Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are now listening to The Jim Colbert Show on
Real Radio one.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Four point one.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
That's right, guys, here we go on a Monday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much for
tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every single day,
and we do have a good program for you. This afternoon.
We will get you caught up on what's happening in
the world. That will do that around three twenty with
JCS News four o'clock hours US and you, Fabia Cower
will do trivia. We'll ended up with you. Heard it
here first, your cast, text and talkbacks all day long.
(00:35):
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim to my left, my
lovely very dangerous co host, and it is deb Robert. Hello, there,
straight ed producer Jack brad Jaw Afternoon borro seven nine
one six four one. Text us at seven seven zero
three one. Find us easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at
the Jim Colbert Show on x Just at Jim Colbert
Show all day, every day, Jim Culbertlive dot com. This
where you can find this on YouTube. Get involved with
(00:56):
our question of the day. If you'd like to send
a talk back, that's easy and free. Just have the
iHeartRadio app, go to real radio and use that Mike
to Senior comment over to Jack, we will get you
on the air. Superstar, Superstar Tum is literally right around
the corner. Good to see you, guys. How's things bad? Good?
Speaker 4 (01:12):
Do you have a good long weekend?
Speaker 3 (01:13):
I did have a good long weekend, you know what.
I gotta tell you. I would get an apology, however,
to apologize to you last week, but I'll do it
on air, make it official.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
There's no need.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
Had a great day, I understand, but I I him apologize.
I don't like doing that the day before, you know,
for Jack as well, because you know you dump all
the productioning aspects of that on. I meant to take
that day off last week because I had one to burn,
and I promised myself that I would never give the
company a day back. And it has nothing new with
the company.
Speaker 5 (01:39):
Wonder it's a form of your compensation, it is, absolutely Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
So I had to take it off, and I'm sorry
for dropping that on you. But I heard you guys
had a gaitmea Tom. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:49):
Toms was great, like one of the greatest dudes ever. Right, absolutely,
he had a great time that'sked about you.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
How come you're never here here it's the same question. Hey, yeah, yeah,
uh you know, I I absolutely love Tom. Actually, in
all my years in Orlando and knowing people from other
media outlets, I think Tom, you know, maybe one of
the ones I've known the longest. I mean he was
over Channel six or how long, Jack, like twenty years?
Oh yeah, so, I mean his entire career. We've known
(02:15):
him on the Monsters and had a relationship with Tom
for many years.
Speaker 5 (02:18):
And he's given us in this radio station huge props
for when he came into the market. You know, we immediately,
you know, had him out in the air, and he
credits us with helping you know, you know, introduce him
to the community.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
Oh yeah, Captain Sunshine, that's what I called him, Captain Sunshine,
like right off rip and then we just started. And
he's very affable. He's a good guy. He's a real dude,
Like you know, he likes to ride motorcycles and hang
out with his wife he's been with for eons. His
kids are awesome people. He's just a really good kind
of community icon. We've been very fortunate to have around
here for a while. And he's got things to say,
which is great.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
Yeah, it is.
Speaker 6 (02:52):
And then Jack hooked us up with an interview with
the great Michael Andrews swingerhead.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I saw that. I'm very jealous that I couldn't be
for that. I love Michael. He's a great guy.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
He is a great guy.
Speaker 6 (03:03):
I didn't know if he was from Wisconsin, and I
ended up talking and finding out we almost went to
the same college together. Would have been a little bit
different on the years. But and then we also talked
to Triangle Elementary School teacher Megan Dewitz, which is awesome.
It was amazing to hear of all things, you know,
Paris Hilton, of all people, of all people, sees her
TikTok video and helps her school wish list become such
(03:25):
a thing that Megan's been able to help several schools,
not only in Lake but in Seminole in Orange Counties
as well.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
And that is how you revitalize your career and your image. Yeah,
he is doing so much. She does need to. But
I think she has a project coming out or something
that's she's a part of. I can't remember. Is there
is there a documentary on her or something coming out.
Speaker 6 (03:44):
I do know she's opened up like some kind of
charitable space for young girls to kind of some get
who'd been burned out by the horrific fires in California,
because I saw something about that over the weekend on
social If.
Speaker 5 (03:56):
You're a celebrity and you don't have a documentary, well
it could be because when it seems to be the
newest thing is self producing, right, your documentary, which is
doesn't really making a documentary.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
It is weird. It's funny. You should mention that I
actually saw one of those this weekend. You know, I'm
sure like many other couples out there that have kind
of gone through all the streaming services and you know,
have looked for things to see that you haven't seen.
