba should be on alert. The Cuban
regime is the weakest. It has been in years, and
now it has lost one of its strongest allies. Florida
Senator Rick Scott was also an attendant. In the meantime,
local Venezuelans are experiencing mixed emotions after Maduro was removed
from power. Celebrations were held this weekend in Orlando, Simi, Miami,
pretty much the entire state. Those celebrating, though, are worried

(14:13):
about what comes next. Independent Venezuelan American Citizens President Ernesto
Ackerman says Maduro may be gone, but his people are
still in.

Speaker 15 (14:23):
Power in Venezuela celebrating they are very scared.

Speaker 16 (14:28):
Region is still in power.

Speaker 17 (14:30):
So in Venezuela was the all celebration at all?

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Yeah exactly.

Speaker 11 (14:35):
Akerman says he'd liked the Trump administration to extend temporary
protected status to Venezuelan's here in the US until things
settle down in their homeland. Meanwhile, Maduro is back in
his holding cell after pleading not guilty to federal drug
and weapons charges in a New York City courthouse.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Oh yeah, I mean we can tok about a little
bit later.

Speaker 11 (14:54):
Yeah, absolutely, all right, Well this is kind of cool.
Starlink is going to provide free internet service.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (15:01):
The Elon Musk owned internet company announced it'll provide free
internet through February third for Venezuela. The move comes after
parts of the country, including the capital, lost power due
to military strikes by the US early Saturday morning, and
to that end, the week is off to a good
start for SpaceX. The company successfully launched twenty nine satellites
yesterday morning. That means no more complaints from you, mister

(15:22):
Colbert from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. A falconst Falcon
nine rocket blasted off at one eight am. SpaceX has
another launch planned for Thursday afternoon back at Yeah, exactly.
I mean, I believe it was a record setting year
for them last year.

Speaker 16 (15:39):
I was.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
I believe they're on par to want to do the
same this year.

Speaker 11 (15:43):
All right, don't expect gas prices to drop or rise
sharply here in Florida because of what's happening in Venezuela.

Speaker 7 (15:49):
If oil prices were one hundred dollars, you'd probably see
oil companies diving in pretty quickly as long as the
coast is clear. Because keep in mind, a lot of
these oil companies had a lot of assets in Venezuela
that were literally taken away.

Speaker 3 (16:02):
From them, stolen.

Speaker 7 (16:03):
They're not eager to get burned twice.

Speaker 11 (16:05):
Yeah, So because of a short term risk, gas buddies.
Patrick Dehan says oil prices were up slightly this morning.
He believes it's going to take years for output to
increase because infrastructure that has fallen into disrepair that has
to be rebuilt, and again, US oil companies aren't going
to invest unless they have assurance everything is safe. Florida
gas prices are averaging two eighty one a gallon. That's

(16:27):
up seven cents from last week, but still fifteen cents
lower than a month ago.

Speaker 4 (16:31):
Yeah, because what makes this a very interesting situation in
Venezuela is you have to have boots on the ground
to protect those infrastructures and make sure that the regimes
don't have another increase in power. Because before those oil
companies start investing tens of billions of dollars again, they
need to be guaranteed that it's not going to happen
like it did back in the seventies. I believe it
was when basically Shavez nationalized the oil companies are late
nineties and basically stole all their stuff stolen.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
Well, hey, it's finder's keepers.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
Yeah, yeah, SPAA, when you're doing with dictators, it is yeah,
go in there and take it back as a businessman.

Speaker 11 (17:03):
Well it's not just that, but you know, airlines are
still working to accommodate American tourists who are stranded in
the Caribbean. Travel disruptions were caused by the capture of
Venezuelan President Nicholas Muduro by US forces Saturday morning, and
the FAA temporarily closed the Eastern Caribbean airspace due to
safety concerns related to that military activity. The ban was

(17:24):
lifted at midnight Eastern time on January fourth. Now, although
the airspace has since reopened, airlines are still scrambling to
get seats, get Americans back into back in.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
That's a lot of rescheduling, isn't it.

Speaker 10 (17:39):
Isn't it?

Speaker 1 (17:40):
Imagine you think you're ending, you know.

Speaker 3 (17:42):
Maybe I need to stay here another day or two
or three. Who's in charge?

Speaker 1 (17:47):
What darn all?

Speaker 3 (17:49):
Right?

Speaker 11 (17:49):
Another news, Governor Ron DeSantis is making a big announcement
at the so called deportation depot.

Speaker 18 (17:56):
Operation Title Wave is now at over ten thousand arrests
of illegal aliens who have been turned over to the
Department of Homeland Security.

Speaker 11 (18:08):
He says sixty three percent had criminal arrests or convictions,
including violent and sex offenders. He adds the temple of
flights going out of Deportation Depot that's in Baker County
and Alligator Alcatraz down in Miami Dade County have gone
up due in part to the federal government stationing Executive
Branch employees who serve as immigration judges to adjudicate immigration claims.

(18:32):
All right, Former Eatonville mayor Eddie Cole is being laid
to rest today.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
Oh wow. Yeah.

Speaker 11 (18:37):
Memorial service started at noon at First Baptist Church of Orlando. Afterward,
Cole is being laid to rest at Eatonville Memorial Gardens.
He served as mayor from twenty sixteen to twenty twenty two.
Cole was also a longtime assistant coach for the Rollins
College women's basketball team and was inducted into the Hall
of Fame in twenty twenty three.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
He was the mayor when I.

Speaker 11 (18:58):
Lived in Eatonville. Really nice guy, really approachable, very very sweet.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
He met the excuse me, we did a Martin Luther Kington. Sorry,
we did a Martin Luther king Day thing there years ago. Oh, yeah,
and he was there and like the nicest guy ever,
Like he couldn't believe we were helping out with it,
like you thought it was the Cools.

Speaker 11 (19:14):
Then yeah, exactly. He'd give you a cell phone number
and everything. He'd be like, yeah, let me know if
there's any problems, just give me a call. I'll go
to stop sign up there.

Speaker 3 (19:23):
That's what you want to make it is.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
It is what you want to see in the mayor.
So God rest his soul, all right.

Speaker 11 (19:28):
A man is accused of stealing mail in Orlando. Orlando
Police announced yesterday Sean Cronin was arrested recently at the
Aria Beach Apartments on South summer On Boulevard. He allegedly
broke into a community mailbox, and OPD says they actually
caught him in the act of stealing mail. Investigator say
Cronin was found with a large amount of mail from

(19:48):
multiple apartment complexes in the area. He's facing charges that
include a grand theft, loitering, and prowling. But kudos to
him for trying to say he was the mail man
who was delivering it, despite the field lamp that he
was wearing on his formute.

Speaker 3 (20:04):
What else are you going to say, you got me
to try everything.

Speaker 5 (20:07):
I guess so, I guess.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
So that's a big deal, right, those are felonies or
I believe, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 11 (20:12):
That's why, Like, if you're passing out flyers, it's against
the law to put them in your neighbor's mouth, right, right, right,
all right?

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Do you guys know anybody who.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Has the flu?

Speaker 16 (20:21):
No? Not yet?

Speaker 3 (20:22):
Man, I hear it is gnarly this year.

Speaker 1 (20:25):
That's what I've heard too.

Speaker 11 (20:26):
And there's been a massive spike in flu cases in Florida.
Now we've talked about this before because Jack, you've mentioned normally,
like February is the piece here.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
Mid February is usually the peak of flu season. The
flu shot usually takes two weeks for full efficacy. However,
this current flu shot is not great, but they still
say it provides some protection against the you know, to
mitigate some of the feelings. Did you get it yet?
I did not, So if you're going to get it,

(20:55):
you want to get it in January February.

Speaker 11 (20:58):
Well, subclade K, I guess from the influenza virus A.
The subclade K is the new variant, but Florida is
now one of thirty states considered to have quote very
high flu activity. That's according to the CDC. Updated data
shows a thirty three percent increase in positive flu cases
across the country in just one week. Think of all

(21:19):
the travel, gathering with friends and family.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
Right, And I was going to ask, is it because
Flora also has a very uh the climate allows us
to go out and be around each other more than not,
you know, just staying home.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
Like if you live in Wisconsin, you're not going to
the mall on Saturday to chill. No, But I think
it's the opposite. I think they say flu cases rise
when you are not getting outside and you are shaped up,
because then you are shared the same air, got it.

Speaker 11 (21:44):
Yeah, And then think of the amount of travelers we
have coming down here to enjoy the holidays in Orlando
the number one destination yet again.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Yeah, they bring their New Years with Christmas.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Exactly, we don't have it. We're just got home here.
We just had sixty people at our house from all
over the area.

Speaker 16 (22:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Yeah, let's just get it out of the way.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
Well, it's like that chicken pox when you're a kid.

Speaker 5 (22:08):
Exactly.

Speaker 3 (22:09):
I don't want a chicken We get a fresh new
book of sick days, let's do it well.

Speaker 11 (22:13):
Experts say the best ways to prevent contracting or spreading
the flu are, like Jack just said, getting vaccinated and
practicing good personal hygiene. And even though they say the
flu shot isn't as effective against this new variant, they
say it's still better than no protection and at least
it will keep you from being hospitalized because I guess
they're seeing a lot of kids suffering this time this year.

(22:35):
Part of it is exactly whatever questions remain after it's
now Seventeen swans at Lake Eola in Orlando suddenly died
from avian flu last month. Yeah, Lakey Yola swan dos
and Andrew Marshall explains why he thinks those in charge
did not disclose what was killing the swans sooner.

Speaker 15 (22:56):
The swans and the lights at Lake Eola are a
huge draw. I mean, they didn't want to disrupt that.
They prioritize that over the health and safety of the
general public as well as that of their captive swans
which they own.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Those are fighting works.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
Oh yeah, they are now.

Speaker 11 (23:12):
Marshall says. Necropsies were not done immediately due to the holidays.
The vets were on holiday, so the bird flu is
extremely deadly and could have been transmitted by visitors to
their domestic pats at pets and to local farms, especially
dangerous to cats.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
Is from what I'm understanding. He says.

Speaker 11 (23:28):
There is no vaccine for the bird flu, but the
park did sanitize and remove feeders to minimize possible spread.
He adds that the risk to the public from H
five N one is rare. That's according to the CDC.
And they also believe that maybe a wild bird, because
we are in migration season right now, maybe the one
that brought the avian flu to Lake Cala, just.

Speaker 3 (23:49):
Like the people flew it comes from out of state
and they bring their crap here. God, you know, we
did not take the time to get our chimney buttoned
up for this season. We're praying to God the chimney,
the chimney swifts don't come back. My son said to me, goes, hey,
you guys wire up the fireplace. And I'm like, God,
of all the things I didn't do.

Speaker 4 (24:09):
Now we have to listen to these stupid birds chirping
our house for the next five months.

Speaker 11 (24:13):
Well, I don't I think their seasons already ended, right
They going back home?

Speaker 3 (24:17):
No, I think they it's maybe that's the case. I
thought it was. They went back in spring. You better
start throwing some lobs in that fire. I can't go.
I tried last time. I don't tell you guys that
did that. No, I didn't a lite about it already.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
No, yeah, next door exactly.

Speaker 11 (24:32):
The next story a thirteen year old Orange County boys
recovering after a firework exploded in his hands. Happened Saturday
afternoon and clarre COONa Point Way. The boy was rushed
to a local hospital. The good news is he is
expected to be okay, but still deputies are investigating the
incidents all right. At Hillsboro County, teen is accused of

(24:54):
driving how fast on I four?

Speaker 3 (24:57):
You know, I read this weekend. There were like five
or six sup perspeeders call it.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
I think one was going like one hundred and seventy
Oh my good, yeah yeah, mclaire and I believe, Oh.

Speaker 11 (25:08):
Yeah, nice, I was going to go one forty okay,
one four, one hundred and fifty four miles per hour
on I four. State troopers witnessed the Ford excessively speeding
on wet roads.

Speaker 4 (25:24):
Oh yeah, Ford is one thing, isn't a Mustang or
Anconnall line.

Speaker 3 (25:28):
Because he's doing that birthday if he's spend that cargo band. Impressive.
That's the only sedan that Ford has, right, uh yeah,
well sports are current one? Yes, yeah, the only one
they could do one fifty yeah exactly.

Speaker 11 (25:42):
But on wet roads near Tampa on Sunday morning, they
tried to stop the driver, but he accelerated two one
hundred and fifty four miles an hour before being pulled
over near US three oh one. The driver, a nineteen
year old, was arrested for reckless driving and dangerous excessive
speeds and taken to the Hillborough County Jail. And then
on top of it, their car is what impounded for

(26:03):
thirty days or anything like that?

Speaker 4 (26:04):
Do they boot their driver's license for stuff like that?
For superspeters because I know that you're supposed to have
like ten points in a year to get it taken
away or some egregious thing. But I would think that
that would, like the super speeder thing should be one
of those where I think, did like one.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
Strike, you're out, we pull up for a year. Young
guys with their license, yes they are they You want
that thread out there that if you could lose your
license for an entire year.

Speaker 11 (26:26):
And your car is going to I mean, so even
if you get out of jail or whatever, how are
you going to get around?

Speaker 4 (26:30):
And they play too many games. I think they can
handle that speed. You don't realize what a car does
at one hundred plus mile an hour and it doesn't
react the same as it does even at seventy.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
Boy drivers some of the most dangerous people on the plane.

Speaker 11 (26:43):
And that's why I you know, I floated this around
in twenty twenty five. It's an old idea, but still,
I just I can't imagine being a car salesman and
seeing a sixteen year old kid about to get a brand.

Speaker 3 (26:53):
New muscle five hundred horsepower car and.

Speaker 11 (26:55):
Not think he's going to wrap himself around a tree
or someone Else's funny.

Speaker 4 (26:59):
Still, it's commissioned. Yeah, they do this for motorcycles, right,
because I believe it. When you get your motorcycle license
until you're eighteen, you can only have so much horsepower
in your motorcycle.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
Really, I think they do it for motorcycles.

Speaker 11 (27:11):
Well that's not fair if they do it for motorcycles,
but they don't for cars. Anybody who's under twenty five
driving a McLaren. Yeah, the stories to tell it must
be that nil money to meet his dad. All right,
So the guy in the next story said, come on, dude,
hold my beer because it looks like we're starting the
new year with another of Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd's quote.

(27:32):
You just can't make this stuff up stories end quote.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Judd says. Thirty nine year old.

Speaker 11 (27:37):
Matthew Zacharino of Eltamont Springs is facing armed trespassing and
other charges after he was spotted last month sitting in
his car at a construction site.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Listen closely.

Speaker 9 (27:49):
We see this dude wearing a red lace bra with
prosthetic silicone.

Speaker 5 (27:58):
Brestuss know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (28:03):
You just say you know what I mean? After he
said brest is, Let's hear it again, shall we?

Speaker 9 (28:08):
We see this dude wearing a red lace bra. Fact,
he says, dude with prosthetic Hang on, here we go,
brestesses know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (28:23):
Isolate that know what I mean? Part, and let's keep
that to use this year.

Speaker 16 (28:26):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (28:28):
But the greatest I don't care if he was as
corrupt as he gets. That guy's got to stay in office.
At first I was, you know, I could take him
or leave him, But now I look forward to him.
I look forward to his prescott.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
Why, here's the thing you have to like, there's never
going to be a Democrat or a shriff in that county.
To just roll with it, just enjoy the fact that's
what's going to happen.

Speaker 11 (28:53):
As soon as I saw the title to the sound
package was Brau and G string, I was like, yes, please.

Speaker 3 (28:59):
Let's look at this. Whole county's on one man. They've
had a run.

Speaker 11 (29:03):
Well again, keep in mind this is Announcemont Springs man.
They arrested a Pole County.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
But that's not all. Jud says Zacharino was also wearing
a G string.

Speaker 11 (29:11):
Brought me Zacharino and carrying a gun underneath said prosthetic.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Breustuces.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
So dude had a G string on.

Speaker 4 (29:19):
He had a red lace brawl with fake boobs and
then a gun talked into the fake boobs.

Speaker 11 (29:23):
Underneath the fake boobs when they lifted the prosthetic out
for pete, no, just the gun. We got this cat's name, yep,
thirty nine year old Matthew Zacharino.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
Zacharino.

Speaker 11 (29:39):
Now he told deputies he was going to a costume party. Oh,
but clammed up when he was asked just where the
party was. He didn't want to bring the popo and
ended up crashing the scene.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
I was about to say that, you you, he's a
little respect for that. You don't see combing the cops
of that party. Dude, if you read it to a
party in a G string, fake boobs and a gun
and a gun or one thing, you probably don't want
to be in that party. Secondly, you definitely want to
be You don't want to be the guy that ruins.

Speaker 5 (30:05):
That party, exactly.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
Regardless. That concludes your JCS news.

Speaker 3 (30:13):
All right in order?

Speaker 4 (30:15):
Man, alright fo one text us at seven to seven
is zero three one back of a second with more
of the Jim Colbert.

Speaker 19 (30:22):
Show, Happy New York, COVID and COVID It's concrete, Mike, Man,
I had that flu and it is no joke, Buddy.

Speaker 20 (30:38):
Uh sick from just before Halloween until Thanksgiving. Oh four
weeks of sickness, and for the first week I thought
I was gonna die, second week I was contemplating going
to the doctor. Slowly got better, but man, it was
not fun. One of the worst sicknesses I've had in

(30:58):
my forty nine years.

Speaker 3 (31:00):
Wowan crow Dephanty Scott, Happy new year, have been here. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (31:04):
Mine started as a sore throw last Sunday, turned into
a cough, got right up into my nogging and down
into the chest.

Speaker 19 (31:12):
This is horrible.

Speaker 13 (31:13):
But five days of a z pack and I'm back
to work today, damn calls. Thank you guys, having an
amazing year, and I'm sure we'll see you around.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
You will be safe, Deputy Scott.

Speaker 3 (31:25):
All right, welcome back to the Jim Cover Show.

Speaker 4 (31:26):
We're all radio one to four point one four oh
seven nine one six one to call us, Text us
easily at seven seven zero three one. If you'd like
to leave a talk back, that's easy as well. Grab
the iHeartRadio app, go to real radio and use that
mic to send your comment over to Jack.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Yeah I did. The Modern Plumbing just came on as
a new client.

Speaker 16 (31:42):
Right.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
I just read their first spot. It's one of two
spots on the on the sheet today. That's it, right,
messed it up first right out of bat. Did not
write their email address or not email adress, didn't write
their website or the phone number down in the spot today.
That's how good it's been it's MODERNPI dot Com four
oh seven three two seven six thousand. Thanks guys, we

(32:05):
appreciate that awesome company.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
By the way.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
They serve so much better. They deserve so much better,
they really do. Let me tell you what they did though.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
You know, my house is on the fifties and we
try to maintain as much of the integrity of the
home as we rebuild it as this is our fourth one,
I think, and the sinks were one of the things
we wanted to keep in the master bathroom. Well, things
in the fifties were designed way differently than they are now.
And the you know, your sink has an overflow thing, right,
so if it overflows, it goes in that little hole

(32:35):
and then circles back around into the drain, So your
sink can overflow and flood your bathroom. That's where the
spiders live exactly right. Well, the ones and the ones
that are in these sinks are way different than the
modern ones. So what happens is the stem at the
bottom of the sink that allows the water to flow
out once it goes over there is too high in
the bowl, so water sits into that area after you

(32:56):
use it and just stagnates.

Speaker 5 (32:58):
Oh, no.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
So we noticed this.

Speaker 4 (33:00):
I notice the smell coming out of our single We
couldn't figure it out. We're like, well, something's going on.
We just had this all of our septic tanks replaced
and stuff by the city, and we figured it was
like a you know, the maybe one of the vents
was bad or something like that, because the smell was
pretty overwhelming. And it turns out when the guy comes
over from Modern he looks at it and he goes, oh, yeah,
you got this thing you pulled out that. He goes,

(33:20):
here's the towel I used to clean it. I'm like,
get out. He looked like I'd clean an oil barrel
with it.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Yeah, it was so how do they fix that? So
they have to or it.

Speaker 4 (33:29):
But the cool thing is is not even knowing what
it is. I thought it was like fifteen things. Other
than that, you know, I've done a little plumbing work
in my life. One of the reasons that's stayed in
the spot is you got to be really careful. That's
a good way to ruin your entire home and avoid
your insurance policy too. By the way, when you're there,
DIY and you're plumbing or you're electrical, right, Yeah, yeah,
so they have to order a special thing that's built

(33:52):
for that kind of thing, and they're very hard to find.
They actually found two of them and they're coming this week,
I believe to install pretty crazy.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
Yeah, yeah, good people though, all right?