You've ripped through all the Netflix movies with one point
four starsped You've ripped through everything. Then you find one
thing on Amazon you think is great, you click on
it in just twenty bucks, right, I hate that.
Speaker 4 (04:29):
I'm already paying you to have your app.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
Then why am I paying you to watch it?
Speaker 3 (04:34):
It's in the theater, so they're hitting you for that
twenty right, And everybody's done this very thing. And this
weekend my wife and I were rolling through it and
as we passed the remote. Like I was telling you
guys last week, it's your turn, right, right, and I
could do whatever I wanted.
Speaker 5 (04:47):
But you know, my wife asked me about that. She
didn't know that was an app.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
Well, within reason, you don't want to choose a bunch
of like you don't choose football a whole bunch because
you do like getting laid. It's great. But as we're
scrolling through, I went to documentaries and there's a whole
section documentaries on Netflix are just like musicians that you
didn't even know had documentaries, And we watched the one
on Alanis Morrisset called Wagged. It actually was pretty good.
(05:11):
She does not look anything like she did in the day,
though she looks way different now.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Really.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
Yeah, it was kind of hard to even tell it
was her. Actually I thought that was her sister or
mother talking looks a little jagged. Yeah. Well again, she's
kind of a weird one because she hit really hard
and then disappeared like three years later, and you remember
her as the young girl from Canada and then boom,
she's not the young girl from Canada anymore. She's, you know,
in her mid fifties.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
And we saw recently on that show alter ego that
Chase Paget was one of the Lost's brother. Chase was
on a reality music competition show. She was one of
the judges, so that's when I saw her most recently.
And speaking of Chase Paget, he's going to be joining
us this Friday on our final show of the year, which.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Is very nice. He's doing a big show out at
the Doctor Phil Center. We're gonna help him promote, which
is awesome, you know, unbelievable talent for sure.
Speaker 6 (06:04):
I did something brand new yesterday, really, Yeah, took part
in the North Outdoors.
Speaker 4 (06:10):
It was from twelve thirty until five.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
What'd you do?
Speaker 6 (06:14):
It's called the North Shore Birding Festival. Just a bunch
of bird nerds hanging out at the Apoca Wildlife that's.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
Becoming very in vocal, oh man.
Speaker 7 (06:23):
It was.
Speaker 6 (06:24):
Bird watching is like a thing now, it is, and
it has been since the pandemic. So really this was
kind of even like for scientific reasons, helping to find
see if you can find the.
Speaker 4 (06:32):
Rare birds, you know, the migratory birds.
Speaker 6 (06:35):
There were all age groups, I mean, plenty of gray
hair when we first drove up, but we were actually
led by a young fifteen year old boy by the
name of Hayden's Cool along with a guy named Chris Newton,
and they just took us throughout the Apopka you know,
wildlife drive where you can walk, where you can't drive.
And yeah, I realized I was neither dressed for the occasion,
(06:57):
and myself and my best friend were the only two
people without binoculars.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
You know, so many reasons and they're crazy thing. Everybody's
looking at the binoculars, having these great conversations and.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
Devin, yeah, I can sigh. I think I see it.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
Yeah, that's a beaver. You're telling it.
Speaker 5 (07:16):
Sorry, I'm like, wow, she drank Chris out there on
a Sunday to look at birds.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
I'm like, no, that's a big one.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
Nope, nope, pre nurse exactly.
Speaker 6 (07:26):
And the in fact, the only thing we found more
than birds were shell casings. Oh really, apparently you can
shoot in that area because yeah, I mean long gold casing,
short silver ones. And then of course the dulcin tones
of you know, the Virginia rail was interrupted by the
sound of gunfire. Oh yeah, yeah, very a very naturific day.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
Yeah. Well, I did something this weekend too that was
also very interesting. And I'll say this, like I've said
many many times before. Uh, if you ever thought that
humanity was coming round, I offer selling something on Facebook Marketplace.
If you ever thought, Jack the humanity was hitting that
(08:11):
third rung of the ladder of enlightenment, enlightenment, we're not
there yet. I give you Facebook Marketplace.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
I raise.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
F I've tried. Really, Oh, let me, let me, I will.
I will gladly share some of my interactions. I sold
my car this weekend. By the way, congratulates. You're welcome,
I say, Facebook Marketplace. I got the one guy with
a brain to actually show up with money.