Speaker 4 (33:59):
Four as seven went six one O four one text
us again seven and seven zero three one. Did you
guys see anything this week while you were off? Did
you watch anything interesting or anything?

Speaker 5 (34:08):
Hey?

Speaker 3 (34:09):
Yeah, I watched a bunch. That George Clooney movie was
a j Kelly. I've seen one battle left or another.
Did you like that? By the way, did you get it?
I did get it. It just it wasn't what I
was expected. I didn't really have any expectations going into it,
and then once I settled into it, I'm like, Okay,
Then I went along for a ride, and then it

(34:30):
got a little weird, preposterous, hard to follow.

Speaker 4 (34:35):
I thought, Man, the weird thing about it was is
And even right now, if you asked me other than
like immigration in some way, shape or form, I wouldn't
know what to tell you it was about. Because when
when we were watching it, it was a little bit
late in the evening and I'm trying to kind of
keep up with it, and I was like, I just
don't understand what's happening. And then the worst thing I
don't know about you guys, is like Kevin Bacon makes
this a little self video where he's walking out of

(34:56):
a movie theater. He goes, hey, I just walked in
to see you know, one battle left or another. You know,
that's how you make films, and blah blah blah blah blah,
and it is going on and on about how.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
Good it was.

Speaker 16 (35:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (35:04):
I was like, what do you know, Bacon?

Speaker 16 (35:07):
Do you know?

Speaker 4 (35:08):
I did not get it, but I mean apparently everybody
else does and they loved it. But this is like
three in a row that haven't hit me, like these
Best picture movies, The Fish, what was the Water?

Speaker 5 (35:19):
The Water?

Speaker 3 (35:19):
One Shape of Water? Did not like it, did not
care for it. Everybody else liked it.

Speaker 11 (35:24):
I just thought it had so much hype over it. Yeah,
and it didn't hit me that well that way either.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
I was like, it was good, I.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
Liked it, but it won Best Picture and I thought
Three Billboards Outside Ebbings, Montana.

Speaker 5 (35:37):
Should have one a way better movie.

Speaker 4 (35:39):
Yeah, I mean I thought, oh, better dialogue, better everything.
And then the last year was that everything all at
once every time or something like that.

Speaker 3 (35:46):
Whatever. Yeah, don't get it. I've seen it twice. Do
not understand what's going on?

Speaker 1 (35:50):
Don't you micro dosing?

Speaker 5 (35:52):
Is that what it is?

Speaker 9 (35:52):
No?

Speaker 1 (35:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (35:53):
Yeah, I enjoyed that, but any anytime you're dealing with
the multiverse, it's you got uh, you know, take notes
and hang on. And I do not do that. Yeah, no, no, yeah,
you gotta focus on it.

Speaker 4 (36:06):
I mean, the funniest thing is Jamie Lee Curtis was
the best part of that movie. And I was watching
I was like, Jamie Lee Curtis is the most entertaining
part of this entire movie I've tried to watch. I
literally tried to watch it three times. Yeah, And we
would get about halfway through. We would look at each
other and like, what is going on? I don't even
understand what's on or what's down.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
But then the year before that, what are you doing?
Are you playing Pokemon? Are you distracted to see? That's
the thing so many people have it as their second screen.

Speaker 5 (36:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (36:31):
See, so you're rolling on your phone and then wondering
why you can't I don't understand this.

Speaker 4 (36:36):
So I can split my brain into like a dolphin. No, no,
I do sc I do the scrolling thing while watching
It's really bad. I did watch the Chevy Chase documentary.
I'd mentioned that at the top of the program, and
we have some I have a friend that actually knows
Chevy and his wife quite well.

Speaker 3 (36:51):
Oh really, Yeah, So it's.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Interesting talking about them because I know that he hears
us talk and he listens to the show all the time.
And I'm saying this stuff that I've about Chevy from
other people in the business, and of course when you
watched the show last night, and it's not too difficult
to find other people willing to say those things. Steve
Martin wouldn't even be an interviewed for it rarely. There
are a number of his old cast meets and friends
that would not go on on on camera to say

(37:14):
anything about it because he apparently had been just awful.
This guy Terry Sweeney, who was in I think the
second iteration or third iteration of the show when it
was eighty five or something, so it had been sixth
he came back to host. This guy Terry Sweeney was
the first openly gay member of the of the cast,
and Chevy said something really said he wanted to write

(37:36):
a sketch for him, will weigh you in at one
point in your life, then will weigh you in another
when you have aids, oh, to see how AIDS affects you?

Speaker 3 (37:45):
And then he said, and then I guess.

Speaker 4 (37:47):
And meeting him the very first time, he said, hey,
I hear you're gay, and he goes and he said yeah,
and he goes, then lick my. It starts with a
bee and I actually laugh at it because it sound
like it sounds like something you could jokingly say to somebody,
of course on the first meeting, right, But yeah, it
went poorly from there. He would not be interviewed for it.

(38:10):
He made a statement about it, but would not go
on film or on camera to talk about Chase.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Well, isn't it.

Speaker 11 (38:15):
One of the trivia things we learned in twenty twenty
five was that the director Christopher Columbus got the movie
home alone because he flew to Chicago to meet with
Chevy Chase about doing National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation and it.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
Can't work with him One day came back and said, yeah, no,
I can't.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
I can't do it.

Speaker 4 (38:30):
The cast of Community, the show that he was on
also had the same kind of effect that apparently he
was just a prick And when you watch him doing
some of the stuff mess now and some of the
interviews that he's actually stormed out of, they have video
of it. Sitting right next to Bill Murray promoting Caddyshack. Dude,
he gets into a screaming match with another cast member
and walks off set while they're doing a junket, like
doing a press junket. So he is a very difficult guy.

(38:53):
But I got to tell you, man, when they did
the interview, it didn't although you've heard those stories and
you know they're true, he didn't really come off like
that during the documentary. A little bit prickly, Yeah, but
it seemed like a lot of it was just him
trying to joke and be funny, and maybe people not
understanding that he's he's doing a bit because he never
lets him in on that he's doing a bit.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
Yeah, when you hit critical mass on how many people
dislike you and call you an a hole, I think,
you know, maybe it's more than just joking. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I.

Speaker 11 (39:22):
Mean one of the clips that I saw on social
media was him telling the reporter, you know you're obviously
going to try and figure me out, but you're not
going to be able to do it. And she asks, well,
why don't you think i'd you know, well, because honestly,
you're not intelligent enough, you're not bright enough, to which
she replied, whoa. He goes, well, you asked right, exactly really,

(39:46):
and I'm sure this isn't going to make it on
the on the air.

Speaker 10 (39:49):
And I was like, oh, it did.

Speaker 3 (39:52):
You're gonna put it in a bunch of actually, yeah, exactly,
it was, you know.

Speaker 4 (39:55):
And again, it's weird because Chevy Chase holds a really
unique space in my innertation at Love because he made
the movie Fletch, which I think is one of the
best one liner movies of all time. And he made
a bunch of those movies to be honest with you,
spies like us, other movies like that for me where
he had that run. He did say something though I've
hear very very few people say that he regretted a

(40:16):
decision he made. He said he regrets leaving SNL when
he left, but he left that to one year.

Speaker 3 (40:22):
One year.

Speaker 4 (40:22):
Yeah, and his agent he was really hot. Hollywood wanted
him really bad. This is out of the mouth of Lorne.
Michael said that Hollywood has a really unique way of
getting your attention, and they did, and then his career
went on to have some good movies.

Speaker 3 (40:33):
Obviously the ones we.

Speaker 4 (40:34):
Mentioned, Vacation, Christmas Vacation, all of those were big hits
and stuff, and then it just went nowhere. One of
the guys said something nice or said something very interesting, said, well,
you know, if you're an a hole on your rise up,
you know, imagine what it's going to be like on
the way down. You're going to be double a hole.
And apparently that's exactly where he went. He was just
like kind of intolerable. But he's been married to this

(40:56):
woman for years and the guy I know that knows
them quite well, I mean knows them well enough to
have him over to their house and have dinner with
him and stuff, says that you would never assume any
of that was the case if you were hanging out
with him personally, because he doesn't have that. I'm like, well,
he doesn't feel like he's on I guess like when
he's out in the camera, like he tries to make
all these jokes while he's doing the interviews where you
can see him trying to be edgy and cutting the

(41:17):
way he was when he was, you know, thirty. But
he does have a very interesting story. He's a talented musician,
piano player, plays drums. I believe almost the drummer for
Steely Dan. At one point he was the drummer for
what turned into Steely Dan. But actually he actually told
them to go find a better drummer. He goes, you
guys are real. You know this is a real jazz band.

(41:38):
You guys need to find somebody who can really keep
up with you. And he dipped himself, yeah, and then
went out and did his own thing.

Speaker 11 (41:43):
Still sounds like you're saying he's not a great looker,
but he's got a great personality.

Speaker 3 (41:48):
You know who was in love with him? You don't
think this is wild.

Speaker 4 (41:50):
I didn't know this either, blythe Danner really, but it's
like they had a thing like in their own Winnith
Paltrow's mom.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (41:58):
Gwyneth Paltrow's mother and Chevy Chase had a thing for
a minute and they were really smitten. She thought he
was like really good looking, very interesting. And one of
the reasons they didn't stay together is because he wanted
to be on the West Coast, and she was a
stage actress. I think she won't to know it was
the other way around. She wanted to be in La
doing movies. He needed to be in New York for
S and L And one of the reasons he left

(42:18):
SNL is because of Black Tanner. Ah, dude, it's really
cool if you want to watch it tonight. Chevy Chase
is a really unique character. And I would suggest if
any of you younger people who listen to the program,
like maybe in your thirties, who haven't seen any of
the Chevy Chase movies, go watch them.

Speaker 3 (42:34):
Dude. I think Fletch is a masterpiece. It is. It
is a comedy masterpiece. Texter says, they sell luxury automobiles
in Greenwich, Connecticut for almost twenty years. Chevy Chase came
in to look at a very nice high line car
and he this person writes, I have never encountered a
more obnoxious person in my life. Everybody.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
I mean, there was a whole bunch of that people
saying that their interactions with Chevy were not pleasant or
fun at all. But if you want to see it,
they really kind of I mean, they don't really hide
any of the warts ye, so check it out.

Speaker 3 (43:04):
It's on CNN.

Speaker 4 (43:05):
I think you can get it on HBO maximy up
soon as well. It's called Chevy. I'm Chevy chasing.

Speaker 3 (43:10):
You're not.

Speaker 5 (43:11):
All right?

Speaker 3 (43:12):
Four seven nine.

Speaker 5 (43:13):
Hey.

Speaker 4 (43:14):
By the way, the story of how the Weekend Update
came along was also covered in this.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
Yeah. I mean he didn't.

Speaker 4 (43:18):
I mean he basically created that. Yeah, nobody had an
idea for Weekend Update. It was his idea from the onset.
It exists because of him, and he has hi stuff
to say about that as well. That is a well,
let's just say arrogant all right, back.

Speaker 21 (43:30):
Gonna say, hey, crew, stoked about y'all being back on
the air again.

Speaker 5 (43:39):
Ham paan Bjorn here.

Speaker 21 (43:41):
Yeah, if you get more than twenty four points in
thirty six months when you're twenty four years old, back
in nineteen eighty four, you lose your license for a year,
no driving, no nothing.

Speaker 5 (43:55):
How about that? Helloh, helloh.

Speaker 17 (43:59):
I think it's to be just a matter of time
until cars start coming with a safety key like they
do on jet skis. So it's like, yeah, you're sixteen
and you gotta Shelby GT. Five hundred, but you're only
getting a quarter of the power because of your age.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
Yeah, I don't know. That's just how I see things
going with the times a governor.

Speaker 22 (44:18):
Hey, Cobert crew, it is so good to hear your
voices again. I hope you had a wonderful holiday season,
rested up, did all the fun things you wanted to do,
and spent time with your family. Hey, we're glad to
have you back.

Speaker 5 (44:36):
Toodles, doodles, good to be back.

Speaker 3 (44:40):
Seven seven zero three.

Speaker 4 (44:41):
One is how you text us If you'd also like
to leave 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.

Speaker 3 (44:49):
We'll get you on there. I'm Jim. There's deb Jack
is here as well.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
Hi.

Speaker 3 (44:54):
Well that second guy, say, what was that second talking
back about about maybe having some type of a restriction
like a governor in a vehicle for you know, young drivers.
I thought I just read something about that.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
I've never heard of that.

Speaker 4 (45:07):
Yeah, I thought i'd just read about something like I thought,
because the electric vehicles can do that.

Speaker 3 (45:12):
Yeah, I was gonna say. Nowadays it's even easier with it.
It's a software, you know, right issue, But it's called
a governor. Well, yeah, so a governor was the name
of a device that would use to restrict the amount
of air and fuel carburetor. Yeah, so like they run
them on super speedways. You know, they have them so

(45:33):
the cars don't go too fast right on a track.

Speaker 4 (45:35):
You can limit how much air and fuel the car
gets and then limit how much power it has and
how fastto But with Tesla's and all that other stuff, yeah,
you could just kind of program it in as a parent.
You know, there's a lot key thing or not, or
it's just a code you entered it in and you
can say, well, you know, make it only forty percent power,
which max speed would be like seventy by miles out,
I mean, still deadly speed, but not you know, one

(45:57):
hundred and fifty and thirty or forty years something on that.

Speaker 3 (46:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (46:01):
You know, another thing too, is I mean there could
be legislation that if you're a parent and you buy
your kid, like, you know, a GT. Five hundred you know,
four five six hundred horsepower car, that you are personally
reliable for anything that happens while that kid's driving it.
I think up to a certain age, I mean I
think you could even go to maybe well eighteen would
be the first, sure, but I mean I think you
could even take that farther.

Speaker 11 (46:20):
I just remember it was a viral video from last
year of an Orange County deputy I believe, or maybe
an Orlando Police officer who pulled over a super speeder,
you know, brand new I believe it was a Mustang
and called the kid's parents and had them come pick
them up right there on the side of I for it.

Speaker 3 (46:37):
I told him exactly what he was doing, was doing
like one twenty nine or.

Speaker 11 (46:39):
Something exactly, And he's the one who told the story
of Listen. I'm doing this because I had a sixteen
year old kid whose parents were going through a divorce.
They were feeling guilty. They bought their sixteen year old
kid a brand new muscle car, and a week later,
he wrapped himself around a tree. And I don't want
to see that happen to you folks as well.

Speaker 4 (46:58):
So the problem is with a lot of that, I mean,
that situation could have been like yes, sir, yes, sir,
and then he gets home and high fives the kid
for getting it up to one hundred and thirty.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
Is it parent, You're not?

Speaker 8 (47:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (47:10):
Yeah, Because a lot of parents just don't understand. They're
trying to live vicariously through their kids, you know. And
if you're a dad, he made a little bit of
money and you never had that muscle car when you're
a kid. I mean to be able to give your
kid that car and kind of watch him do burnouts
and stuff and take his dates out and stuff. That
there is a certain aspect of that to certain dads
that they would find cool.

Speaker 1 (47:28):
I would imagine until your insurance goes up to you.

Speaker 3 (47:31):
I don't know, yeah, six thousand. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (47:35):
And somebody said that Ford has a my key that
allows for speed, seat belt and audio limits. Oh wow,
In other words, how loud you can turn your stereo up.
And the fact the car probably won't crank if the
seat belt isn't engaged.

Speaker 3 (47:47):
Something like that. Nice.

Speaker 19 (47:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (47:50):
I would never buy my kid a car like that,
not a million years. All my kids got like rat cars.
Their first cars are like rat cars. I mean, like,
you know, four cylinders, barely rolling.

Speaker 1 (48:00):
My brother had a car that every stop sign he'd
have to put a quart of oil in.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
I actually sold a car over the break my daughters,
Oh did you really and market glaze. Yeah, really sold
it within an hour. Wow, I had ten inquiries full
asking yeah, yeah, yes, but I realized I probably should
have been asking more. Yeah, that wouldn't when you contend
immediately minute exactly, you could say, damn how desperate the

(48:29):
low end car market is. Yeah, but uh, she she
has her mind. We have a car available that she
can use. But she fell in love with the Kia
Soul and then found out that they're not making them anymore. No,
they're not. Yeah, she's bummed about that.

Speaker 13 (48:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (48:47):
Yeah, yeah, and you don't want to get into that
vehicle because then when you need.

Speaker 3 (48:50):
Parts, yeah you don't. They still make parts for every
vehicle on the road. Yeah, but with just keyas in general,
I think maybe you gotta be very careful with that.
You're careful with is in Hyundai's Yeah, just you know,
just me talking to mechanics and understanding that maybe they're
not as reliable as other vehicles out there. My daughter
just got a brand new Nissant Nissan. It starts with

(49:11):
F I can't remember fit or Nissan Kicks Kicks that's it,
a little suv kind of hybrid thing. Yeah, those are cool.

Speaker 4 (49:17):
I had to because you know, she's about to have
a baby and The car she had was like, you know,
I don't say a student car, but it was basically
a student car, a car.

Speaker 3 (49:25):
That ac and it ran and then it didn't run anymore.

Speaker 4 (49:28):
And she'd already put money into it, didn't want to
put any more money into it, so decided just to
get a new ride. And man, I mean it was
very affordable payment under four hundred dollars for a brand
new vehicle. Wow, no money down. Yeah, and not a
crazy link Blowan or anything like that. Zero percent interest.
Nissan's doing a big deal right now.

Speaker 16 (49:44):
I guess.

Speaker 3 (49:46):
I love new cars.

Speaker 4 (49:46):
I'm gonna have to get one soon. Mine's ratty as
f my car. Try What is it that where you
don't take care of your vehicle?

Speaker 3 (49:53):
What is it called lazy? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (49:55):
Yeah, think of something else, Think of something more flattering.
Why is it I have a hard time doing that?
I bought a brand My truck is brand new, Literally
bought it off the internet. They delivered it to my
house with like forty eight miles on it.

Speaker 1 (50:10):
That getting out in the parking lot.

Speaker 4 (50:12):
Yes, And I'm telling you, if you look at it
right now, it's got seventy thousand miles on it. But
I'm telling you it looks like somebody lives in it.
And I cannot as hard as I try, I can't.

Speaker 3 (50:24):
I'm not that guy. I just have you seen a
doctor about depression?

Speaker 5 (50:27):
Is that what it is?

Speaker 3 (50:28):
It could be who knows? Lack of motivation.

Speaker 4 (50:30):
Yeah, my buddy Daniel, Daniel Dennis, his car looks like
I'm telling you. When Daniel trees his cars in the
people ask him did you drive this thing or did
you really use it? Because it's perfect, like he keeps
his cars in absolute immaculate shape.

Speaker 3 (50:44):
Yep. I was trying to explain that to my daughter.
It's like cause I cleaned you know, her car before
I sold it. And then I'm like, you know, if
you take better car care of it, you know, you
get more for it.

Speaker 16 (50:54):
Right.

Speaker 3 (50:54):
Yeah. But the thing is is for me, like and
this is what I've said for years, Like to me,
a vehicle is a it's not like part of my personality.

Speaker 4 (51:02):
I don't get like that involved with a vehicle, Like
I don't. I don't do that, Like I don't identify
with it. Like that's why I have a little ratty
pickup truck. I don't, you know, I don't need that.
I've gone through that stage of my life. I had
a couple of nice cars in my life. I was like, Ah,
it didn't really it doesn't do anything for you, you know,
you know, it doesn't really mean anything. So I was like,
just give me something to get me back and forth.
A little pickup truck. I can use it to do

(51:22):
the yard work and stuff I need. But I just
I just beat the hell out of them.

Speaker 3 (51:26):
I don't know what it is.

Speaker 1 (51:28):
It's probably a good thing then that you don't need
a fancier car.

Speaker 4 (51:31):
Yeah, that's why I don't buy him anymore. I would
never buy a nice car. My wife would never let
me buy a nice car, not a million years.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
She doesn't.

Speaker 4 (51:36):
I mean when I get into hers, and she's just
like that as well. I mean she keeps her car clean.
She's got that car wash thing where she takes it
to the car wash like every day, every other day.
It's immaculate. I mean, it looks like she doesn't use
it and it's brand new.

Speaker 1 (51:49):
Does she put paper down on the seats before you
get in?

Speaker 10 (51:52):
No, she doesn't, but she should.

Speaker 4 (51:54):
I don't mind me, man, it is it's like having
a dog that's played in the ponds. I don't know,
and that makes me so angry that I don't have
that gene that does that. I have geenes that do
other cool stuff, but I do not have that let's
keep everything immaculate gene, because my studio can get that
way too.

Speaker 3 (52:13):
I was gonna ask, like, where else do you see that?
Is it like at that You have a desk at home?

Speaker 4 (52:18):
So yes, but I mean if you looked at it,
like I have to clean it up about every two weeks.

Speaker 3 (52:22):
Because here's what I do.

Speaker 4 (52:23):
Like, I'll if I have a project, I'll bring everything
out for the project, and then when the project's done,
I'm like, there's another project, I'll get that stuff out too. Yeah,
And then I'll do that like six or seven times,
and the next thing, you know, I can even move
around in my studio. Then I have to take an
entire day. I do this to my garage about every
four months. I go in to do projects. I pull
everything out I need and don't put it back because
I need to do something else with that. So next thing,

(52:45):
you know, my garage looks like a hoarder's living room.

Speaker 3 (52:48):
It's awful. And I don't have that gene to keep clean.
I don't know what it is. But my bedroom's immaculate.
I make the bed every day.

Speaker 4 (52:56):
My closet's perfect, my shoes are put away, and they're
little cubby holes there's supposed to.

Speaker 3 (53:00):
Be because your wife would kick your ass. Do you
close cabinet doors in the kitchen? Everything?

Speaker 4 (53:07):
I do all that stuff, I clean the kitchen, I
do all that. It's just my personal stuff I don't
take real good care of.

Speaker 1 (53:13):
It's that creative mind.

Speaker 3 (53:14):
No, I don't know about that. The thing that yeah,
no shared space is it's only the things that you
that are solely for you are the things you don't
really maintain. And it's the thing my wife does never.
My wife never rides with me. It's self hate. It
could be, and that you feel I'm from Palatka. I

(53:35):
don't deserve something this day.

Speaker 4 (53:39):
It was a very good possibility. That's the case as
a very good possibility. I wonder if anybody else has that,
the thing where they take care of some stuff in
their life, but other parts of their life they just
completely and utterly ignore.

Speaker 3 (53:51):
And I do that all the time.

Speaker 4 (53:54):
And I don't have other I don't know that I
have one thing other than my relationships that I really
pay a lot of attention to when it comes to
my personal thing.

Speaker 11 (54:03):
Hey, even Monica on Friends who was as ocd as
they come. Even she had a secret closet.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
Oh does she really?

Speaker 5 (54:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (54:10):
All right, all right four seven nine six four one.

Speaker 4 (54:12):
You doing text us at seven seven zero three to
one back in one second.

Speaker 14 (54:24):
Subcobra crew beadm bread here.

Speaker 17 (54:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (54:29):
I actually had that sickness Wednesday night all the way
till yesterday Sunday afternoon at four o'clock is when I
finally got out of bed. It's horrible.

Speaker 3 (54:37):
Don't mess with it anyways. Today I'm forty one years old.
I can't believe I made it that long. I'm glad
to have you guys back.

Speaker 5 (54:45):
Y'all have a good one.

Speaker 3 (54:48):
Hey, I'll say o'honnah oh.

Speaker 7 (54:50):
Twenty twenty six, Holy monkey ikey ho.

Speaker 2 (54:54):
Hey, just got home from rather arguous Aaron running session
almost cop motor over by some New Yorkers in the
parking lot at publics.

Speaker 5 (55:05):
Snowbird's irritate me.

Speaker 3 (55:06):
Very dangerous anyway.

Speaker 5 (55:08):
It is still follow the rules, man, they don't side.
But welcome back, guys.

Speaker 7 (55:13):
Great to hear you.

Speaker 10 (55:15):
Hello, ha thanks.

Speaker 4 (55:15):
Brother, Yeah, man, that theory of pedestrian world being outside
of publics being the most dangerous that came to life
during Christmas and New Year's My goodness alive not good
all right? For seven nine one text us seven seven
zero three one. Those talkbacks are easy as well. Just
get that iHeartRadio app. When you go to the real

(55:38):
radio section, you'll see a Mike. Use that to send
your comment of re Jack. We'll get you on there superstars.

Speaker 3 (55:42):
I'm Jim. There's deb here as well.

Speaker 5 (55:45):
Yo.

Speaker 3 (55:48):
You guys still drink coffee every morning? Yes? Oh yeah
I am. You go out or you make it at home? Yes,
you do both. Yes?

Speaker 1 (55:54):
Where do you get when you get out?

Speaker 3 (55:55):
Where do you get it? Now? Starbucks? Starbucks? You home home?
But do you ever get it out?

Speaker 16 (56:00):
No? Not ever.

Speaker 3 (56:01):
You never buy coffee out.

Speaker 11 (56:02):
Not It's Jack speaking your love language. It's not worth
the price, It's not worth the number for you. Yeah,
you're right.

Speaker 4 (56:09):
I would agree one hundred percent, and recently specifically with Starbucks.
And look, this is a company I could not have
given more free advertising to over my career than anybody.
And I'm telling you, man, I have preached to the
masses regarding the quality of Starbucks. It's not there anymore.
It's not the same company anymore. The product's still good,
but it's not like it used to be. Right, But

(56:30):
there is a trend happening, and I don't know if
you guys have paid attention to it when it comes
to your coffee, America is stopping the cafe thing and
it's a different world now. Where do you think Americans
are beginning to kind of migrate out of cafes and
coffee shops and where they're getting their coffee now convenience

(56:53):
stores wah wah. So that is part of it, right,
The new trend for coffee is racetrack wuah wah. But
because these people have really stepped up their coffee game.
I got coffee last night at wahwah h yeah, and they're.

Speaker 3 (57:06):
Just they've been redesigning the wah wahs they've been you know, uh,
the ones around here, and it's just their whole coffee
bars is like seven eleven's on the same thing, and
they have so many different offerings, so of course you
have to make it yourself, but it also is three
or four or five dollars less than it is when
you go and get any of these specialty coffees at
your coffee shop.

Speaker 11 (57:25):
The ones that I've been seeing are the drive through
coffee shops. There is no cafe part too.

Speaker 3 (57:31):
They just opened up like a good Bean or something
like that, right by.

Speaker 1 (57:34):
Me, Joseph Brothers.

Speaker 3 (57:36):
I think it's no, no, no, no, it's the one
out there by us.

Speaker 1 (57:38):
The just there's a couple of them, Ellison's or something
like that at.

Speaker 3 (57:42):
Least or something like that. Right, it's just a little
it looks like an old photo map exactly where you
pull up. It's got a window on both sides.

Speaker 10 (57:48):
That's it.

Speaker 3 (57:48):
And you pull up and you get your coffee and
move on.

Speaker 4 (57:50):
That's also becoming very trendy because the infrastructure for the
people who are buying those businesses are considerably less than
buying an inline Starbucks or a freestanding Starbucks, right, or
any of those shops for that matter.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
Right, But that's not it either.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
Less Starbucks is closing like what three four hundred location.

Speaker 3 (58:06):
Yeah, yeah, they've had some tough times. Here's what it is.
And you see one of these every day, or maybe
don't because you leave a little bit later than I do.

Speaker 4 (58:14):
So have you guys noticed that the food truck thing
is turning into coffee. Have you guys noticed that around
town if you drive around, and apparently this is happening
all throughout the US. People are starting to create these
little coffee shops that they can pull behind their cars
and they set up in parking lots, the back part

(58:34):
of a convenience store. And for us deb on the
way from Lake County into the radio station, there's an
empty lot right across from that racetrack in that seven
eleven yep.

Speaker 1 (58:44):
I know there used to be donuts that were sold
there as well.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
There's a little coffee now.

Speaker 4 (58:48):
The guy owns a free standing coffee shop, but he's
got this little trailer, little covered trailer, like a landscape
trailer that it's covered, and he's turned that into a
mobile coffee shop where they sell coffees and baked goods
that they get out and the line is long af
every morning. And I've had coffee from there and it's

(59:09):
very good. And that is becoming a national trend because again,
a coffee from them is like two dollars and ten
cents as opposed to three dollars and eighty cents or
whatever it is at Starbucks now, just for a plain
coffee so that's like the trend that's happening is people
are coming out of these cafes. They're tired of paying
six seven eight dollars for a cup of coffee and
that's about the tip, and then you have to tip
the barista, who's gonna be pissed at you if you

(59:31):
don't do it right.

Speaker 1 (59:32):
Gonna be a little something extra in that coffee.

Speaker 4 (59:34):
And people are like, look, man, I don't want I
don't need that infrastructure. I don't need that third space
experience to get a cup of coffee. I would just
like to get a nice cup of coffee and move on.
And that's what's happening, and it's kind of interesting. There's
a great story today on Fox News about it and Denton, Texas,
the best new lattes are sort of piping hot out
of a yellow food truck hidden behind a shell station.

(59:56):
And I've noticed here in Central Florida, on top of
the one that we see out there that's that light
blue trailer, there are a number of those popping up
all throughout Central Florida where people are like, well, the
food truck are very expensive. Those seems like one hundred
and fifty thousand plus, But anybody could take a little
covered trailer, do a little work, get a get it.

Speaker 3 (01:00:15):
It's that film cover. What's that jack? When they do
the film? That a wrap?

Speaker 4 (01:00:19):
Yeah, rap, when they get it wrapped with their logo.
Not that expensive. You have brew coffee, put it in
earns and off you go.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Are you thinking of opening a new business.

Speaker 3 (01:00:28):
Dude, I'm telling you this is a doable scenario.

Speaker 5 (01:00:32):
It really is.

Speaker 3 (01:00:33):
What are you laughing at? I'm putting up. I think
we could do it. Yeah. Yeah, let's have Jim Colbert
Choke Coffee.

Speaker 4 (01:00:39):
It says flower Shop Coffee serves coffee in a perfectly
balanced flavors like pecan pie, some'mores, pretzel mint, and they
do it out of a The location is a tiny
parking lot with no seating.

Speaker 3 (01:00:50):
I tell you we were in Mount Dora New Year's Eve,
and I know I mentioned to you guys that night
I was walking around. The longest line at the at
anything was the one food truck that was actually a
coffee food truck. Yeah, and that's exactly what we're talking about.
It looked like a little horse trailer.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:01:08):
And then they had to open up they could you know,
do they open up flat thing. They open up and
they serve coffee and pastries and that's they it's it's
it's pre wrapped croissants, doughnuts and cookies and muffins and
then your coffee in the morning.

Speaker 11 (01:01:21):
I was wondering because walking up that night, I'm like,
you know, I know there's food trucks and there's bars,
and I saw the longest line of police officers.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
I'm like, well, they're not.

Speaker 11 (01:01:30):
In line for the and then I walked by, I'm like, oh, yeah,
it's a coffee truck.

Speaker 5 (01:01:34):
Of course, that's the tracking exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
See, that's oh I could do that. When the food
truck thing first hit, I kind of it's like, oh,
let's get a food truck. You know, I wanted to
do it, but you know, I don't make anything peanut
butter and jelly. But you know what's great about that's
your weird food truck.

Speaker 4 (01:01:50):
But what makes it so smart? Right, here's why it's smart.
You know, you might not eat buffalo chicken, and you
might not eat roast beef sandwiches. I might not eat
Mexican food, you might not eat Greek food. You might
not eat burgers or fries. You might not eat pizza,
but all of us drink coffee. Yeah, yeah, So it
makes perfect sense because coffee is one of those things.
It's so universal, so few people don't drink it in

(01:02:10):
the morning that it's almost an automatic. And that place
is by the way on the corner and depca could
It is full every morning. My wife gets coffee there
like two times a week. It's delicious.

Speaker 11 (01:02:20):
I like this one text at seven seven zero three one.
I told my girl the other day, I wish there
were coffee trucks like ice cream trucks and just drove
through neighborhoods.

Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
That's a brilliant idea actually in the morning.

Speaker 4 (01:02:31):
Yeah, absolutely, man, it says to add to the to
add just to the east Stourbridge Coffee House in Massachusetts
open up a new location in April.

Speaker 3 (01:02:40):
It's next to a Noble gas station and it.

Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
Brings handcrafted, handmade, artisan coffees out of a landscape trailer
and hands them to you for about thirty percent less
than you can get in the cafe.

Speaker 3 (01:02:52):
It's amazing because between and the one that opened by
me is the human Bean. It's of the human bean,
Human Bean. And then but you see foxtails popping up
and three people text in all, one after the other.
Dutch Brothers. Yeah, Dutch Brothers is another one that you know.
So it doesn't seem to be a shortage of coffee places.

(01:03:13):
It seems to be they're more and more present. However,
you know, can you, like, would you consider just investing
in a better coffee maker? Like are you satisfied with
how you make coffee at home?

Speaker 5 (01:03:26):
Or would you?

Speaker 3 (01:03:27):
I mean, because if you say, like, what six bucks
a day or so two thousand dollars over a year, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you know, you could buy a nice espresso machine. And
so that's what I have now.

Speaker 4 (01:03:38):
I drink an espresso because I don't go out in
the mornings. I don't have to go to work in
the morning. My wife goes to work in the morning,
she will drink one then. But on the weekends she
goes out and gets one, like can get one on
the way to wherever she's going. Yeah, and we'll drop
by there and occasionally if we don't have she doesn't
have time to make one at the house or you know,
doesn't is kind of in a hurry, she'll just drop
by there and pick one up because she can get
a pastry with it. As well, but we have our

(01:04:00):
an espresso and we love it. I mean, it does
a really good job for me. I think it's wonderful.
So I don't really go out for coffee much anymore.
When I play golf in the morning, sometimes I get
it because it's a larger quantity than I get from
the house. But it's good, and I will tell you
I like this trend of I don't know if you
can make money though, I don't know how many. I

(01:04:21):
don't know how many cups of coffee you have to
sell to break even or whatever. And coffee is expensive
right now.

Speaker 3 (01:04:26):
The even in Aldi that I get one Colombian single
store good Jack, the Beaumont brand. Yeah nice. However, when
it's like the can is like a pound and a half.
But when I started going to Aldi, it was seven
seven fifty and now it's like ten almost eleven bucks.

Speaker 4 (01:04:46):
Yeah, in that same can, A pounds of Starbucks coffee
right now is in the fourteen to sixteen dollars range,
I think. But depending on what you depending on what
you get, sometimes they'll run bogos at your favorite grocery store. Yeah,
but it's his villain. Coffee are here on satellite beat
start as a truck. Great coffee one in Melbourne as well.
You would love it all hip hop and punk theme

(01:05:07):
with amazing coffee.

Speaker 1 (01:05:08):
That sounds awesome.

Speaker 4 (01:05:09):
Like that's another one. Is it Black Rifle here in
town that has that coffee company? And by the way,
we're the one we're talking about. It's called ground zero and.

Speaker 11 (01:05:15):
I think Black Rifle is the coffee brand that was yeah,
created by vests, Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:05:20):
But the coffee thing is you know, again, when you
look at the infrastructure and the you know, the price
point and the layout for what you would have to
do to start like a little coffee business on the side,
it pales in comparison to what it would cost to
do a food truck. Even if your food truck just
did sandwiches and you didn't cook on site, you just
kind of constructed sandwiches, it would still be grossly expensive.

Speaker 3 (01:05:40):
Do you think between the food truck people and the
brick and mortar people that are envious of each other,
do you think if you had a food truck, you're
you're dreaming about having a brick and mortar location. Well,
I know that's the well, I know that's the case
with one person, the cow and cheese guy. Yes, kwame.

Speaker 4 (01:05:56):
Yeah, he started out his wing place, which is I
think a wing fire or something whatever it is. He
started out as a food truck then turned into a
brick and mortar. I think most people would rather have
a brick and mortar than have to drive the food
truck around and deal with the maintenance of the food
truck because they are very expensive to produce and expensive
to keep moving around. And the other thing too is man,

(01:06:18):
once you have a brick and mortar, you are a
destination location. If you're driving a food truck around, you know,
where are you gonna be? I mean, do I have
to where do I have to meet you at?

Speaker 3 (01:06:27):
Type thing?

Speaker 4 (01:06:27):
I mean, there are very few places like that place
we have in downtown called where all the food trucks go.

Speaker 11 (01:06:32):
I was just gonna say, I love that gathering of
food trucks. That's a big thing in Portland as well.

Speaker 16 (01:06:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:06:37):
Yeah, well they had that area there, it's called the
Yard or something like that where they like eight or
ten food trucks will gather around and you can find
out an advance who's going to be there and they
still have their spot. But also to answer your question,
there are a number of people. Matter of fact, ground zero.
I believe the coffee company started out as a brick
and mortar and then created this little trailer that they
take out just to get more just to get more coverage.

Speaker 3 (01:06:59):
But it's almost like a catering extension to your business. Sure, yeah,
sure it is.

Speaker 4 (01:07:03):
I mean the thing is, if people can't come to you,
or they won't come to you, and you set up
on a very visual corner where people can drop by,
they they're in and out in no time at all.
They get the same quality product. I mean, that's great
for them. And you know, some of these people have
schedules as well. I know that Kwame used to have
his truck here some places there at some places. Yeah,
but I don't know, man, that seems like a real

(01:07:24):
arduous thing to do.

Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
That's the inspections for the food truck all that.

Speaker 4 (01:07:28):
Yeah, yeah, it's dangerous. Yeah, you're traveling with it. If
you fry things like he did, he had the park
his truck and then you're firing up friars or your
oils three hundred and seventy five degrees. Yeah, you're not
leaving right away, Yeah, no, you're not slashing around that
that chicken death your truck while you're riding on these
roads in central Florida.

Speaker 5 (01:07:46):
No way.

Speaker 3 (01:07:48):
But I just thought it was kind of a cool story.
I saw it this morning. I was like, damn, that's right.
Those things are going crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:07:52):
Man.

Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
There are a lot of them too, and this happens
a lot in the Northeast. A lot of these places
up in the Northeast and a number of them in
Texas as well. But I think you just got have
a cool trend is as we're tired, we're tired of
driving to the city to experience something outside existing chains
in coffee houses. Owner of Upshot Coffee break Shop, which
is located in an old auto shop, told this outlet. See,

(01:08:15):
they do like their places, and I love meeting my
kids that are favorite like Rosso's. YEA love meeting my
kids at Rosso's for a croissant or a or a
you know, a pastry and a cup of coffee because
you can sit and talk. But when you're on the
run and you want something kind of cool and to
be able to drop by one of these spots, it's great.

Speaker 1 (01:08:32):
And not paid close to ten dollars for a cup
of coffee.

Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
I got a I got a savory pastry and a
coffee Sunday morning. Eleven dollars thirty cents.

Speaker 3 (01:08:43):
Wow, eleven dollars and thirty cent was that with the
tip for a Yeah, for a ham and Swiss croissant
that I could eat in five bytes and a large
cup of coffee? What eleven dollars? What do you think
at number one? Break at the breakfast menu at McDonald's costs?
Right now? You've talked coffee, you know, buffet and a
hash brown?

Speaker 5 (01:09:04):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (01:09:04):
What nine ten dollars? Oh, it's not that much. It's
almost eight.

Speaker 5 (01:09:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:09:09):
Ye, Still that's way expensive to consider what it used
to be. Didn't it used to be like five bucks?

Speaker 3 (01:09:12):
I know, it's like I got that. I'm like, wait,
she's like seven and seventy. I'm like, I'm sorry, what
didn't you think about it? It's like, oh, of course
everything else got up. Yeah, why wouldn't they? You know,
egg mcmuffet and McDonald's go up to have you priced
beef lately? No, that's yeah, you want to have some fun.

Speaker 4 (01:09:30):
Slide into uh, slide in into the the green one
and go to that meat department. And I actually there,
I was buying a couple of things for this shower
the other day. And there's a guy standing next or
standing in front of the beef case and he was
the only one. It was like that thing had guns
pointing out of it. Nobody would go near that thing, right,

(01:09:50):
They didn't even want to take the chance, like I
think they card a charge of six bucks just to
stand in front of it, exactly. And we went over
and I said, uh, I said uh him. I said, oh,
braving the meat department, are you? And he started laughing.
And I picked up two filet mignons and they were
like your regular, like six ounce fla mignons.

Speaker 3 (01:10:08):
And I pointed at that Bryce and he said, no way,
forty three dollars. Forty three dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:10:13):
I think it was like thirty or twenty nine dollars
a pound, or right at thirty bucks a pound, damn.