Speaker 6 (08:41):
The mustang, right, the little mustang you were rebuilding, not
your tail get less.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
To find this guy. Oh yeah, here we go. Ready.
So when you put something up like this, you immediately
get and you get inundated with is this still available?
That's it.
Speaker 5 (08:58):
It's an automatic thing when you bring it up. That's
one of the things they offer you to send a
pre that's pre written and you can send that easy.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
So you just click and send that. You know, and
your response is always just simply yes. You just literally
copy and paste the word yes, and it said somebody
sent me a text and it said, now this is
an instant messenger, you know, not on my phone of course,
because it's just going through Facebook, so everything you can
kind of do through that, and made some type of anonymity,
you know, so you can maintain, you know whatever. This
(09:28):
guy named Judson, I don't even know who his last
name is. Whatever he texted me, He goes, I got
four thousand cash for that neglected rebuilt title Mustang of yours.
I thought the dude was joking, like I thought it
was like maybe a fan of the show, you know,
taking a shot at the rebuilt title because it's a
wrecked car, it's an old cop car. Blah blah blah
blah blah. I just text back lol, because I thought
it was joking. This is the response I got. If
(09:49):
you ain't got nothing nice to say, why you wasted
both our time? F word for gays? WHOA sure?
Speaker 4 (09:57):
I'm going to invite you over to my home?
Speaker 3 (10:00):
I am literally not lying. Dude called me a straight
up f work for gaze?
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Whoa let me cast? Judson didn't buy the.
Speaker 3 (10:06):
Car, No, no, no, I didn't give justin dipped immediately
dropped the F work for Gaze on me and then
immediately bailed out of the conversation, you know, like a man.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
Right exactly.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
Yeah, and then everything from I also put up there
no trades, right, no trades One of the big things
in Facebook marketplaces. They want to trade you everything in
their yard that doesn't work for something you have that does. Right.
So what do you think how many people out of
the fifteen people that contacted me wanted to trade me something?
I'll help you nine? Oh wow, like literally more than
half the people. And it says no trade right there
(10:38):
on the ad offered you want to you want to say,
by side, I got his? I got a seventy four
zc R Suzuki runs great, you wanna trade it? You
got an F one fifty about one hundred and fifteen
thousand miles? Oh bub, I want to trade it. I
swear I'm got an old fridge full of deer. You
want to trade it? Tilgate? Yes, that's it man, What
(10:59):
an experience? Yeah, something on Facebook marketplace. My god, almighty,
it's like inviting the flea market to your internet space. Yeah.
You also have to deal with bots. Yes, no, they're
and they're fishing for information like the immediate searre shooting
out prices, and then the other one. The favorite, My
(11:19):
favorite question is the very first response, not, hey, tell
me more about the car. Hey, is a real cop car?
Where from? Blah blah blah blah, any of this stuff?
Is it run as it go? Blah blah blah blah.
This one, what's the lowest you'll take for it? Yeah?
Opening question, what's the least you'll take for it? Always
put one of your children.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
Have you ever had a successful sale off marketplace?
Speaker 3 (11:41):
I have it works, I've purchased.
Speaker 5 (11:43):
I'm so, but you have to get sort through a
lot of the refrash.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
Yeah. Yeah, and buying is just as equally as wild.
And then now you see people who are doing a
lot and they put it in there. They put this
entire list of rules of engagement for them on Facebook
because you can look at there's selling information and see
they've sold a bunch of stuff and they've been through
the gamut scene of all of it. So they tell
you all the stuff that are not going to do
(12:09):
my project. I have a project twenty twenty five. Oh,
mine is to declutter and I want to get it
rid of a lot of stuff. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (12:17):
I just remember every time I have a garage sale.
I just say I'm not doing that again.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
Next time. We just donate this stuff, right, Okay.
Speaker 5 (12:26):
Then I'm like, oh, Facebook, Marketplace and you just you know,
so eloquently describe that experience. And then there's also eBay,
which now kind of takes an arm and a leg
out of your purchase. Those fees. Yeah, they're like, oh no,
we need more money now, yeah, yeah, for sure. And
then you also you have to mail it. You have
to all the shipping and all that stuff involved. And
(12:48):
so it's like I got so much stuff that I
don't want anymore. There's a value to it, but I
just got to get rid of it.