Speaker 3 (01:10:19):
And they weren't that big. It wasn't that much meat.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Forty bucks even ground beef is ridiculous, so.

Speaker 4 (01:10:25):
Expensive, man, all right, four O seven nine one six
one four one. You'd always text us at seven seven
zero three to one. Back in a second with more
of the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 19 (01:10:37):
Hey Jimmy and the Cobt crew.

Speaker 5 (01:10:38):
Just want to let you know.

Speaker 18 (01:10:40):
I was out in Seattle in Portland a few years
ago and I found Dusch Grows.

Speaker 3 (01:10:46):
Dusch Grows was awesome.

Speaker 18 (01:10:47):
I tried to invest in them, opened some here in
the in the States in Florida, and they wouldn't love
me because you had to be a Barisa for three years.

Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
We're played without you even infest in the company.

Speaker 10 (01:11:00):
Hey, you guys, have a great day.

Speaker 3 (01:11:01):
Damn, I'm crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:11:03):
That is great, I guess.

Speaker 3 (01:11:04):
I hope you guys are doing well. First of all,
I missed you guys. Welcome back in happy New Years. Yeah,
you guys can start your own coffee the Jim Corbo
Show coffee. That's a good idea.

Speaker 8 (01:11:14):
Just to make sure that the flavors are super bored
things by babe joke.

Speaker 3 (01:11:19):
Bye all fall in bold is accent start to Joko. Now,
welcome back to the Jum Coward Show.

Speaker 5 (01:11:30):
Roal Radio one.

Speaker 3 (01:11:30):
O wait one, I'm Jiminor's deb Hello, Jack is here
as well. What's Warren one? You want to talk about coffee?

Speaker 16 (01:11:37):
Warren?

Speaker 3 (01:11:37):
Now you evele love talking about coffee. Warren.

Speaker 5 (01:11:39):
What's going on?

Speaker 3 (01:11:40):
Buddy? What do you go to say about coffee.

Speaker 16 (01:11:41):
Warren Hey, old man living here, born here in Orlando,
sixty seven, retired limited budget And uh, what I've found
when you're trying to watch your money anyhow, I go
to the dollar store. I buy a certain brand of
Benstent coffee and great. Mainly we drink coffee for caffeine.

(01:12:04):
So I'm not gonna you know, there's you know one
place called Mickey D's where you can get a decent cup.
I'm not going to pay four than five dollars when
I can drink it for about thirty cents a cup.

Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
Yeah, I got you know what instant though, I know
a different game.

Speaker 4 (01:12:20):
But my grandmother and my uncles used to drink that
instant folders and they loved it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:26):
Yeah that's me.

Speaker 16 (01:12:31):
What can I say?

Speaker 4 (01:12:32):
I'm broke, Yeah, don't worry about it. Worrying that's fine,
But you're you're beating the system mcdog.

Speaker 3 (01:12:36):
Yeah. I remember my grandfather was. It was always uh sanka,
Oh yeah, there you go. He put crema in it.

Speaker 4 (01:12:43):
Oh come on, now, not one organic thing in that cup, now, nothing,
only the water.

Speaker 3 (01:12:53):
All of those things came out of a lab.

Speaker 4 (01:12:56):
Yeah, man, coffee is a major player of course in
American culture. The thing is with me is the then
Espresso pods really aren't that bad. They're about a dollar.
The ones I about a dollar twenty five apiece. So
I'm paying a dollar twenty five for coffee at home. Yeah,
and I think you know what the can I get?
It's like thirty seven yeah, yeah, yeah. So you know,
we like then Espresso because you do get really good

(01:13:16):
quality coffee. It tastes, it tastes very good.

Speaker 3 (01:13:19):
It makes a good cup of cough.

Speaker 4 (01:13:20):
But and I don't like the curing because the curing
has that metallic flavor that I do not care for.
And I don't care what curing it comes out of.
It always has that kind of metallic flavor to it
that I do not care for. And then Espresso does
not have that.

Speaker 3 (01:13:33):
And Danny DeVito says it, I don't know what would
cause the metallic flavor. I know it's horrible for the
environment that wastes, yeah, of k cups, But I mean, truly,
it's the same for an Espresso, they claim. I mean,
so the Espresso says, they send you a recycling back,
They send you a bag and you can send back
the empties. You can so that they can throw them away. Yeah,

(01:13:56):
and I have a feeling that's exactly what they're doing.
It's a feel good thing. Yeah, and I think most
people are not sending them back. I I think we
did it the first year that we had it, and
then we do not do that anymore. Again.

Speaker 4 (01:14:08):
When the recycling thing we found out that, you know,
the government recycling thing was a bit of a scam,
we were like, well, I mean, who else is doing this?

Speaker 3 (01:14:14):
Then if the government has an entire program where they
say they don't.

Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
That's actually it was started by the plastics industry.

Speaker 3 (01:14:21):
And see, and that's plastics of the problem. But you know,
paper is easier to recycle, cardboard, aluminum cans and all
those things. Do you recycleods item if you throw them
in the trash? Well, to be honest with you, this
is go in the trash. Bit.

Speaker 4 (01:14:36):
The espressopods are aluminum, They're not paper, They're they're aluminum,
so theoretically, but the curates are plastic though, right Yeah, yeah,
so theoretically I could recycle the pods for the an
espresso and.

Speaker 11 (01:14:49):
People will text us that they do make the reusable
curing pods where you can fill it with your own coffe.

Speaker 3 (01:14:54):
That's what we did the last for about the last.

Speaker 1 (01:14:56):
It's finding the perfect amount is what's difficult.

Speaker 4 (01:14:59):
Yeah, for about the last year we had our currig.
We stopped buying pods and we started buying the coffee
I like, which would be the Starbucks Italian Roast, which
I think is the best, and started making coffee with
that and it.

Speaker 3 (01:15:11):
Was damn good.

Speaker 4 (01:15:12):
But you realize, I mean you're going through quite a
bit of coffee doing that as well, because I could
take you a couple of tablespoons make half a pot,
or take a tablespoon to make one cup.

Speaker 3 (01:15:20):
Yeah, well with the cure the way it used it.
You know, I just bought uh a new coffee maker.
It's a hybrid does it? Does it espresso as well? No,
it's got that you make the kraph you can make
a krap and it's connected to the k cops.

Speaker 1 (01:15:36):
Yeah, you can do that. We've got yeah, we've got one.

Speaker 3 (01:15:39):
Just like that comes with the container so you can
put your grounds in it and really so you.

Speaker 11 (01:15:44):
Can make more than one cup then like actually it's
a coffee pot on one side and then a cureg
on the other.

Speaker 3 (01:15:49):
It's like two coffee makers stuck together. Yeah, are you
so fancy bread?

Speaker 22 (01:15:54):
Joe?

Speaker 3 (01:15:55):
It was on seal?

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
Oh right, I laugh every time I see it.

Speaker 11 (01:15:58):
I'm like, yeah, that's if I have company enough company
that I need to make a pot of coffee.

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
That's not going to happen, right.

Speaker 3 (01:16:05):
But in the morning, we make a pot and then
we'll you know, my wife and I on each have
a couple and then if the kid gets up later,
you know she only wants one cup. You don't need
to make a whole pot for that or you know, so,
so do you make a pot of coffee?

Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
What do you have a curreate?

Speaker 1 (01:16:21):
I just yeah, well it just like jack, it's a hybrid.

Speaker 11 (01:16:23):
On one side of the coffee maker is the coffee pot,
so you've got the caraffe and then on the other
side is the cuic I only have one cup a
day because I find that if I try to have
two cups a day, oh my stomach just get sour.

Speaker 1 (01:16:35):
It's not happy.

Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
Yeah, I'm finding happy.

Speaker 4 (01:16:39):
I have the you know they have the coffees have
a different caffeine level and they can tell you, like
one to ten what it is. So I the first
when I drink in the morning, is like a seven,
But the second one I.

Speaker 3 (01:16:50):
Have in the morning is like a three. Because man,
I gotta tell you the one thing about that espresso,
it will make you an espresso not good.

Speaker 5 (01:16:58):
Oh we're good or real good.

Speaker 4 (01:17:00):
And the thing I don't like about not brewing a
pot of coffee is that when you brew a pot
of coffee, your house smells like coffee in the morning.

Speaker 13 (01:17:05):
I know.

Speaker 4 (01:17:06):
And that's how your house is supposed to smell in
the morning. That's what's supposed to get you out of bed.

Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
On the weekend mornings, your house shit smell like coffee,
and breakfast during the week your house shit smell like coffee.

Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
By like eight thirty. Your entire house shit smell like coffee.
That's like your that's your that's your old factory wake
up call. Yeah, absolutely, And I mean I wouldn't remember
that as a kid, like smelling that waft of coffee
coming through my door, and I knew my dad was up.

Speaker 3 (01:17:30):
You know, my dad my mom were up because they
were they were brewing coffee. My grandmother was the.

Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
Same way my dad.

Speaker 11 (01:17:34):
He could drink a cup of coffee out of a
pot that had been sitting there for six hours and
slap it in the microwave and call it good.

Speaker 3 (01:17:41):
Dude. My grandfather was so hardcore. I would go to
his house and my grandfather is my dad's dad. It
was like a man's man. Dude could do anything.

Speaker 4 (01:17:48):
Self taught engineer guy was amazing, one of the most
interesting people I'd ever met my entire life.

Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
And I would go over and he would be drinking
coffee he made two days ago. Oh, and he would
you know what? He would you know what? He would
wash down with that two day old cold coffee tuna pizza.
Oh God, this story could not get anymore gross. He
threw it up like a baby bird to feed it

(01:18:15):
to his kids. Hey, pop, want to make out he
would wash I'm not kidding that he would wash.

Speaker 4 (01:18:22):
He would take a two day old cup coffee and
he would drink that and eat tuna pizza. He would
eat these totinos pizzas, and he would get a can
of tuna in oil, by the way, nothing water. He'd
sprinkle that tuna around on that Totina's pizza and then
cook it and eat it and wash it down with coffee. Oh,

(01:18:46):
I'm like, you're the realist man. I've ever met my
entire life, and that stuff would drop loggers to their knees.

Speaker 3 (01:18:53):
He just drew dinner for everyone, lessening the fine.

Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
We're not having pizza tonight.

Speaker 3 (01:18:59):
That's for oh man, smell that.

Speaker 4 (01:19:01):
I would smell that too. That that pizza cooking, I said,
that smells like a condor's nest.

Speaker 11 (01:19:08):
Grandparents though, Man, if they grew up anywhere near the depression,
You see your grandparents eat any kind of protein, and
you're like, I guess I wasn't raised during the Depression
because I Am not going to eat a chicken foot
like that.

Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
Dude.

Speaker 1 (01:19:21):
That is not going to happen.

Speaker 3 (01:19:22):
Dude.

Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
One of my best friends in high school, his sister
used to eat sardines out of the tin with her fingers.

Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
Now and she was cute, and I'm like, how do
you do that? I hear, that's like a super food.
Very good. Any fish, Yeah, except for galaa.

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
That oily fish.

Speaker 4 (01:19:40):
Farmeris dog no good, all farmeries fish tilape is kind
of a jumpfish.

Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
I would stick with the good stuff. Salmon stuff like
that's good, yeah, high fatty fishes, frozen sat it's in
my freezer. Yeah, that's fine, let me go. Doesn't sound
very processed at all?

Speaker 16 (01:19:58):
All right?

Speaker 4 (01:19:58):
Four oh seven one not they say wild, just means
they drink a lot four seven nine text us at
seven seven zero three one. A buddy of ours passed away.
We'll give him some time next here on the Gym
Cord Show.

Speaker 10 (01:20:14):
Speaking of coffee back in the eighty for me, it
was at commercial ultures commercial.

Speaker 3 (01:20:23):
The best pot of waking up as holders and you
want to come happened new year, Happy.

Speaker 18 (01:20:30):
New Year, buddy, y'all do know you don't have to
make a damn six cup pot of cough.

Speaker 5 (01:20:37):
You can make a one cup pot of coffee.

Speaker 3 (01:20:42):
Come on, you, guys, he ain't wrong.

Speaker 6 (01:20:46):
So I just got my account ledger from my daughter's
daycare for twenty twenty five. Does anyone want to take
a guess how much one year of daycare costs? I'll
pause for a moment.

Speaker 3 (01:20:56):
Eleven thousand dollars twelve I'm gonna say in between.

Speaker 6 (01:21:00):
Jack probably was closest, because he's always closest. When you guys,
guest numbers for one child for one year of daycare
eleven thousand and seven hundred and eighty dollars. No, not
eleven hundred, eleven thousand, but then.

Speaker 3 (01:21:16):
Again, it's twelve grand he's ad eleven and seven. To me,
that's twelve k. Yeah, yeah, I could hit listen to
his sext before I played it, so I knew exactly
how when you said eleven off for if, I'm like, damn,
here we go, Well that's a twelve she was closer.

Speaker 5 (01:21:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:21:33):
Yeah, that's bananas, man, that I don't. I don't.

Speaker 4 (01:21:36):
I don't know how people do it. I truthfully, when
I hear numbers like that. By the way, welcome back
to the Jim Colbert Show. I'm Jim Devin Jacker here
as well. I mean, I don't understand how families do it.

Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
I don't. I think that's like Tom Veay and you
know of Tom and Dayan, they hired someone to come
to their house. They have a living nanny. Yeah, and
I think that actually, you know, you get more out
of the deal.

Speaker 4 (01:22:00):
I don't know if she lives there anymore, but I
know when they were kids. I think up to his
kids like four or five years old, they literally had
to live in nanny h that lived in their house
and did all this stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
And took care of their kids.

Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
Makes sense.

Speaker 4 (01:22:11):
Yeah, and again, like Jack is saying, and like, and
I was when people came over to my wife's pipe
or my daughter's baby shower.

Speaker 3 (01:22:17):
This weekend, I was doing tours of the house.

Speaker 4 (01:22:19):
My house is kind of cool because it was built
in the fifties and it does have a help helper's bedroom.
So in a house like that, they didn't have kids.
They call them slave quarter. No it's not slave quarters,
but they had a servant. They had a place where
the servant lived. In other words, she had her own bedroom,
she had her own bathroom clause and everything like that.
But it was part of it's part of the kitchen,

(01:22:41):
which is now my studio. So we had two swinging
doors that leave the kitchen and go into the rest
of the house. And in my house, in the master bedroom,
the dining room, and the living room, there is a
service bell and you ring it, and in the bed
in the kitchen a bell would ring and that would
tell the service that they needed to come out to
find out what people who lived in the house needed.
And that's the only time they were invited in the

(01:23:01):
main part of.

Speaker 5 (01:23:02):
The house to do work. That was it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:04):
Oh, I'm sure, so it's not that uncommon to have that.

Speaker 4 (01:23:07):
And from what I understand how they paid is they
did make money, for sure, but it was way less
because they were being provided food, shelter, a place to
live a nice place to live, and all the accompaniments
are accoutrements of having their own home. Without having the
payments of their home. They actually made it, and I
think that's kind of what they did with her. They
did pay her, but I think, you know, part of

(01:23:28):
her pay was also the place to live and things
of that nature.

Speaker 3 (01:23:31):
But I don't know how. I don't know how families
do it. He said, that's one kid, So you're telling
me it's twenty basically twenty three thousand dollars if you
need to put two kids into daycare for a year,
So that means one of the parents is working primarily
to pay for daycare. Correct. So if you make fifty
k a year, you're bringing home like what forty one? Eh, yeah, maybe.

Speaker 4 (01:23:51):
Thirty nine forty something like that probably, So you're working
all year to make sixteen thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:23:58):
That's food, that's rent, that's car in turns all of
it sixteen K. I do not know how people do it.

Speaker 4 (01:24:04):
I do not know how single mothers make it through life,
especially if they have a deadbeat dad or a deadbeat
ex husband who doesn't really pay or pay their share.

Speaker 3 (01:24:12):
I simply don't know how they do it.

Speaker 4 (01:24:15):
I mean I read the standard of living now now
it says like a household of two people have to
earn like what one hundred and ten. Yeah, well to
have it, to have a to have a normal life.
That's not even like that's not blowing it out. Like
back in the day you heard one hundred k. Man,
those people were like, you know, you have your own
plane and stuff like that. Right if you heard one
hundred thousand dollars, that was the magic number. Now it

(01:24:35):
just doesn't hit like that, especially in this state where
it's very expensive to live.

Speaker 3 (01:24:39):
Babysitters so Texas says, yep, twelve grand yearly nannies are more.
The price of his sitter is at least twenty dollars
an hour. Yeah, I would think that's minimum. Matter of fact,
I asked a raise coming today. Ray triently he'll be
in it today at six twenty like he always does.
And I told Ray, Ray did us a big favor
over the holiday. We had a situation where to take

(01:25:00):
care of and Ray was nice time to take care
of it for us. I told him today, I said,
we want to take out to dinner somewhere nice and
blah blah blah blah blah, and he goes, all right,
let me know in advance, so I could find a babysitter.

Speaker 4 (01:25:08):
And I was like, I can't imagine. It's gotta be
twenty twenty five dollars an hour. And if you have
that's perk? Is that perk kid?

Speaker 3 (01:25:14):
By the way, Yeah, so like if you have three
he has three kids.

Speaker 4 (01:25:17):
So if he has three kids and you hire one babysitter,
does a babysitter watching three children make more than a
babysitter only watching one, I don't think so. Yeah, I
don't think so either, though, right, feel a little more.
It's not twenty ahead, No, definitely not twenty ahead. It
shouldn't cost to three hundred dollars go out for the night, right.
The rule of thumb is you have to spend more
on his dinner than he spends on the babysitter.

Speaker 3 (01:25:39):
Oh yeah, yeah, that'd be fine.

Speaker 10 (01:25:40):
I can do that.

Speaker 3 (01:25:42):
I just may pay for his babysitter.

Speaker 4 (01:25:46):
The meal would be cheaper, and let's get a pizza.
And by the way, I couldn't imagine trying to find
a babysitter right now. You know, my daughter was certified
as a babysitter because you can go through this class.

Speaker 1 (01:25:55):
I did that at the Red Cross.

Speaker 16 (01:25:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
I think she did it at R and she did
it at the Y I believe.

Speaker 5 (01:26:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:26:00):
Yeah, I would take my certificate around the neighborhood and
knock on doors. If you're looking for a babysitter, I'm certified.
You know, that's infant CPR.

Speaker 3 (01:26:08):
Good for you.

Speaker 1 (01:26:09):
It was marketing before marketing was marketing.

Speaker 3 (01:26:11):
Did you get any jobs that way?

Speaker 5 (01:26:13):
I did?

Speaker 11 (01:26:14):
What was interesting is that the one time something happened,
thank god, the child's father was home. This was still
back in the day when you cut up hot dogs.

Speaker 5 (01:26:21):
Yeah oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:26:24):
Yeah, but uh, cold calling babysitting doesn't seem like a
prosperous business.

Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Well I'm in this way.

Speaker 3 (01:26:28):
Hey, can I watch your most precious thing.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
I know we haven't met thirty years ago.

Speaker 11 (01:26:32):
And you know, if you weren't mowing someone's grass or
delivering the newspaper, you were a babysitting.

Speaker 3 (01:26:38):
I don't know that I could trust anybody to babysit
my kid right now, Like if I had a child.
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:26:43):
I don't know outside of some family members and stuff,
I wouldn't would I here's how I would look at it.
I wouldn't want to put the onus of keeping keeping
something like that precious protected, because if something happened, I
would never be able to forgive you, even if it
wasn't your fault, I would never be able to forgive you.

Speaker 6 (01:27:00):
Right.

Speaker 4 (01:27:00):
So no, I'm just saying I think that's how would
have to I would have to look at it. Do
you remember how you here? Did you have a babysitter?

Speaker 3 (01:27:05):
We did? Did you have somebody who used all the time?

Speaker 19 (01:27:08):
We did?

Speaker 3 (01:27:09):
Did you we had? We got lucky? We had when
I lived in Melbourne, we had a lovely woman. And
I think it was like five dollars an hour back then.

Speaker 1 (01:27:16):
That's what I used to make.

Speaker 3 (01:27:17):
Yeah, yeah, we were talking, you know, ninety late ninety Yeah, wait,
when did we move?

Speaker 5 (01:27:24):
Late nineties?

Speaker 3 (01:27:24):
It had to be the late nineties if I was
living over there.

Speaker 4 (01:27:27):
Yeah, all right, four O seven nine six four one
text seven seven zero three one.

Speaker 3 (01:27:31):
Well, uh.

Speaker 4 (01:27:31):
Forecasters are saying, this is a scene in story. It
says to bite despite Venezuela. Forecasters say that twenty twenty
six will be the cheapest year of gas since COVID,
and I wonder how many people that will help out.
Like you know, when you talk about like what's expensive now,
we just got to talking about beef being really expensive.

Speaker 3 (01:27:48):
But that's easy. Just eat chicken or port right, it's
very accessible.

Speaker 4 (01:27:51):
They just actually said when we were talking about the
beef prices that chicken is really inexpensive right now, lead
quarters and dark meat they're almost giving away like less
than a dollar. So you can still get protein in
your diet. You don't have to eat beef, right, but
you have to drive right, you have to go to
where you're going. I would think gas prices would be
one of the number one ways that you could reduce

(01:28:12):
your monthly output, especially if you use your car for
you know, for your business or if you commute a
long way. But gas is not gonna affect you jack
it does. I pay for gas, I know. But what
I'm saying, I just get better gas. But you have
a hybrid and you live kind of around the corner.
You only live like a few miles away, Devin, I
live twenty seven miles away, right, So gas prices for

(01:28:33):
us will make a bit of a difference. Sure, yeah,
because you're I'm burning like a tank and a half
or two tanks a week.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
How about you at least a tank a week?

Speaker 3 (01:28:40):
Yeah, tank a week.

Speaker 4 (01:28:41):
So, and you know you're talking about the prices going down,
like we're paying really cheap right now, right exactly, like
I paid two seventy nine I think the other day
for gas.

Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
I couldn't believe it. I thought it was a misprint.

Speaker 4 (01:28:50):
But it looks like they're expecting the national average national
which is a big deal. By the way, national average
of gas would be below three dollars the entire year
of twenty twenty six, which is a big deal. But
that means for certain states it'll be really cheap, like
really cheap. The states it's already cheap in now, which
like george is dirt cheap.

Speaker 3 (01:29:08):
Yeah, I've always noticed that, Like driving up you always
see that price drop as soon as you get in Georgia. Yeah,
Georgia is dirt cheap. It says it's less state taxes
there or what.

Speaker 4 (01:29:18):
Yeah, I don't know if it's always the tax thing
that causes it to go up, right, That's why California
is so much and your proximity to the port as well. Yeah,
but I mean, but we hear that, know we have
like is Galveston, Like is Texas gas high? Because I
know a lot of it comes in there. It says Alabama.
It says ten states or forecast to enjoy yearly average
prices of less than two seventy five a gallon. Wow, Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma,

(01:29:43):
South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. And at least three of
those are as far away from ports as you could
possibly get. Kansas, Oklahoma, and Missouri are nowhere near a port.
So I think it's just their state taxes is really
what drives that up?

Speaker 11 (01:29:57):
Well, the bummer is that gas prices maybe going down.
It'd be nice if the grocery prices.

Speaker 1 (01:30:02):
Could meet that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, because that would really help.

Speaker 4 (01:30:05):
But I mean, but do you think you could still
shop in places like your aldise and your discount stores
and still get good deals on groceries? Is it just
certain stores? Is everywhere expensive like that?

Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
I think Green is the most expensive.

Speaker 4 (01:30:19):
Yeah, yeah, for sure, it's the most expensive, right, But
I do believe you could go to places like Bravo
and Aldi and still find deals on food if you
bulk chop. I mean Jack does that all the time
and it's just just him and Naomi well and his daughter. Yeah,
I think we're gonna start doing that a little bit.

Speaker 3 (01:30:34):
Man. I gotta tell you, Hello Fresh is kind of
expensive now, it is.

Speaker 4 (01:30:39):
It's expensive. Yeah, I didn't realize that until, you know.
I was talking to my wife about it. I was like, uh,
I'm like, that's expensive. But if you meal prep, it's cheap.
And that's what people are starting to do.

Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
Basically, that's what you're paying right with Hello Fresh, you're
paying for someone else to meal prep for you.

Speaker 4 (01:30:54):
You're exactly doing it and package it and tell you
how to make it. Yeah, Like I've I've made these
meals so much. I don't even need the instruction sheets anymore.
I just kind of know when it says what it is.
I've made them so often. And that's the one problem
with with meal services like that is you have the
same thing over and over again.

Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
Don't you save the cards? And then it's like, Okay,
just go to the store and by the ingredients and
make it. Probably should do that. We do not save
the cards. Oh, I've done that. Oh I saved all
of them, do you really? Oh yeah, I've made like
cow zoldes and other things. Now, the funny thing is,
it's funny cowzodes. It is something I used to know
how to make, right when I worked at a pizza joint.
And you can go online and see all the You
can actually go to HelloFresh. They have all of the

(01:31:32):
recipes right there online, so you don't even have to
have the cards because I've done that.

Speaker 4 (01:31:35):
They've shipped, They've shipped the meals before without cards, and
you just go online and find it. So theoretically you
could go to HelloFresh dot com and just jack every
single recipe they have. And if you have some of
the stuff in there, a lot of couscous, a lot
of rice.

Speaker 3 (01:31:48):
That's why I think that what you said, like right
before the week before we left, is that the book
most threatened by artificial intelligence is the cookbook.

Speaker 4 (01:31:55):
Yeah it is, yeah, yeah, one of the And that
was a really interesting story because what they're saying, you know,
do you write a cookbook and when you ask AI,
you know, hey, what can I make with this in
my fridge? You know that thing is not just making
that up. It's scouring information that that's already stands, So
it's jacking other cook's recipes to provide a recipe for
you based on what it has. And the other thing

(01:32:16):
they hate about it is it's bastardizing their recipes. So
people now think, well, this is pulled from so and so,
Well this got it, not a cook not realizing that
it's just kind of mixing all everything together and not
giving you precise measurements on anything. It's just spitting something out.

Speaker 3 (01:32:31):
So you have.

Speaker 5 (01:32:33):
Yay AI.

Speaker 4 (01:32:34):
Yeah, yeah, there's a weird blowback about that. Matter of fact,
James Cameron, we have a story about that coming up
here in a few minutes. James Cameron, the famous director,
had a really unique statement on AI, which is in
a weird spot right now. And I got to tell you,
financially for the country, it's kind of bizarre considering how
much money is being poured into these data centers. Oh buddy,
our economies and then upheld by it. And now well

(01:32:56):
it's not quite there yet, but I mean that's where
they want to move. But the thing is like they're
looking at AI. Now what I'm reading is like possibly
another dot com bubble. Type thing, like they know that
it's valuable, but they don't know how yet. But they're
building data centers almost almost like we have to build
it before somebody else builds it, almost like we don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:33:17):
What it's going to do.

Speaker 4 (01:33:18):
We don't know how we're going to use it. You
know we need it, but we know we need it,
and those things require so much power. Now they're talking
about building small nuclear plants that we've talked about before
that we thought the nuclear programs were going to go
more local anyway, that they're going to build these small
kind of boutique reactors just to cover certain neighborhoods or
areas like cities, rather than states or conglomerates of states.

Speaker 3 (01:33:38):
It's going to overtax the system. And this is one
of the reasons why our power bills are going to
go up to feel to feed the growing need for
electricity for data centers as well as I mean, you
talk about you always talk about trades. They're saying there's
going to be a shortage of electricians based on the
power needs of the future, and they say that it's

(01:34:00):
a great field to get into. Yeah, if you are
a young person looking to learn a trade, absolutely. And
these data centers are you know, and again these are gambles.
I mean they're gambling. They don't know, they don't know
how this is actually going to be applied. But when
you look at who's doing the gambling, it's the top
five businesses in the world with the most cash.

Speaker 4 (01:34:22):
But we saw that with the Internet, we saw that
with the bubble, and we saw that a lot of major,
major names did not come through that. So it's not
beyond the realm that some of these companies could fail
and it could really go belly up, which would be
very bad for the country if that happened. And again,
this power, this power supply thing, they're talking about power
requirements they've never even heard of, like entire city levels

(01:34:43):
of power to run these data centers, multiple of those
data centers.

Speaker 3 (01:34:48):
This is going to create rising prices for everyday American. Yeah,
it will.

Speaker 4 (01:34:53):
And let's say figure out that power situation. Jack's right,
they'll have to pull that power from the grid. By
the way, the grids can even produce that kind of
power and provide power the neighborhoods doing they can't.

Speaker 3 (01:35:01):
They can't do both.

Speaker 4 (01:35:02):
So they're having to upgrade all the power systems, which
is another great expense. But the James Cameron story was
interesting because he said the reason they'll never be able
to regulate AI.

Speaker 3 (01:35:11):
I'll tell you next Oh.

Speaker 5 (01:35:20):
Show, Welcome back, guys. I am so glad I have
something to watch onto you tube. Yeah, thank you for
doing your thing. It makes my day every day.

Speaker 1 (01:35:35):
Happy New Year, Happy New Year, buddy, Happy New Year.

Speaker 4 (01:35:39):
Welcome back to the Jim Cobra Show, Real Radio one
O four point one. If you want to send a
talk back, you could do it.

Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
Let us know how you're feeling. Wish just happy new Year.
We'll do the same to you.

Speaker 4 (01:35:47):
Just get the iHeartRadio app, good a real Radio and
use that Mike to send your comment over to Jack
and I'm Jim.

Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
There's Den. Hello, Jack is here as well. Yeah, good evening.
All right, we're talking.

Speaker 4 (01:35:55):
About AI and James Cameron. Interesting story, but real quick,
before we get into that. I promised I would say
something and I did not. Jeck reminded me I didn't
pay off the Adam the WU story. So there's a
guy I met years ago. Actually I was still with
the Monsters at the time, and that's when the onset
of YouTube and content creators really kind of began. I

(01:36:17):
believe that he was one of the first name content
creators out of Orlando that I remember. Yeah, he I
think started his first channel in nine and then his
second one in twenty twelve, right, and I met him,
I believe on that second channel. And the reason why
I met him is I read online that he had
been banned from Disney property, and I was very intrigued

(01:36:39):
of how somebody could be banned from Disney property that
didn't do anything like malicious you know, there's a fight started,
didn't try to smoke weed in the Haunted House, you know,
nothing stupid like that.

Speaker 3 (01:36:50):
Sprinkle someone's ashes, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, none of that.

Speaker 4 (01:36:54):
But what he did do is, you know, part of
his thing is Adam the Wu is he would travel
around the US and go to old filming sites. He
would go to theme parks and go to certain parts
of theme parks and tell you stories about either how
it was built, why it was built. He would find
the hidden mickeys, and he just did all this kind
of counterculture kind of stuff that was very very interesting

(01:37:14):
because nobody else was doing it. Yeah, and especially in
Orlando because there's so many adult you know, Disney adults here,
they loved it. He became very popular or very quick.
But how he got in trouble was is back in
the day, there used to be a thing called River
Country at Disney World. It was like a campground that
had a water park that was on a lake, and
the lake was part of the park. You could go canoeing,

(01:37:37):
and you could do ziplining and then swimming in the
whole nine yards and there was a water flume. And
then somebody got sick from one of the amibas and died.
I think actually a couple of people did. They got
the amiba from that lake, and they shut that thing down.
He broke into it.

Speaker 1 (01:37:52):
That'll get your banned.

Speaker 3 (01:37:54):
Did a bunch of.

Speaker 4 (01:37:54):
Pictures showed the old and again on Disney property. Something
that is decrepit. That is something I mean, you won't
find a rapper like a gum wrapper on the.

Speaker 3 (01:38:03):
Ground at Disney. You will not do that. I mean,
deb you know you work there, you understand, Oh yeah,
you won't find any of that.

Speaker 5 (01:38:09):
They're uber.

Speaker 4 (01:38:12):
Militant about their image and everybody knows that. So when
he went behind the scenes kind of exposed the fact
that Disney still had kind of a rotting corpse of
part of their theme part back there. They did not
care for that, and they banned his ass like for good.

Speaker 3 (01:38:26):
Now.

Speaker 4 (01:38:26):
He did wind up getting unbanned and was allowed to
go back in. I think he had to write him
a letter in a formal apology and some other things.

Speaker 3 (01:38:33):
I'm so sorry.

Speaker 4 (01:38:34):
But one of the things that he did that I
love so much, outside of the Disney stuff, he would
go to old filming sites for like for movies very
popular moves, Back to the Future and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (01:38:43):
Yeah, you've recommended several of his some of his stuff
with a vacation.

Speaker 4 (01:38:50):
Yeah, so, I mean it's real. He had a fascinating channel. Well,
obviously we're talking about him for a reason. He passed
away at the age of fifty one years old over
the Christmas break and just read today that he had
an embolism that moved into his lung blood clot and
it wound up killing him.

Speaker 3 (01:39:05):
And I guess his dad found him.

Speaker 4 (01:39:07):
And actually Kevin Triplett was the first one to let
me know, because Kevin was a big fan as well.
He texted me that morning and said, you know, Adam,
the Wu has passed away, confirmed by his.

Speaker 3 (01:39:15):
Father, and it was a big loss. It was kind
of wild.

Speaker 4 (01:39:18):
I was telling Jack today, it was kind of wild
because I didn't know that many people were kind of
into him. But man, I saw a great outpouring on
social for Adam, and I thought that was kind of
cool because he was a really sweet dude with a
really unique idea and pulled it off.

Speaker 3 (01:39:32):
He lived his dream.

Speaker 4 (01:39:33):
He lived in a van for a while, just traveling
around the nation doing cool video content.

Speaker 11 (01:39:38):
That's what he did, and he was one of the
first to do a lot of other content creators, you know,
gave him credit for, you know, helping them launch their
own chounce.

Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
Yeah. So a rest in peace, Adam the WU You're
a good man, and that we wish you the best
in your family the best.

Speaker 5 (01:39:51):
All right.

Speaker 4 (01:39:52):
So we're talking about James Cameron an AI last segment,
and this is kind of an interesting statement. He said
that AI will never be regulated, and that's obviously one
of the big things. I mean, Internet still, uh, you know,
creates that same argument how you regulate the Internet? Right, Well,
he set up for a unique reason. He said the
Internet will never be regulated, or AI will never be regulated,

(01:40:14):
because there isn't a common moral statute for the world.
So it will never be it'll never be regulated because
something that we would consider you know, hey, that regulation
is good. You know another culture or country would say no, no, no, no,
that's not good. You got to you gotta keep that
available and that and that. That kind of math problem

(01:40:35):
goes on and on, you know, from culture to culture.
And I found that to be a very interesting argument.
The story is actually fascinating.

Speaker 3 (01:40:41):
It's one of the reasons, well, on a smaller level,
our federal government didn't want states passing their own regulation
where it would be, oh, in Florida, we can do this,
and then California, we have to have these restrictions and
so and so because it's you know, when you find
but we do that now though you can have that,

(01:41:03):
it just makes it a lot more complicated. Sure, but
we're just having a blanket system.

Speaker 4 (01:41:08):
Yeah, they do that now with adult content. I mean
there's some states or you can still get it in
some states. You can't get it here, can't get it
in Texas without that driver's licensing, but there are other
states that do not adhere to that. So they do
have some By the way, you're right, Ron Decandans today
made a statement on AI regulation says, hey, you can't
make us do that, or we can do whatever we want.
You can't tell us what we can and can't regulate

(01:41:29):
in our state.

Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
But if so, if you can't use AI to create
certain malware or revenge porn or stuff in one location,
if you can do it in another location, then that
cat is out of the bag, right right. So I
think that's what he was talking about is you won't
be able to James Cameron saying you won't be able

(01:41:51):
to get a world to agree on where the line
should be between right and wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:41:56):
But I do believe that the world could agree that
you taking a child's photograph and turning that into active
child sex content is bad. I don't know that one
culture it could come up and go, you know, we're.

Speaker 3 (01:42:07):
Fine with that, yeh. Yeah. I think there are basic
tenants that you could get agreement on.

Speaker 11 (01:42:12):
Yeah, And that's where I don't think it would be
a moral tenant that the world agrees to. I would
break it down to AI companies well, because it's just
like the social media platforms. They'll squawk that they're looking
after children, but it takes lawsuits and exposing it to
find out that they're really dragging their feet on it.
So I would say it's more of an issue for

(01:42:34):
the capitalism behind AI than governments coming together on it.

Speaker 4 (01:42:38):
You may be right, though, but I do believe culturally,
if like in a country like the US, where you
can openly mock and comment on your political leaders with
no recourse theoretically but no recourse, other countries you cannot
do that. I mean, I'm guessing you probably can't take
a picture of the King of Saudi Arabia and turn
them into some kind of donkey or something like that, because.

Speaker 5 (01:42:58):
They'll probably get your thrown in prison and putin.

Speaker 4 (01:43:02):
In North Korea and China, So you know, for us
being able to make fun of our political leaders as
part of our culture and has been for many many years,
those places you can't do that. I think that's kind
of what he's talking about a little bit. There are
so many different cultural norms based on leadership in different
countries that it'd be hard to tell the US that
they're cool with it, and then the rest of the
countries they can't. But I think you're right that Jack

(01:43:24):
is right. It'd be up to that government to regulate
that particular thing. There can't be a global okay for
any content regulation I believe.

Speaker 11 (01:43:33):
I mean China does it with their social media. You
know their kids aren't on TikTok.

Speaker 1 (01:43:37):
There is no I don't think you can get it there, right, No,
not TikTok. They have their own version of it.

Speaker 3 (01:43:41):
Right yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:43:42):
Yeah, but you don't see Western content there no, no, no, no.
In North Korea or Russia or any of that stuff either,
you don't get to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:43:49):
It's like in Australia where they just recently passed their
social media band as kids under sixteen. Those are specific
you know, pro grams and access points. AI is integrated
into everything, yes, yeah, right, so ever, whatever search engine

(01:44:10):
you're using, it's everywhere and every company is using it
to some form or fashion. So I think it's a
little uh, it's not as clean to be able to
say you can do this and you can't do that.
Where's the most marketable part of AI?

Speaker 4 (01:44:25):
The thing the thing that's interesting in what I saw
this weekend or while we're on the break is is
you know, there is a lot of fervor around AI
and it's earning potential, but has anybody actually captured that yet?

Speaker 10 (01:44:40):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (01:44:41):
Like, how are they going to monetize this outside of
automation and companies to save money with employees? What is
the actual product? Like with the Internet, you can say,
well the Internet, I can go to this website they
have they have ads on the website, you create content.
Or I can go to a website, I subscribe and
I create revenue in that manner. How does AI create
revenue outside of using it to replace employees or automated

(01:45:04):
system that's already existing again to redo some employees.

Speaker 3 (01:45:07):
How how do they monetize it? I think it's it's
sold to all different you know, software developers, right, so
it could be your Microsoft Office suite being able to
do certain things in that. So Microsoft is obviously you know,
going to use it and also developing. But I think
they're in partner with chat GPT. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:45:28):
But if everybody has it, where's the value? Like, if
you can do the same thing that deb can, because
you have the same supermachine that deb has, where's the
value in it? The value is in really in you.
It's not in the supermachine. It's in what you ask
the supermachine. Yeah, yeah, the prompt, Yeah, the prompt. I
mean we talked about prompt engineers a while ago. But
how many of those are you gonna need?

Speaker 5 (01:45:46):
I mean you're not.

Speaker 3 (01:45:46):
I mean I don't know. But what I'm saying is like,
where's the value in AI? Where what are you charging?

Speaker 5 (01:45:51):
Right now?

Speaker 4 (01:45:51):
We do everything for free with it, just like with
the Internet. You log on your free, if you want
certain content, you pay for it. Do a degreat Yeah,
well I money off this? Well, I mean, what's for
all these billion dollar data sentittors?

Speaker 3 (01:46:01):
Yeah? No, but if you if you want to use
CHET GPT more regularly or you know, after a certain amount,
there's a limit to what they can do, right sure?
How many? How many pictures you can have generated? Right? Yeah?
And then you have to pay and they have different
tiers of that, whether it's twenty dollars a month, thirty
dollars a month.

Speaker 4 (01:46:20):
But aren't they going to run into the same issue
that Netflix runs into where they're like, well, we have
to do something else because the subscription stuff isn't gonna
make enough money to cover the studio cost of making
all this content that we're producing. You have to have
more ways to make money. And if you I don't
see it, I've looked, I don't understand how they're gonna
make money with this, other than like you were saying,

(01:46:40):
even if they license it, how many people are gonna
pay Let's say they have to jack it up it's
one thousand dollars a year to use chat GBT, how
many how many people are gonna use it?