Speaker 6 (12:53):
I just interest or not pinterest, the poshmark. The thing
is clothing, shoes, handbags.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Album with those blowout scenarios, that's one of the most
that's almost better. That's almost better than just putting it
all in a big box and saying everything for like
ten dollars, twelve dollars, whatever the case may be. Yeah,
that's what I see happening in a lot with like
clutter items at estate sales or rocktales. Now people are
just like I'll put it all in a box and
like all this is ten bucks. You go through it later, Yeah,
and you figure it out, you unbox it yourself. You
(13:20):
just done box here, make this a surprise for yourself exactly. Yeah.
Four oh seven nine one six four one text us
at seven seven zero three one. A lot of stuff
to talk about. Obviously, the Rob Rodern thing has been covered. Uh,
the shootings have been covered. We are going to go
over and give you our perspective on that, plus a
bunch of other stuff today as well.
Speaker 6 (13:37):
WDEF for news, Well, we're going to talk about the
Brown University shooters still at large, closer to home, a
new arrest warrant for the Orlando jogger attack suspect. And
now you really want to get your Powerball tickets. We'll
talk about that and more coming up next during JCS news.
Speaker 3 (13:52):
All right, say l break, will come back and get
Deb's dues and continue with the Jim Colber Show here
on Real Radio one oh four point one s.
Speaker 8 (14:04):
But afternoon the Jim Colton Show, Prince of the Island.
But somebody, now, I feel your pain. I know what
you're being true, bro, I feel you. When I was young,
everybody has a beer and I was the only one
that looked like Sahara desert. And then you know, I
put all kinds of stuff in my face to get
the beer. But let me tell you now, in my fifties,
my beer looks like the sweets outs, all white and everything.
(14:27):
The only thing that will really make it understand is
to use ships.
Speaker 3 (14:34):
Never gets old. H never gets old. I think twenty
twenty six is gonna be the year he figures out
the clock.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, don't not even sure what he
was talking about.
Speaker 4 (14:46):
I have yeah the same here all right for seven.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
Nine six one four one texts seven seven zero one.
If you would like to leave a talk back like
our friend Prince of the Island, it's easy. Grab the
Ironheart Radio app, go to real radio and use it
Mike to send your comment over the jack. We'll get
you on the air. You two can run out of time,
superstar or a super welcome back. I'm Jim. Jackie is
right over there, and Dev has your news.
Speaker 4 (15:10):
Let's get it.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
It is time for JCS news. Wow, this guy got
to put his name on everything.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
It's in my contract ed.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Here's the news on the Jim Cober Show.
Speaker 6 (15:22):
And JCS News is brought to you by that mortgage
guy Don all Right, the man who shot and killed
two students and wounded nine others at Brown University late
Saturday afternoon, is still at large. It was revealed late
last night that a man who was taken into custody
early yesterday at a hotel in Rhode Island is not
the shooter. Providence Mayor Brett Smiley said there is no
(15:43):
way to know if the gunman is still in the city,
which he acknowledged could cause quote fresh anxiety unquote for residents.
He asked that anyone with surveillance video from the area
of Hope and Waterman Streets on Saturday to please contact
the FBI or Providence Police.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
All right.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
Australia is morning after Saturday's deadly shooting at a Jewish event.
At least fifteen people are dead and forty others remained
hospitalized after gunman opened fire on a crowd at Bondai
Beach in Sydney. Australian Prime Minister Anthony or Albanizi called
it an act of quote pure evil end quote.
Speaker 4 (16:18):
Officials say the shooters were father.
Speaker 3 (16:20):
And son crazy and there's video everywhere.
Speaker 6 (16:23):
Yes, the father was shot and killed by officers, while
the son was injured and is in critical condition. Video
that you're talking about shows a bystander leaping into action,
taking tackling the armed man and taking his weapon away
from him. It all happened exactly as Jewish families were
celebrating the start of Hanukkah.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
Crazy back here in.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
The state of Florida, the Florida Holocaust Museum is reacting
to that deadly shooting during a Hanukah celebration in Australia
over the weekend. In a statement yesterday, the museum said
the attack is quote the latest incident in a global
wave of anti Semitic violence that continues to plague the
Jewish community end quote. Museum officials said such violence is
born of ignorance, envy, and spite and fighting. It requires
(17:03):
people of every background to recognize our common humanity and
act to protect it. I think one of the saddest
stories is that a Holocaust survivor, yes, is reportedly.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
Among those killed.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
Yeah man, yeah, yeah, all right.