Speaker 3 (01:46:48):
Then? I mean, I don't know what the subscription fee
can they maintain with a subscription fee only considering how
many people have a have a have an AI machine
like Gemini, Google's has one, We have one. You know,
it's gonna it's it's going to be software in programs
like the Defense Department. They're you know, they'll generate you know,

(01:47:09):
programs that will you know, make us a safer country. Yeah,
medicine is another one, but so who's pay Pharmaceutical companies
they'll be using it, right, so they'll probably have their own,
you know, special versions of it that we don't have
access to.

Speaker 4 (01:47:25):
But the the interesting thing to me is with subscription
based revenue models, it requires lots of people buying the subscription.
And even then Netflix and companies like that that are
gigantic companies by the way, I mean big enough to
buy Paramount, you know, big big companies. If they don't
have the subscriptions to create the revenue, they have to

(01:47:45):
find other spaces. That's why they've dived in our uh
in the wrestling, they're into sports anything. They're trying to
get licenses to be able to produce a content. For
these companies because they have no The subscription thing isn't tenable, right,
It's not going to it's not going to cover the
extending cost of running the company.

Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
You can't continually.

Speaker 4 (01:48:03):
It can't be nineteen ninety nine one week and then
thirty one ninety nine the next week, and then sixty
bucks at the end of the year because their costs
are going up. Eventually people will go, well, I'm not
gonna watch it.

Speaker 3 (01:48:12):
Then two things. One I think you touched on it
earlier is like, we don't know, we don't know where
the return is coming from. We're all we just know, Oh,
this is gonna be We believe this is the future.
We need to run in this direction. Even Bill Gates
said it's one of the greatest technological developments he's ever seen.
It's crazy, right, I mean, there's no question it's crazy.

(01:48:34):
But also I think what we have now with the
free stuff we get to use. It's kind of like
the dealer giving you a little for free, Yeah, and
you kind of get addicted. Oh you see what you
got here? And now oh okay, yeah, I'll pay for that.
And then oh, do you want to be able to
do this? And as it develops and these models get
more robust and just better at what they're able to do,

(01:48:56):
they'll be able to charge more.

Speaker 23 (01:48:58):
Is it like that?

Speaker 3 (01:48:58):
And you'll have companies. See with Netflix, you don't have
companies spending hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars to
use your product, right, right? So I think there's a
you know, whether it's in the medical field, you know,
of pharmaceuticals, in just defense, I think that money is
going to fuel.

Speaker 4 (01:49:18):
But that's interesting because other than the product passed down,
how would that affect the consumer? Like, I mean, so
this is not a consumer based product, then, I mean
the revenue model isn't because of consumer.

Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
Based product, right, A portion of it can be. It's
in everything based product.

Speaker 1 (01:49:34):
Defense, That's what it is.

Speaker 3 (01:49:35):
It's anything computers are used for and maybe some things
now that computers aren't even used for.

Speaker 4 (01:49:42):
Yeah, okay, so let me ask, so do do they
regulate the ability of the machine based on your fee.
In other words, like, let's say there is an AI
out there, and I'll just use chat GPT because it's
the one everybody knows. And a pharmaceutical company says, we
want to use this AI to expedite the clearance of
this particular drug. You know, it takes us five years

(01:50:03):
and about a billion dollars get this thing to market.
But with AI, we think we can do it in
two years because of the way that we complete the studies,
the way that they can compile information. Right, And let's
say they use chet GBT, they just pay the thirty
dollars a month or what whatever do you pay for
the what do you pay for the company version? Twenty
twenty dollars a month. So the pharmaceutical company takes a
twenty dollars a month product and creates a medicine that

(01:50:27):
are you know or okays of medicine that makes tens
of billions of dollars over its lifetime. So chat GBT
gets twenty dollars and the pharmaceutical company gets information that
changes their revenue base completely. I mean, that's what I'm saying,
is is it based on how much the company makes
off the information given by it.

Speaker 3 (01:50:44):
Oh, I don't think so, because also there's no guarantee
on the information that it's accurate, right, Yeah, between the
hallucinations and so it's kind of you know, buyer, beware
of what you're using it for. But maybe they're paying.
Maybe there is another level that we don't have access to. Yeah, exactly,

(01:51:05):
that is, you know, a little more advanced. Yeah, and
it is still developing. It's changed, It changed greatly just
over the past year. Sure, yeah, it's gonna Oh it's
in its infancy, no question, but it keeps changing exponentially,
which is part of the scary aspect too. Right, But
how much how smart can it be? I mean how
much can it be?

Speaker 4 (01:51:24):
I mean there's only so much knowledge, right, I mean,
it's going to create more based on the information we've
given it because I mean all the information is it's
all plagiarized information, absolutely, Yeah, every bit of it. That's
gonna be an interesting aspect as well. I mean if
these are already happening, these these copyright lawsuits and plagiarism
lawsuits are already beginning. Yeah, and just this cookbook when
we were talking about, is already happening, and it's going

(01:51:47):
to go over and over, So it's gonna be interesting.
This is the fate of this is going to winde
up in courts, I believe, because it can't just take
your proprietary information and use it for the public without
a fee.

Speaker 3 (01:52:00):
Unless it can, unless it can, right, and there have
to be fines for that. There has to be some
type of.

Speaker 4 (01:52:07):
You can't just do that, Like I can't go to
a book, and I can't go to a book pull
an excerpt from a book and put it in my
college paper.

Speaker 3 (01:52:14):
What if it is deemed No, you can't. But what
if it is deemed that, Well, if they had to
pay copyrights on all the information, it would bankrupt the companies.
And that's too much ingrained into our current economy. And
so for the sake of the country that they're going
to deny any copyright claims. Yeah, because they can't do that,

(01:52:36):
it's too Yeah. Yeah, well I mean they can, but
come on, man, I mean, that's that's we just take
over a country for oil. And it's not the first
time we've done it. We've done it like seventy two
you give what's that statue gave you earlier? Sixty, which
one about presidents who oh yeah, Because the first thing
I did when I saw this invasion, I'm like, how
many times does this happen?

Speaker 4 (01:52:56):
You just start laughing when you Wikipedia. I mean Jimmy
Carter did it. I mean Grenada, Panama. We could go
on and on, back to.

Speaker 3 (01:53:05):
Herbert Hoover.

Speaker 4 (01:53:06):
I mean, they've been doing this for eons, invading other
countries to get US's best interest in that country because
of a resource or whatever. Been doing it in a while.
Somebody said today it was They're like, no, it's not
all about oil. It's about natural resources.

Speaker 5 (01:53:21):
Let me tell you.

Speaker 3 (01:53:22):
Wait, I got exactly. I got very bad news for you.
That's all about oil.

Speaker 4 (01:53:28):
It's never it was never about drugs. I wonder how
many drug boats are gonna get blown up.

Speaker 3 (01:53:31):
Now, it's like say, hitting the Civil war. Oh, it's
about state tris. Yes, state trikes, half slavery. That's an
instant interesting aside. Yeah, like I said, the very first
boat strike, this is about oil. It was always about oil.
September second, when I walked in there, I said, this
is about oil. Talking to Ross today, he's like, and
Jimmy said it as soon as that that that boat
that he said, it's oil. I walked in there.

Speaker 4 (01:53:51):
I said that boat, that thing was still burning and
I was in I was in that office, going we're
about to actually a drive by. I pushed it oor open.
I said, uh, will invade Venezuela for they're oil. Yeah,
they're gonna say it's drugs. Venezuela doesn't produce drugs. It's
a trafficking route for drugs and mostly to Europe, not
even America. So it's got nothing to do with drugs,
not even a little bit. Drugs hasn't been mentioned in

(01:54:12):
the last three.

Speaker 3 (01:54:13):
Days with this situation with Venezuela, not even a little bit.

Speaker 4 (01:54:16):
But you know, I'm happy for the Venezuelan people because
they are rid of a despot and they they deserve freedom,
that's for sure.

Speaker 3 (01:54:23):
And if you were living under that and you know,
and someone just gave him, plucked that person out of there,
you're thankful. Oh you don't care that You're saying the
ends justify the means exactly. But on the other side
of it, you have to say, did the end we
will find out.

Speaker 4 (01:54:41):
The thing that scares me about it is this, and
this is when you look at this administration even through
its twenty sixteen administration. They they like the shock and
all of the event. Where's the plan? What happens now?
Where's the plan? Because as of right now, nobody in
the administration has really said what the the plan is.

Speaker 3 (01:55:00):
They said, well, we're gonna run it.

Speaker 5 (01:55:01):
What's that mean?

Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
Are we gonna have boots on the ground in Venezuela.
Are we gonna occupy that country now so that they
don't have another regime pop up that we're there to
quell that?

Speaker 3 (01:55:10):
How long are we.

Speaker 4 (01:55:10):
Gonna stay there? Are we gonna be in Venezuela for
a decade?

Speaker 3 (01:55:15):
I don't know. Let's check with the oil company. Yeah,
the feeling they know.

Speaker 4 (01:55:18):
Yeah, I heard they knew before I heard they knew
in Congress, didn't I heard that today that the oil
company executives and by the way, Mark Rubio said today
they didn't share this with Congress to make sure that
the operation wasn't compromised.

Speaker 3 (01:55:32):
Compromised.

Speaker 4 (01:55:33):
But Trump himself said on Air Force One, when asked,
he said he told the oil company executives.

Speaker 3 (01:55:38):
They were going in, but did not tell Congress.

Speaker 4 (01:55:41):
All right, four O seven nine one six one four
one text us seven seven zero three one, load them up.

Speaker 3 (01:55:46):
Trivia's next.

Speaker 23 (01:55:58):
Yeah, if you might not want to play this until
after the segment that you guys are doing. But Jim
is hinted that you're gonna talk about somebody who passed away,
and I'm just assuming it's Adam thea Wou. I never
met him, but I watched hundreds of his videos. My
wife and I loved his videos. We loved him, and
ever since I found out on December twenty second order
whenever it was, I've just been in a funk about it.

(01:56:19):
The most amazing thing is everybody who has posted about
it that did know him. They all said I lost
my best friend, which means he must have just treated those.

Speaker 5 (01:56:26):
People so amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:56:28):
He's a great guy.

Speaker 5 (01:56:29):
Man. Hey, everybody, I'm willing.

Speaker 2 (01:56:31):
I hope you all enjoyed your break, deserve it, and
I hope you're all rested up because now it is.

Speaker 5 (01:56:38):
Time to kick twenty twenty six as ass. Okay, I
love you goodbye.

Speaker 8 (01:56:47):
You know, if every deep agin boozoduball welcome back and
hippy news, I obviously might still be.

Speaker 3 (01:56:59):
Drunk from New Years, but then you no New Year,
New me.

Speaker 8 (01:57:05):
I'll just get drunker, probably anyways, glad to hear you
back live.

Speaker 3 (01:57:10):
I have a good thank you, buddy, appreciate that. Was
hoping to see him a New Year's I thought we
would right there.

Speaker 1 (01:57:18):
He could probably drive.

Speaker 3 (01:57:19):
Yeah, yeah, you get right. All right, Welcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show. I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (01:57:23):
There's Deb Hello. Jackets here as well, and he has
the Jackie Sack. My friend, what is inside all aboard?

Speaker 1 (01:57:29):
Chug a chugu Look at it, glack, look at it glack.

Speaker 3 (01:57:33):
This week, Oh boy, this is a great thing about Mondays.
I get to open it up for the first time
to see what we have, and I am staring at
not only a four pack of tickets, okay, but they
also include pit passes to Monster Jam on Today's World
January tenth. That's this Saturday. Oh my god, I know, right, yeah, unbelievable, unbelievable.

(01:57:58):
And right after that it's Deepsburg Day. So awesome trucks.
Not at Deb's birthday, but at Monster Jam. Well maybe both.
Amazing stunts definitely at both, and big Air action also
Big Air Pact excitement. It's fun for everyone. Get tickets
now at ticketmaster dot com to Monster Jam, not Deb's birthday, however,

(01:58:22):
four packet tickets and pit passes up for grabs for
today's JCS trivia, So it's.

Speaker 4 (01:58:28):
Back to you, Thank you, young lady. One, two, three,
four or fun see catching big air?

Speaker 5 (01:58:35):
Oh yeah, three three?

Speaker 3 (01:58:37):
All right, let's go with stands Dan. How you doing well?

Speaker 21 (01:58:41):
It's going on.

Speaker 3 (01:58:43):
Doing pretty well? Stan. How about yours, buddy, Miles?

Speaker 5 (01:58:47):
Amazing?

Speaker 16 (01:58:47):
This my loast birthday.

Speaker 3 (01:58:48):
I'm about wim brother.

Speaker 4 (01:58:49):
All right, very nice birthday, Happy birthday, buddy, won't play
a little game with.

Speaker 3 (01:58:53):
Us, Yes, sir, let's let's do it.

Speaker 2 (01:58:56):
Is he the puzzlemaster or is he the guy who's
care be writing today's game?

Speaker 5 (01:59:01):
Can he be both? Let's find out. It's time for
JCS trivia?

Speaker 4 (01:59:06):
Ya all right, Stans is a real easy game, buddy.
Got a question here for you. Four answers. One of
these answers is not true. Trying to fool you, buddy.
But if you can see it and you can find it,
I will send you over to Jack and he's got
something nice waiting for you. Are you ready, yes, sir,
Here we go, buddy, on this day in eighteen fifty five,
this is a name, by the way, King C. Gillette,

(01:59:29):
American businessman and inventor of the disposable razor, was born
in Fond de Luck, Wisconsin. Wow on this day, that's right,
King Gillette, he started a Gillette razors. Of course, here
are three fun facts about razors and shaving and one
annoying cut of a lie. Oh no, all right, we're
talking about razors and shaving. Which one of these is untrue?

Speaker 3 (01:59:49):
Go?

Speaker 4 (01:59:49):
Number one, Until nineteen seventy six, all shaving cream was
designed solely for men's shaving needs. Number two, an average
shave mo twenty to twenty five thousand hairs. Number three,
Caucasians have more hair than African Americans. Or lastly, religion

(02:00:09):
accounts for about seven percent of all men who choose
not to shave. Which of those is not true?

Speaker 16 (02:00:18):
Well, my last favorite number is number three, jam, let's
go with it.

Speaker 3 (02:00:21):
No, that's absolutely true.

Speaker 4 (02:00:22):
Unfortunately, buddy, Caucasians do have more hair than African Americans,
and African Americans have more hair than Asians.

Speaker 3 (02:00:30):
Well, there you have there you go two or one? Two?
Four or five?

Speaker 1 (02:00:35):
Let's go four?

Speaker 3 (02:00:36):
Four is David? David? How you doing?

Speaker 16 (02:00:39):
Hey good, Jim?

Speaker 3 (02:00:40):
How are you doing good? Buddy? We're talking about shaving
and razors, which one of these is not true? Number one.

Speaker 4 (02:00:44):
Until nineteen seventy six, all shaving cream was designed solely
for men's shaving needs. Number two, an average shave removes
about twenty to twenty five thousand hairs. Or lastly, religion
accounts for about seven percent of all men who choose
not to shave.

Speaker 16 (02:01:01):
The last one.

Speaker 4 (02:01:01):
No, that's absolutely true, which I found kind of crazy. Actually, really,
seven percent of all people who don't shave, they do
it because of religion, not because of a style or
anything like that.

Speaker 3 (02:01:11):
I thought it would be lower than that for some reason.
All right, One, two or five?

Speaker 1 (02:01:15):
Let's go two.

Speaker 3 (02:01:16):
Two?

Speaker 5 (02:01:16):
Is Bill, Bill?

Speaker 3 (02:01:17):
How you doing?

Speaker 5 (02:01:19):
Incredible?

Speaker 3 (02:01:19):
Jimmy, glad to hear that. Bill.

Speaker 4 (02:01:21):
We're talking about shaving or razors? Which one of these
is in true? Get a fifty to fifty shot here.

Speaker 3 (02:01:25):
Number one.

Speaker 4 (02:01:26):
Until nineteen seventy six, all shaving cream was designed solely
for men shaving needs. Or Lastly, an average shave removes
twenty to twenty five thousand hairs.

Speaker 5 (02:01:37):
I'm gonna go with two, Jimmy, No, that's.

Speaker 3 (02:01:39):
Absolutely true, way, absolutely true.

Speaker 5 (02:01:42):
One or five it's still five?

Speaker 3 (02:01:45):
Five is Christy? Christy? How you doing we scared. I
know I was gonna say one the whole time.

Speaker 5 (02:01:52):
No women, Yeah, one is.

Speaker 3 (02:01:57):
The answer for sure, Christy. Let me ask you a question.

Speaker 4 (02:02:00):
It says until it says until nineteen seventy six, all
shaving cream was designed solely for men's shaving needs. The
date is wrong. Is it before or after nineteen seventy six?

Speaker 10 (02:02:13):
Well, I would say after.

Speaker 4 (02:02:15):
Honestly, until nineteen eighty six, no moly, yeah yeah, well
or not one shaving product was made one shaving cream
product was made for women. It was all made for men.

Speaker 3 (02:02:30):
Yeah. I guess women just wet shaved with water or
whatever soap.

Speaker 1 (02:02:33):
Yeah, or you just borrowed your husbands. Yeah, your dad's.

Speaker 3 (02:02:36):
CHRISTI years, you're a winner.

Speaker 5 (02:02:37):
Enjoy yourself, Happy New Year.

Speaker 3 (02:02:41):
Yeah, man, that's crazy.

Speaker 10 (02:02:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:02:43):
Until nineteen seventy six, not one shaving company made a product.
Eighty six made a product that women could use as
shaving cream.

Speaker 3 (02:02:52):
Wow, amazing.

Speaker 1 (02:02:53):
You're shocked by that.

Speaker 3 (02:02:54):
Yeah, I know you're not. I'm still shocked that women
couldn't have credit cards until the seventies. By the way,
part of why I picked this is because of that,
because of you, Because I knew you. I knew you
would be like, that doesn't drop me exactly.

Speaker 4 (02:03:06):
A couple other things you may not know about shaving
or razors before we get to the top of the hour,
Sports with Brandon kravitzs coming up next, and of course
we have every trembling next hour as well.

Speaker 1 (02:03:13):
Wait, let me fake it.

Speaker 3 (02:03:14):
Why a typical shave lasts about how long?

Speaker 1 (02:03:19):
Oh talking about legs?

Speaker 3 (02:03:21):
Ten hours? I think almost all of this is for
dude's faces. Oh ka, yeah, yeah, almost all of this. Yeah,
just like the shaving crew.

Speaker 5 (02:03:27):
Right exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:03:28):
Yeah, I'll sit this one out.

Speaker 3 (02:03:29):
But three and a half minutes. I think that's accurate.
Right in ancient Egypt, Well, the shave takes that long.
I thought you it lasts how long? Like how long
it lasts until it grows back?

Speaker 1 (02:03:39):
No?

Speaker 3 (02:03:39):
No, how long it takes you to shave a typical shave?
Uh yeah, the times you know?

Speaker 1 (02:03:44):
Really?

Speaker 3 (02:03:45):
Yeah, about three and a half minutes. That's about right,
That's about how long it takes that get it away
in Yeah, well you don't.

Speaker 1 (02:03:51):
You guys don't shave your legs every day, though some
women do. I don't.

Speaker 4 (02:03:54):
Yeah, my wife doesn't at all because she is real
fine hair, so she doesn't I mean, yeah, why bother Yeah, and.

Speaker 3 (02:03:59):
That's Anne down scenario scenario.

Speaker 1 (02:04:03):
Yeah, the thighs ended in the twenties.

Speaker 3 (02:04:05):
In ancient Egypt, men and women shave their heads for
want lace. Oh that's a great guess. Not true though. Aerodynamics,
purification and rebirth.

Speaker 4 (02:04:17):
So they think they thought not having hair made you
more pure, and it was kind of a rebirth because
it would grow back, so it was kind of a
kind of a rebirth sign that you were.

Speaker 3 (02:04:27):
Making a change.

Speaker 4 (02:04:29):
Not Egyptian, you saw the bitch men spend about how
much of their total lives shaving?

Speaker 1 (02:04:36):
Well if there and a half minutes a day to
cara for a lot seven years?

Speaker 4 (02:04:42):
No, no, five years, five months? Oh wow, yeah, five months.
About five months of your life is spent shaving?