Speaker 6 (17:16):
In other news, Governor Ron DeSantis is pushing his proposal
for a Florida AI Bill of Rights for citizens. During
a roundtable at FAU and Jupiter today, Dessanta says he's
not concerned about an executive order signed by President Trump.
Speaker 5 (17:30):
Last week, the President issued an executive order and some
people were saying, well, no, this blocks.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
The states from doing it does First of all, an
executive order can't block the states.
Speaker 6 (17:41):
He says, only congressional action can preem states under Article
one powers. Now, the mother of a teen, yeah, I know, yeah,
you know. Wait, he's going to make up for it
at the end of the story.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
It's the thing now to rebuke a bit.
Speaker 6 (17:53):
The mother of a teen who says an AI chat
bot imitating a licensed therapist. Now, we've talked about this
story before, but we just thought it was like a
chatbot that this teen was talking to, you know, out
of loneliness. I did not know that it was imitating
a licensed therapist. Wow, helped him commit suicide and the
(18:13):
Orlando home after first grooming the fourteen year old.
Speaker 5 (18:16):
And when I say sexually groom, I mean the same as.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
An adult doing this.
Speaker 5 (18:21):
Have of behavior like sexting a minor, these very explicit
conversations and rule playing.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Which is just just mind blow way.
Speaker 6 (18:29):
It just really it's like you just don't want to
give your children any technology at all.
Speaker 4 (18:34):
It's like your answer machine took your life over. Yeah,
exactly now.
Speaker 6 (18:38):
DeSantis insists that Trump's order actually encourages states to do
things like protect children from the dangers of artificial intelligence.
Speaker 4 (18:45):
There you go, there's the Mia culpa.
Speaker 6 (18:49):
A Massachusetts based travel agent is accused of ripping off
a Daytona Beach school. We had done this story several
weeks ago during JCS news, but happy to say Velusia
County investigators say Robert Goodwin of Stone and Compass Travel
was supposed to be planning a trip for around one
hundred students, staff, and chaperones from Seabreeze High School.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
What happened.
Speaker 6 (19:09):
Instead, he allegedly pocketed the four hundred thousand dollars. The
good news is Godwin was arrested in California last week.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
Long arm of the law.
Speaker 4 (19:22):
Indeed, wow, man.
Speaker 6 (19:23):
Four K, four hundred thousand, and then again, you left
one hundred students, their parents, staff, all those people who
were looking forward to a European tripp out of their money. Yep,
you know, it's just they're going to get it back.
They're not going to get it back. It's been spent.
And then they also don't even get their trip.
Speaker 5 (19:38):
Good lord, what a posts a life lesson.
Speaker 6 (19:42):
Exactly suck people suck. A Washington, d C. Man is
behind bars for the death of his daughter in Kasimi.
Oscila County deputies arrested the thirty three year old for
aggravated manslaughter and child neglect over the weekend. The man,
again visiting from DC, told investigators that he took his
toddler with him into the hot tub at an airbnb,
(20:04):
and he allegedly found the child unresponsive after he fell asleep.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Oh while holding her.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
Oh, I didn't even I always thought the heat of
a hot tub would be too much for a topic.
Speaker 8 (20:15):
It is, it is.
Speaker 3 (20:16):
Yes, they're not supposed to be in hot tubs.
Speaker 4 (20:18):
See again, you have to have a license to drive, right,
you have to have a license to drive.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
Definitely not supposed to be sleeping in him.
Speaker 4 (20:24):
No, no, all right.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
A man accused of attacking a jogger near College Park
earlier this year is now facing rearrest.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
Hey, we have a connection to this, don't we.
Speaker 9 (20:36):
Yeah, we do.
Speaker 6 (20:37):
Actually, Jack has the video of it. Let me just
go ahead and fill you in on the story. So
the Orangejosteal Estate Attorney's office issued the new warrant for
Tyler fight on Friday, the State Attorney's office. Remember this
last week caused such a brewe ha ha when this
kid was offered like three years probation time served in
jail because one of the prosecutors in the Orangejosteali State
(20:57):
Attorney's Office had withheld adjudication, meaning as soon as he
completed his terms, he wasn't going to have a criminal sentence,
wasn't going to be facing any jail time, although he
has apparently a record a pattern of attacking young women.
So on Friday, the state's Attorney's office says Fight violated
his probation by changing his residence without notifying his probation
(21:19):
officer first.
Speaker 4 (21:20):
And not only that, they also say.