Speaker 18 (02:04:50):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (02:04:51):
What percentage of men shave their face every day? Jack?
You're a daily shaver, aren't?

Speaker 9 (02:04:54):
Nope?

Speaker 3 (02:04:55):
No, I'm not either. No. This is three days right
here or two days I shave today, But I stop you.
I don't use a blade. I just use a razor
so it leaves a little.

Speaker 4 (02:05:05):
Yeah, I use safety razor, the one you know. I've
been using that for a while. Way better action. Seventy
five percent of men shave their face every single day. Yeah,
and then lastly here that was the eighty six thing. Yeah,
Russ is the only guy know who shaves his face
every day. Or did I think he has a beard now? Yeah,
but when we work together every day, never had stubble,
not one time ever. And I know news news personalities

(02:05:27):
don't either. They have to shave every day, correct, Yeah,
any TV people, they can't have a stubble.

Speaker 3 (02:05:33):
That looks dirrect.

Speaker 5 (02:05:33):
Yeah, all right, four.

Speaker 4 (02:05:34):
Seven nine one Sports Next with Brandon Kravitz will do
that right after this. Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show.
Roll Radio one oh four point one.

Speaker 3 (02:05:48):
I'm Jim. There's debb Hello.

Speaker 4 (02:05:50):
Check us here as well. H And every Monday night,
this gentleman drops fine it talks some sports with us.
You can hear him every day from three until six.
Right there on ninety six nine of the game. Goodn't
lowed for a buddy, mister Brandon Kravitz.

Speaker 3 (02:06:02):
And let's do the most we can with this eleven
minutes that we have, buddy, because I gotta tell you,
there was a lot crack.

Speaker 4 (02:06:08):
And let's just start with that Steelers Ravens game last night.
Can we go back to a conversation you and I
had week two. Is this genuinely one of the best
football seasons you've seen in ten years?

Speaker 5 (02:06:18):
Yeah, that was one of the points that I made
in the I needed five hours today on the year,
only had three. Now we only have eleven minutes. It's
good to be back. Happy New Year, Happy New Year.
Fantastic season. And think about the way the NFL script writers.
If you're one of the ten foil hat folk, they

(02:06:40):
got it right this year. They nailed it.

Speaker 3 (02:06:42):
You hope they keep doing this.

Speaker 5 (02:06:44):
Think about the way they bookended this season. The first
Sunday night football game of the year was between the
Bills and the Ravens, and the Ravens had, if I
remember correctly, a seventeen point lead on the Buffalo Bills.
The Bills came barreling back. It was close game at
the end. The final was four one to forty. The
Bills beat the Ravens, putting the Ravens at the end

(02:07:04):
of the season in a situation where they had to
win against Pittsburgh. They had won that game and not
blown that lead, that this game would not have been
for the division. They would have had a win over
a one extra win over the Pittsburgh Steelers, but it
came down to the wire where Baltimore again has a
lead in the fourth quarter, has then a chance hit

(02:07:27):
a receiver downfield, a chance to kick a game winning
field goal dead.

Speaker 3 (02:07:32):
On forty four yards, fort chip shot in the league anymore, and.

Speaker 5 (02:07:36):
A chip shot for Tyler Loopho was the kicker who
to that point had not missed a field goal this
season between forty and forty nine yards. He was eight
of eight until that pick that sailed right. Was never
even closed.

Speaker 3 (02:07:53):
He said, he knew and he hit it. It was bad.
He said he was coming off his foot. He knew
it was right. Eight of Knine's pretty good.

Speaker 4 (02:07:58):
Yeah, but Pittsburgh, But the Pittsburg kicker mix missed went
exactly the same way earlier in the game.

Speaker 3 (02:08:03):
You felt for that, Yeah, I mean blew it. I
mean they missed him virus. That was a point after Yeah, yeah,
oh yeah, that was a point after for him to
miss that, And what that meant you knew, you knew.

Speaker 5 (02:08:14):
I share this. This was one of the wildest stats
that I've ever read. Let me make sure that I
get this exactly right. There have been over sixty thousand
field goal attempts in NFL history. Tyler Loops miss on
Sunday night is the only one of those attempts that
came down as time expired in the fourth quarter of

(02:08:38):
the final week of the NFL season, when both teams
in action had their playoff hopes resting solely on that kick.
That's the only time, oh my god, that ever happened
and missed it.

Speaker 3 (02:08:52):
That's as good as it gets.

Speaker 10 (02:08:53):
Though.

Speaker 4 (02:08:53):
It's as good as it gets, and not to mention,
let's look at the cultural part of it. You got
the old guard, you know, you have Mike Tomlin and
Aaron Rodgers against not not necessarily the new Guard. These
guys have been around for a minute, but like the terminator,
like you know, the Lamar Jackson's like the terminator and
U and then the running back I can never be
Henry Derrick Henry, and then the great coaching. I mean,
everything was there to make this. And of course they're

(02:09:15):
both those teams from that area, very gritty cities, you know, yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:09:18):
Very much so great rivalry.

Speaker 6 (02:09:21):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (02:09:21):
I don't think either team was going to go very
far in the playoffs, but it was a great way
to end the season and a great way to book
end the season. What it sets up for now, there's
some really great matchups in the playoffs. This Jags Bills
game is going to be phenomenal. That's a Sunday one
pm game Jacksonville at home in I think the worst

(02:09:43):
possible matchup that they could have asked for. I'm very
high on this Jags team right now. They bring it
on both sides of the ball. Trevor Lawrence is legitimately
playing like an MVP. Running game is good, defense looks good,
and all of those as Everything about the Jags, in
my opinion, is better than what the Buffalo Bills have,

(02:10:04):
other than the quarterback back. Yeah, and Lauren, that's not
a knock against Trevor Lawrence. He's just not Josh Allen
and he does have wheels. You know, Josh really can
scare you with his with his legs. I mean, but
you know, Trevor's been running a lot this year as well,
so it's gonna be very interesting. They were dominant this weekend.

Speaker 3 (02:10:18):
I mean it was gross.

Speaker 5 (02:10:19):
I mean, of course, yeah, I think it's a team.
The Titans are terrible, but they're bad. They're starting quarterback,
even though he's not that good. He got hurt. Cam
Ward got hurt in the middle of the game, and
the Titans still had a chance of not collecting a
top five pick if they had won the game. They
were obviously miles away from that. Again, I don't think
that was a major concern, but they had incentive to lose. Also,

(02:10:40):
Week eighteen in the NFL, there are pockets of good moments.
The Bucks Panthers game was ugly, but at least it
had stakes to it, which wound up not mattering. By
the way and the way that I'll break that down
in a second, because I think that's really interesting too,
but I was.

Speaker 4 (02:10:56):
Gonna ask you about that next. NFC South is unique
in the team who won the conference out a losing record,
But oh no.

Speaker 5 (02:11:01):
It is just going to finish the point on the
Week eighteen is so the goofiest week in the NFL action.
A lot of these teams, their playoffs seating is solidified,
or team will so like the Packers that there's nothing
they could have done yesterday where they would have moved
out of the seven spot. So they benched everybody and
then they get blown out by the by the Vikings,
who are just trying to look good and feel good

(02:11:22):
about themselves at the end of the year. That game
is totally meaningless. Yeah, there you go, deb And then
you have a team like the Chargers. The Chargers can move,
They can get as high as five and as low
as six. And so basically they have to decide how
bad do we want to play against? A certain opponent
is going to decide whether or not we play our guys.
But we still have to play a road game to

(02:11:44):
start the playoffs, so they decide to bench their players.
It gets goofy. The NFC South was very confusing. First
of all, none of these teams deserve to be in
the playoffs, not even one of them.

Speaker 3 (02:11:56):
Hard stuff. I'm with you, not even the bus and
I love them, none of them. These are the rules.

Speaker 5 (02:12:01):
If you win your division, you not only do you
automatically get in, But the goofiest part about it is
that you host a playoff game. So the Carolina Panthers
get in. Now, how does this happen? This happened? This
probably had a one percent chance of happening. About a
month ago, the Atlanta Falcons won four games in a
row at the end of their season, which created a

(02:12:23):
three way tie.

Speaker 3 (02:12:24):
And then Tampa lost three or four games in.

Speaker 5 (02:12:26):
A row, right, and Tampa was in the driver's seat
for the long season, and all they had to do
was not lose eight of their last nine games, and.

Speaker 3 (02:12:34):
They did as that coach saw his job anyway he does.

Speaker 5 (02:12:37):
He talked to the media today. So what this created
was because the Falcons finished the season so hot, the
Bucks beating the Panthers on Saturday didn't guarantee them a
division win. The Saints had to win because if the
Falcons won, there'd be a three way tie. And a

(02:12:58):
three way tie, it's your common record against those three teams.
The Carolina Panthers were three and one against the Falcons
and the Buccaneers, so they get the three way tie
over the Falcons and the Bucks. The Falcons had no
chance of making it in in the final week. All
they do is screw the Bucks at which they did,
and they did that, so you were the same Bucks.

(02:13:20):
Even though the Bucks won on Saturday, they still needed
things to go their way.

Speaker 4 (02:13:24):
So the reason I say this is such a great season,
by the way, talking to Brandon Ravitz here from ninety
six to nine to the game, and the reason I
think this is such a great season is. I read
a piece this morning. I forget where it was from.
I want to see ESPN, but I'm not a hundred
on that. And it said, for the first time in
a long time, we have no clear Super Bowl favorite.
And I think that's the best possible scenario for NFL football.
You don't really know. There is no Patriots, there is

(02:13:46):
no the San Francisco forty nine ers, or.

Speaker 3 (02:13:49):
There is no team like that.

Speaker 4 (02:13:51):
Anybody anywhere could lose right now to anybody, it doesn't matter,
and I love it.

Speaker 5 (02:13:57):
It's hard for individuals like me who are in an
industry where you are paid to stick your chest out
and say, no Jim, no deb no Jack, this is
what's gonna happen. Yeah. My wife is sitting on the
couch with me last night. She goes, she just throws

(02:14:18):
it out. There was not prepared for this. She goes,
who do you think's gonna win the Super Bowl this year?
Win it? You're gonna regret asking me that. Here comes
a thirty minute diet tribe and uh, thirty minutes later,
I gave her no definitive answer.

Speaker 3 (02:14:35):
Nobody knows what I mean.

Speaker 5 (02:14:37):
No, I even do this for a living. I mean
I have no idea.

Speaker 4 (02:14:40):
I mean, you have to look at the Patriots. They're
playing great football right now. You can't rule the Jags
out right now. I mean, those are two teams that
nobody at the beginning of season thought I had a dream.

Speaker 5 (02:14:48):
The winner of that game is probably Let's see, then
you have to discount the Patriots. To me, it's the
in terms of the AFC, the Jags of Bills in
the Patriots are the teams that I trust the most
right now, and the Jags or the Bills are about
to be eliminated. So it'll come down and I think

(02:15:08):
the Patriots will beat the Chargers. So then it will
come down to as far as how I feel moving
forward with who's available and who's still in the hunt.
If I had to pick it right now, gun to
my head, you have to pick the Super Bowl combatants.

Speaker 3 (02:15:22):
Oh, we haven't even talked about the other side. Go ahead.

Speaker 5 (02:15:25):
I would take the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks.

Speaker 3 (02:15:30):
I was about to say, who's going to beat the
Seahawks right now? Who is going to beat that defense?
Right now? That defense scares me in my own home, and.

Speaker 5 (02:15:39):
I'm not comfortable discounting the Rams either.

Speaker 3 (02:15:42):
I am maybe the Seahawks will run it this time.
Oh yeah, maybe, But I mean the Seahawks looks so good.
I mean they look they look so good. The Rams
really don't look that good to me. Rams are a
coin flip game to game.

Speaker 5 (02:15:54):
I thought it was troubling that the Seahawks only put
up thirteen points on the forty nine Ers. Forty nine
ers defense is so bad, but they only put up
three that defense. I think their defense is very good,
and that's full power.

Speaker 4 (02:16:08):
For them, right party back kittleback the whole nine yards, right,
full power. They put up three points. McCaffrey supposed to
be the one of the best backs in the league,
so he dropped three points against that that defense.

Speaker 16 (02:16:18):
Dude.

Speaker 5 (02:16:19):
Towards the end of that game, he dropped a pass
that turned into an interception and made it look a
lot uglier than it really was. I think that if
I like the forty nine Ers a lot, and I
think that that's a team that nobody's talking about right now.
And now they've slipped to the six seeds, so people
are going to see, oh, it's a six seed whatever.
Outside of that last game where they only put up
three and It does speak well to Seattle's defense. They

(02:16:40):
have been playing offense at a prolific level. Brock Party
is one of the hottest quarterbacks in the NFL. Right now.
I think they're going to beat the Eagles. Oh I
think this. I think this Eagles team is done.

Speaker 3 (02:16:52):
On borrow time.

Speaker 5 (02:16:54):
Yes, very well. So we beat this weekend by who
well they were they were another one that they weren't playing.

Speaker 3 (02:17:00):
It doesn't count for right now.

Speaker 5 (02:17:01):
Okay, they were good with their positioning. They could they
couldn't have gotten any higher than two. They settled at three.
But yeah, they lost the commanders who were also playing backups.

Speaker 3 (02:17:11):
All right, So who do you think it's gonna be?
The Seahawks?

Speaker 5 (02:17:13):
And if I had to Patriot now it's Seahawks Patriots
would be would be my guest. I do have two
bets in the hard rock app So this is the
way that I'm doing this is I'm just taking different
combinations and slamming them together. So I have I have
Rams Patriots as a wager. You get like twenty five

(02:17:33):
to one on that, and then I also have Bill's Seahawks.
So I'm just taking I'm just taking random bag matchups
and just hoping that I somehow accidentally get it right.
That's my that's my game plan.

Speaker 4 (02:17:46):
All right, every day from three until six right there
on ninety six nine the game good laugh for a man,
mister Brandon Cravitz.

Speaker 5 (02:17:52):
By the way, this segment brought to you by wing House,
good food, beautifully served.

Speaker 4 (02:17:56):
Thank you, buddy, always good toeing you all right for
seven nine next all right for seven nine four one

(02:18:21):
text us seven seven zero three one. Welcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show. Happy New Year, twenty twenty six
is a year we are on. We will be here
for at least another week.

Speaker 3 (02:18:31):
Right, it's no guaranteed. Welcome back on Jim.

Speaker 4 (02:18:33):
There's deb Hello, Jack is here. And every single Monday
night this showman drops by. He runs TK Law one
firm for life dot Com. The offices are right there
now it's Im on Springs.

Speaker 3 (02:18:42):
You guys, give it up for the awesome ray trendle.

Speaker 10 (02:18:48):
Happy New Year.

Speaker 3 (02:18:49):
That's all I want you to say right now. I done.

Speaker 4 (02:18:53):
I don't know that I could give you a bigger endorsement.
I don't I don't know that I could do that.
I don't know that I could tell you how good
you are at what you do more any day of
the week. I don't think so you What you have
done for my family and I over the last like
what three or four years has been exponentially incredible.

Speaker 3 (02:19:13):
I just need you to know that, Well, thank you.

Speaker 16 (02:19:15):
Now.

Speaker 4 (02:19:15):
You're an awesome guy and you have really helped my
family out a lot. There you go, Now we can
move forward.

Speaker 10 (02:19:20):
I appreciate you saying that. You know, we just had
a conversation about identity and kind of how we build
our identities. And you know, I really love doing what
I do, and being a good lawyer is a big
part of what I do. But I'll tell you what
I took. I took almost nine days off.

Speaker 1 (02:19:42):
Wow, from the.

Speaker 10 (02:19:43):
Last time I've seen you guys to now. And I'm
including weekends on that, but normally I work weekends and
I work late nights, and I took almost nine days
off to be with my family. And I can't I
can't say quite how much I love doing what I do,
which gives me the opportunity to then spend night days
with my family. And I promised my daughter daughter one

(02:20:04):
for people who are new parents out there, maybe Ross
is listening, don't make your kids promises things that you
have no control over. I promised my daughter that I'd
find snow for her for Christmas. Oh, which, when I
was looking at their weather reports, I was like, there's
no way I'm not going to find snow. Apparently there
was like a heat wave and so like we uh,

(02:20:25):
we ended up driving to one of those artificial snow.

Speaker 3 (02:20:28):
Places, like those like the SnowCat Ridge or what is
that thing?

Speaker 10 (02:20:32):
Yeah, so one of these mountains where they blow snow
on them and then you know, people with snowboarding, ski
and stuff. So we ended up going away these places,
and then the very next day it was supposed to
be like a cold rain, we ended up getting snow
flurries and so but like just having those memories of
my kids and being with my family and realizing that
all the hard work that I usually put in gives

(02:20:54):
me the opportunity. I feel very lucky and very blessed,
and I feel very lucky to be here with you
guys today. And you know, most of what I do
is just hanging out with friends.

Speaker 3 (02:21:02):
Well, bro, you are I just never met anybody like you.

Speaker 4 (02:21:05):
If you have a real good dude and the fact
that you remain accessible to and I'm a client. I mean,
I know we're buddies and stuff, but when it comes
to business, you and I have a relations we understand that.
You know, when we are in these realms that we work,
whether it be here in your office, you know, we're
we're business clients and I don't expect anything out of
you and you don't expect anything out of me.

Speaker 3 (02:21:24):
We've had a great relationship that way.

Speaker 4 (02:21:26):
But you know, the ability to have you give such
great advice that we could apply immediately, that that really
works for us in real time is just an asset
that everybody should know about when it comes to you
in the firm. I think you guys, you guys do
an exceptional job and I'm I'm really proud to have
you part of the program.

Speaker 10 (02:21:44):
Thank you. I really appreciate you saying that. And I
you know, you've You've got another lawyer that's on the show,
and he's he's the greatest. He's one of the most amazing,
fantastic people.

Speaker 5 (02:21:53):
The guy has told him too much already.

Speaker 10 (02:21:55):
He has surgery and I check in on him and
I'm like, hey, Beddie, he you doing okay. He's like, yeah,
I'm doing okay. And then a couple of days later,
he's like, hey, Merry Christmas.

Speaker 3 (02:22:02):
Yeah, I'm like.

Speaker 10 (02:22:04):
Santa Claus or Santa Claus and uh, you know, just
a sweet, sweet guy. So when you say things like that,
I feel truly privileged.

Speaker 3 (02:22:13):
And well you're the only company. You guys were only
to allow on here, you know, the best toybody else.

Speaker 4 (02:22:20):
But no, no, you guys are great people and it's
really an asset. And I hope the listeners out there
who hear you guys every week when you come in,
you and Glenn understand that. You know, we we do
get to pick who we have on the program, and
we do that for a reason, and one of the
reasons is is both of you never fail us. You know,
everybody on the show has been affected by Glenn. We've
all had cases handled by Glenn. And I think most

(02:22:40):
of us have handed or at least a few of
us have had cases handled by you. My my family
has had at least four by you, and I mean,
you guys have just it's been a punch card going
for you, right, Yeah, I got a free one coming up?

Speaker 3 (02:22:52):
You got one?

Speaker 16 (02:22:54):
All right?

Speaker 3 (02:22:54):
What are you have for us this week?

Speaker 10 (02:22:55):
So you know, one of my favorite fast food restaurants,
you know, speaking of uh, you know, holidays and travel.
I have like this weird when I'm in my healthy mode,
I'm super healthy, but I've got this weird craving for McDonald's.
I get that all the time. I don't know if
you guys, I really love McDonald's.

Speaker 4 (02:23:13):
But about every two weeks, buddy, I've got to get
a quarter pane rod cheese and a tenmpeece nugget.

Speaker 10 (02:23:16):
See I get. I get two double hamburgers and two
mcchickens and a large fry. You eat all that by
yourself and then a large diet coke that's wash it
down for you. And when I try when I on
road trips, you know, and I don't eat it all
at once, you know, I'm you know, in the car
for a couple of hours. I'll snack on them. That's
one of my favorite things to do. One of my

(02:23:38):
all time favorites from McDonald's is the McRib Did you
ever get into the McRib?

Speaker 4 (02:23:43):
Christ say, I only had one, and that was so
many years ago. I just remember it being like a
barbecue sandwich with pickles and onions.

Speaker 10 (02:23:51):
So that's a good way to describe it. Yeah, that's
a good way to describe it. Extra saucy. Yeah, and
uh McDonald's is currently being dude for its make rib.

Speaker 3 (02:24:02):
Okay, so let's try to figure out why.

Speaker 10 (02:24:04):
That's what I was gonna ask you.

Speaker 3 (02:24:05):
Okay, because it doesn't have bones, but it projects like
because it's molded into a rib like it's got There's
no way bones it. There's no way. It's that simple.

Speaker 10 (02:24:18):
Well, what do you think it is?

Speaker 3 (02:24:20):
I thought there's no pork kid, No, that can't be
the case. I don't like these faces you're giving us.
What do you think?

Speaker 1 (02:24:30):
I actually had it as my kickers.

Speaker 3 (02:24:35):
She's rebooting the news. I am.

Speaker 10 (02:24:38):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (02:24:40):
So nobody got injured eating it?

Speaker 10 (02:24:42):
In eating it?

Speaker 3 (02:24:43):
I mean, is it? Do they think it's stolen from another?
It is? It is the idea borrowed. It's been too long.
It's been forty years.

Speaker 10 (02:24:50):
It has nothing to do with any kind of special
recipe or.

Speaker 3 (02:24:53):
Anything like that. But it's been forty years. You would
have think this is I got it. I got it
the vault. Is it refrigerated, right, So every time they
put it back in the vault, they're afraid it's getting contaminated.
It's not refrigerating.

Speaker 10 (02:25:05):
So Jack, actually, between the two of you, you are
both pretty close. So the idea of the mick rib
is that it's a rib sandwich, right, it's the rib meat.
Apparently there is no rib meat.

Speaker 3 (02:25:19):
No, you can't do that. It's not mechanically separated like
the chicken meat mechanically separated pork.

Speaker 10 (02:25:27):
It is some of the other organs of pork. There's
organ meat in it, and some you can't do that.
Some connective tissue, connective tissue from the shoulder.

Speaker 1 (02:25:44):
Wow, scalded stomach they said, was stomach lining.

Speaker 3 (02:25:48):
No.

Speaker 10 (02:25:52):
Now, what makes us interesting is a lot of times
we see these cases and we don't hear anything back
from the company because it's like, you know, the word
settle this outside of the courtroom. McDonald's immediately made a response,
which is, none of this is true, and we're going
to defend defend this lawsuit. And so, you know, the

(02:26:14):
lawsuit is basically, you know, kind of what you both
were kind of hinting at. It is a misrepresentation lawsuit.
It's just this is the red bull has wings thing.
This is the red bull has wings thing. This is
the uh, you you know, you get enough mountain dew.
You can get a hairyer jet. This is a you've
misrepresented what it is that we're getting. And so we've
got this expectations, reasonable expectation that what we're eating is

(02:26:37):
ribb meat. It's called the Mike rib. It looks like
a rib. It's got even got the little lines a
little rib meat. But that's not what we're getting.

Speaker 11 (02:26:47):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (02:26:48):
And so.

Speaker 10 (02:26:50):
McDonald's hasn't said, here's our secret recipe for how we
come up with our our rib sandwich.

Speaker 3 (02:26:55):
Well, okay, so hold on for a second.

Speaker 4 (02:26:57):
Okay, So denying something subjective is a corporate play or
any play, because you can do that. It's subjective, right,
deny it. It's subjective. You don't know this is not subjective.
Either it does or it doesn't have the things in
it that you say. Either it does have traces of
organ meat and ligaments and stomach lining, or it doesn't.
How could they immediately dismiss it if they don't know

(02:27:19):
for a fact that that hasn't been the case.

Speaker 3 (02:27:20):
And who, by the way, is who filed a suit?

Speaker 10 (02:27:23):
Who knows that it has a class action lawsuit? It's
a class action lawsuit. So somebody's been testing this meat
and or maybe had access to, you know, somebody in
the McDonald's meat factory.

Speaker 3 (02:27:33):
Oh my god. So if you've ever eaten a rib
in your.

Speaker 10 (02:27:35):
Life, I've had dozens.

Speaker 3 (02:27:38):
I've literally had one or two in my entire life.
I does it taste good? Is it good?

Speaker 10 (02:27:43):
I can't remember the taste. It's every time it comes out,
I want to try another one.

Speaker 3 (02:27:47):
You get the barbecue sauce, Yeah, yeah, it's good. It's
not bad, right, all right. I mean it's not as
good as you go to a barbecue Joe.

Speaker 10 (02:27:56):
But there's no bones in this micrib.

Speaker 5 (02:27:58):
I know.

Speaker 3 (02:27:58):
It's amazing. Really. Somebody said they should call it the
mc chittering, And.

Speaker 10 (02:28:06):
I guess to a certain point, right, Like, we've seen
the pink meat paste that comprises the burgers, sure, and
we see that the mechanically separated chicken that comprises the chicken. Yeah,
so shouldn't we kind of assume.

Speaker 3 (02:28:22):
Oh, don't get me into that. Are you serious?

Speaker 7 (02:28:24):
Is that an event?

Speaker 5 (02:28:24):
I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:28:25):
Look at Campbell's. I mean when the former VP whatever.

Speaker 5 (02:28:31):
Cat on a hot slike yeah.

Speaker 11 (02:28:33):
Saying that you know, he doesn't want to eat bioengineered
food that came off a printer.

Speaker 1 (02:28:38):
I mean, the assumption is that you're you're eating real meat.

Speaker 3 (02:28:42):
The dude you get blown out.

Speaker 10 (02:28:43):
But I don't know, I don't I don't know, I
really don't know. What the outcome is here is.

Speaker 4 (02:28:48):
That the argument is that how you would argue that,
like I mean, if I mean, this obviously isn't a
nugget of chicken like in a sense that it's a
you know, it's a mechanically separated nugget that everybody could
have understand is deep fried. But we have learned to
expect that. That's so what you're saying is they would
defend that particular product by other products on their menu
that also skate the edge of description or yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:29:12):
I think you know again, that's what you should come
to reasonably expect for McDonald's is you're not going to
actually get a chicken breast when you get a McChicken,
you're gonna get.

Speaker 3 (02:29:21):
Well, it's parts of the chicken, right, The rib is
a specific part of the pig.

Speaker 10 (02:29:26):
But that's what the allegations really focusing on is you
should be giving me some rib meat, but yeah, some
mcpork samch It doesn't have to have all rib meat though, right, Well,
then I guess how much rib meat would constitute a mcrib's.

Speaker 4 (02:29:42):
So more majority more rib meat than that yoga meat
than filler. Well, didn't ice cream? Didn't Briars also go
through this at one point recently? Yeah, Briars had to
go Briar's ice Cream had to change the name of
their product to was it ice dessert or or dessert
frozen dessert product or something like that because there was
no milk in there. And Subway just went through this

(02:30:04):
with their tuna sandwiches, did they.

Speaker 1 (02:30:05):
Not, Yeah, as well as their Subway matt or yoga matte. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:30:13):
So you know, we're seeing more and more of these
intentional misrepresentation lawsuits.

Speaker 3 (02:30:20):
Now there's now they're renaming it on the texting service
the mick a c l the shoulder as I say that,
there's some shoulder meat in there and some organ meat.
So I don't know what you'd want to call that, but.

Speaker 4 (02:30:33):
Pork shoulder is fine though we cooked pork shoulder all
the time port but you know, pork shoulders, that's a
common that's a common barbecue item, but not not organ meat.
And can I tell Okay? So I'm gonna go out
on a limb here. Aren't there certain cultures and religions
that can't consume organ meat like it's a it's against
their religion. I don't think they can have any pork. Yeah, yeah,

(02:30:53):
I didn't know if it was a separate thing with
the pork scenario.

Speaker 3 (02:30:56):
But now if you thought we killed that but heights
at four forty five with our discussion back then, did
you imagine what's happening now? Could you imagine somebody unwrapping
one of those things about to light into it when
he says stomach lining, there's.

Speaker 10 (02:31:10):
There's no uh mc rib promotion going out right now?
I looked, so I had anger him for one after this?

Speaker 3 (02:31:16):
So what would happen? So would they would?

Speaker 4 (02:31:18):
It would be theoretically like almost like some of these
uh some of these data breach lawsuits where you know,
you contact a website, you enter like how many mcribs
you've had, and they pay you so much for a
m for how many you've had or.

Speaker 10 (02:31:32):
Yeah, so you know we start. We just recently saw
this with the that soda pop that's like the healthy
probiotic soda pop. We saw that in November, yeah, poppy, Yeah,
the one where it's like, you know, you bring us
your receipts and if you've got six cans, you get
twelve bucks. If you've got twelve cans, you get Niking Bucks.
I imagine it'll be something similar. Red Bulls was like

(02:31:53):
that too, wasn't not yeah, it was yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:31:55):
You know.

Speaker 10 (02:31:56):
So it's just I don't know, as a society, as
a culture, we've gotten very sensitive to all kinds of things,
you know, people you know, being offended easily, and now
we've gone to this weird switch to where you have
to be hyper technical about what you're delivering. And I'm
not saying saying it's it's all wrong, right if if

(02:32:18):
I'm if I'm going to get a a one wagu
beef steak, and it's not that right, I paid a
premium for that product. But when you're going to McDonald's
and you already know that they are going to create
a process to make the meat cheaper so they can

(02:32:39):
make a profit off of it, and that you expect
it's not going to be top quality, you know, baby back.

Speaker 4 (02:32:44):
Rib meat, or that's exactly the argument. That's honestly, I
think the only argument you could really have against this,
and it's almost it's kind of you know, for McDonald's
is not good because it's almost like walking up going, hey,
it's your donald track. What do you expect right?

Speaker 10 (02:32:58):
Right?

Speaker 3 (02:32:58):
What do you expect? Right?

Speaker 10 (02:33:00):
But I think that that's a I think that's a
legitimate because again, these are always from the reasonable person standpoint,
So I think it's a legitimate argument that they have
is what really is your expectation? What's the legitimate expectation
to have here?

Speaker 4 (02:33:11):
And I think, man, I think it changes a lot
when it's something you're consuming. If this was something you
used at the house and it's a you know, uh,
you know, magic sandpaper, and you didn't think it was
so magical, that's subjective. But you're eating this like you're
consuming it. People have a much different relationship with stuff
they put in their body than they do when they don't.

Speaker 10 (02:33:30):
Well, and we've seen this, you know, the laws evolved
too as we've you know, we know are no longer
you know, eating a whole chicken. We're having these mechanically
separate chicks. Well, now is it reasonable to anticipate having
bones in your chicken?

Speaker 11 (02:33:45):
Right?

Speaker 10 (02:33:45):
The law has evolved as as our food processes. Our
food processes have evolved, but it's just an interesting case
and it'll be interesting to see what happens. Because McDonald's
immediately issued a response.

Speaker 4 (02:33:57):
Yeah, you can imagine. I mean, that thing's got to
be a giant money maker. I mean it's one of
those things they only release occasionally and they know it's
going to sell out, so you know, it's one of
the only products they do that with right where they
hold it back and release. I think some of the
shake products, like some of the shake and sweet products
they do that as well, seasonal stuff like.

Speaker 3 (02:34:12):
Yeah, yeah, but it's I think if it was out
all the time, it wouldn't sell as much. Just relacing
because you feel like it's special. It creates this false
sense of urgency. I wonder I people are gonna start
testing to see if the fish file a has cod.

Speaker 10 (02:34:28):
Oh interesting, Well if there's no fish in the fish.

Speaker 3 (02:34:30):
Oh what if it's the tuna from uh from that's
where it all went. Always get seen. You man, see
what a great case. So we should pay attention to this.
Is this relatively new?

Speaker 10 (02:34:43):
This just broke the news I think Friday and then
uh and then today Wow. McDonald's issue to response.

Speaker 3 (02:34:51):
That's wild. I did not see that anywhere this morning.

Speaker 10 (02:34:53):
That's crazy, you're not craving mcribs.

Speaker 3 (02:34:55):
Like, all right, we'll get a little bit more right
here to say, deb what you got for news?

Speaker 11 (02:35:01):
The first Uvaldi trial starts today, a new way to
take with gofy and a list of DC's rejected twenty
twenty five license plates. Oh, we'll talk about that next
during you heard it here first.

Speaker 4 (02:35:11):
Yeah, let's take little break. We'll come back and get
dev's news. Do a little bit more with Ray and
get the hell out of here on Monday.

Speaker 3 (02:35:18):
Hey, boys and girls, our friends at tklaw want to
remind us always look ahead. Looking Ahead tomorrow on Real
Radio Tuesday edition Monsters will have Detective barb In Teal Piper,
daughter of the late Rowdy Roddy Piper, will be in
studio as well, and more big dumb fun tomorrow on

(02:35:39):
the Monsters in the morning. When it comes time to
look ahead for you and your family's well being, do
it with the team at TK law. Simply log on
to one firm forlife dot com and the weather This
morning in pump each county a blessed so us So

(02:36:00):
what's the role with me?

Speaker 5 (02:36:01):
I'm looking out the window win.

Speaker 10 (02:36:03):
I just can't see.

Speaker 5 (02:36:04):
Who do you think when you have such look? I
can't see. It's all fogged up?

Speaker 1 (02:36:09):
And it was it was and it was man that
made my butt clench.

Speaker 3 (02:36:14):
Right up, fogged up. We gets up it out. We're good,
all right.

Speaker 4 (02:36:20):
Welcome back to the Jim Forward Show right here on
Real Radio one O four point one. Thanks for tuning in.
Happy new year is twenty twenty six and we are on.

Speaker 3 (02:36:29):
The radio for at least another year. Welcome back on Jim.

Speaker 4 (02:36:33):
There's deb Hello, Jack is here. No Ray Trinley still
hanging out until the end of the show. That's one
firm for Life dot com. TK Law is the firm
and their offices are right there now. It'm on Springs.
Handle a lot of different legal disciplines, whether it be
trip and fall, whether it be a state issues, whether
it be divorce, all that stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:36:54):
It're all covered it all and even the unique stuff.

Speaker 3 (02:36:57):
You can handle it. So give him a call, give
him a shot.

Speaker 5 (02:36:59):
Like what.

Speaker 4 (02:37:01):
Let's say, Let's say that your your wife's ex husband.

Speaker 3 (02:37:08):
Just won't go keep turning up like a bad penny.

Speaker 4 (02:37:11):
Let's say the ex husband got a credit card in
your wife's name without her knowing about it years ago,
then ran that thick.

Speaker 3 (02:37:19):
And then dove on it.

Speaker 4 (02:37:21):
And then eighteen years later when a collection company comes
knocking at your door because they found your address and
they want their money.

Speaker 3 (02:37:29):
Wow, what do you do?

Speaker 4 (02:37:31):
And it started out as a small amount of money
and then Ray and then with fees and fines, you call.

Speaker 3 (02:37:37):
Ray and Ray takes care of it. Deb what do
you for news? You heard it here?

Speaker 5 (02:37:45):
First on the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 16 (02:37:47):
All Right.

Speaker 11 (02:37:48):
The first trial connected to the police response to the
mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas's underway.
Potential jurors were being questioned, and the trial of former
Uvaldi school officer Adrian Gonzalas, who's accused of failing to
engage the gunman after arriving at rob Elementary School during
the massacre May twenty four, twenty twenty two. Nineteen children

(02:38:09):
and two teachers were killed. He faces twenty nine felony
counts of abandoning or endangering a child. The trial was
moved to Corpus Christi after Gonzalez's attorney filed for a
change of venue, arguing he wouldn't be able to get
a fair trial in.

Speaker 4 (02:38:24):
Uvaldi read today that they found out today during the
trial or part of it beforehand, that he actually knew
where the shooter was.

Speaker 3 (02:38:33):
Really, yeah, he even knew where he was in the building,
didn't and didn't engage.

Speaker 11 (02:38:37):
It'll be interesting to see how it turns out, considering
Scott Peterson from you know, from Parkland was also facing
these charges and was not convicted all right. Novo nor
Disk's weight loss drug with gov is now available in
pill form in the US. A starter dose of the
pill will be available for a mere one hundred and

(02:38:57):
forty nine dollars to patients with their scription who purchased
it directly through the manufacturer without insurance. According to Novo Nordisk,
the largest dose of the medication will be available by
the end of the week for three hundred dollars a month.
The pill will be available at more than seventy thousand
US pharmacies as well as select telehealth providers. Wow. So

(02:39:19):
for all those who wanted to have the weight loss
benefits of wagovie but are a little skeeved out about
giving themselves a shot.

Speaker 3 (02:39:26):
Now you're in.

Speaker 11 (02:39:26):
Now you're in doily pill fifty monthly right monthly. Yeah,
that's the starter dose. The larger dose is three hundred
dollars a month. Wow and then Washington, DC's Department of
Motor Vehicles has released a list of license plate requests that.

Speaker 1 (02:39:43):
It rejected in twenty twenty five. I wonder why.

Speaker 11 (02:39:47):
Political commentary fueled by decisions made by the Department of
Government Efficiency and its former leader led to several rejections
including THHX thanks dog elon no and.

Speaker 1 (02:40:00):
H eight elons oh eight elon.

Speaker 11 (02:40:03):
The DMV also rejected a request for a plate reading DEI.
Other plate rejections included phrases such as PSALM thirty five,
bs ball and god Mova, god Mova. And you heard
it here first on the Jim Culbert Show.

Speaker 3 (02:40:17):
Hey you, Deborah?

Speaker 5 (02:40:18):
Sure hoo?

Speaker 3 (02:40:19):
Do we have to think today, young lady.

Speaker 11 (02:40:20):
We want to thank the friendliest attorney, Ray Trendley from
TK Law one firm for life dot Com.

Speaker 16 (02:40:25):
This guy.

Speaker 11 (02:40:26):
Also want to thank Brandon Kravitz from ninety six to
nine The Game, just in case you missed him talking sports.

Speaker 1 (02:40:31):
His podcast has already been posted.

Speaker 11 (02:40:33):
At The Jim Culbert Show and then last but never leased,
Sam Bowen and Candice Rich for running our YouTube chat.

Speaker 3 (02:40:39):
Thanks guys, appreciate that very much, Jack. Do we have
a question today?

Speaker 5 (02:40:43):
We did?

Speaker 3 (02:40:44):
You were talking about what a great NFL season it was,
so the question in our YouTube chat did you watch
the NFL? Did you watch NFL football on a regular
basis this season? Man? I think, oh man, that's weird
with our audience. I really don't know that. I'll go
sixty percent said yes, fifty six Yeah, not too bad,
not too bad at all. One Firm for Life dot Com.

Speaker 4 (02:41:05):
That's Tklaw again, Alfics offices right there now, tomth Springs,
got a big week planned.

Speaker 10 (02:41:09):
Got a big week planned. We are opening up our
second office next Monday.

Speaker 3 (02:41:14):
Are you really well? You've kept that quiet.

Speaker 10 (02:41:18):
I'll talk about it next week, all right? Can you
tell me what he's here? What part of town in DeLand.

Speaker 3 (02:41:22):
Really good for you? Dude?

Speaker 4 (02:41:24):
Again, that's Ray Tklaw, One firm for Life dot Com. Right,
let's get that hell out of here.

Speaker 1 (02:41:29):
Sounds good?

Speaker 5 (02:41:30):
All right?

Speaker 4 (02:41:30):
Coming up tomorrow we'll do what you do. That's new,
the first one of the year. Scott Brown will be
in tomorrow for its only money.

Speaker 16 (02:41:36):
Now.

Speaker 4 (02:41:36):
I gotta tell you guys, Ross's schedule has changed. He
will be with us on Thursdays and Fridays in twenty
twenty six.

Speaker 3 (02:41:42):
We had no power over that. It's just kind of
how his schedule.

Speaker 4 (02:41:45):
Worked out taken when we can get Yeah, there'll be
no Ross tomorrow or Wednesday, but Thursday and Friday we'll
have him back to back. So that's what will be happening.

Speaker 5 (02:41:52):
All right.

Speaker 3 (02:41:53):
Here we go on behalf of deb Jack and Ray.

Speaker 5 (02:41:54):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (02:41:55):
We follow the New Junkie. They follow the monsters in
the morning. After us, it's Tom and Dan with the
corporate time at our friends from Real Laughs. We'll see
you tomorrow at three for more of The Jim Colbert Show.
Until then, have yourself a fantastic Monday.

Speaker 1 (02:42:06):
Evening and happy New Year. See you tomorrow Bye.

Speaker 19 (02:42:11):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (02:42:13):
If you missed any part of today's show, check out
The Colbert Show on demand, and for highlighted feature segments,
listen to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are
available for free on the Iheartrate
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