Speaker 6 (21:22):
He failed to show up for his psycho sexual evaluation,
which is also part of his probation. Now, according to
the arrest warrant, here's the really fun part, his current
whereabouts are unknown.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
Oh boy, you mean the guy who had the psycho
sexual evaluation. Yeah, we don't know where that cat is.
Speaker 4 (21:39):
We don't know where he is.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
They oh know where he is if I see my gun.
Speaker 6 (21:45):
And all right, So this is a final destination story.
An investigation is underway after a woman was found dead
inside a freezer at a Dollar Tree in Miami.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
I saw this, and isn't she a doctor?
Speaker 6 (22:00):
I haven't seen yet, but police said the body of
a naked female was found inside naked was found inside
the freezer of a store on Southwest eighth Street Sunday morning.
Speaker 10 (22:10):
Now.
Speaker 6 (22:10):
Authority said the woman was not recognized by staff members.
She has been identified as a thirty two year old woman.
That's all I've seen so far. Please say that death
is being investigated as unclassified while circumstances remain unclear. Investigators
have not released further details as the investigation continues. I'm
sure they're going to be scouring store video.
Speaker 3 (22:31):
Oh yeah, to.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
See how she entered, when she entered?
Speaker 3 (22:33):
What the hell?
Speaker 4 (22:34):
I know exactly?
Speaker 3 (22:35):
Yeah, it says mystery grows for a Florida doctor's body
found in a Dollar Tree freezer the day after she
entered the store. Damn yeah, man, Massille Garay Sanchez is
her name?
Speaker 4 (22:51):
Yeah, crazy, isn't it. That's just like a circumstances unbelievable.
I don't. Yeah, well, thank you for giving me that information. Yeah,
all right.
Speaker 6 (23:00):
Arguments are going on today in the sentencing trial. This
is also down in South Florida of Jason Binagas, who
has pleaded guilty to the fatal shooting of a Hollywood
police officer in twenty twenty one. The assistant state attorney agreed, Listen,
he had a tough childhood, but he's still a cop killer.
Speaker 2 (23:15):
Yeah, allowsy childhood.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
His mother certainly was not.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
The way mother of the your awards and neighbors remember it.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
Litigation neither excuses nor justifies the merd.
Speaker 6 (23:27):
His attorney, Christa Rickman, said, Benagas was a child of
eighteen wow at the time of the incident, and just
ten months earlier he would have not been eligible for
the death penalty.
Speaker 11 (23:37):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (23:38):
The state said, listen, he was old enough to become
a police officer and old enough to know right from wrong.
The jury will begin deliberating this afternoon. Now eight of
the twelve jurors must agree to recommend death. But his
attorney is saying, listen, he criminally took responsibility by pleading guilty.
Let him live out the rest of his life in prison.
In the state saying nah, yeah, now, we're good, all right.
A former Kissime Police Office officer is due to be
(24:01):
sentenced Tuesday on child porn charges.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
The authority, say.
Speaker 6 (24:04):
Officer Dariel Javier Quiles Davila met the child victim while
on duty. In October twenty twenty three, a jury convicted
him of receiving child sex abuse material. He faces up
to twenty very hard years in federal prison.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
A cop A cop pedophile exactly?
Speaker 4 (24:22):
Well, yeah, no, not not good at all. Cow gone,
all right, who has to fill up? Because good news
if you do.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
Oh, yeah, it's low right now.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
Gas prices and session gas stations are where you can
usually buy Powerball tickets.
Speaker 4 (24:35):
There you go, two wins.
Speaker 6 (24:38):
Gas prices in central Florida have dropped for three consecutive weeks,
so the average in Orlando was two seventy seven for
regular unleaded.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
Yeah, this is like free.
Speaker 12 (24:47):
It is.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
I saw seventy six today. Actually nothing, but I did.
Oh I didn't buy it, I just saw it. That's
down by the time I got up work today. It'll
be three when I got up work guaranteed.
Speaker 13 (25:01):
Now.
Speaker 6 (25:01):
That's down nearly twenty cents since this time last month,
according to Triple A, and they're well below last year's
average of.
Speaker 4 (25:07):
Three to twelve.
Speaker 6 (25:08):
The priciest market's no surprise, West Palm Beach, Gainesville and Naples,
while the cheapest are in Crestview, Panama City and Pensacola. Nationally,
the average price for a gallon of gas is two
ninety And did you guys hear the news about Sweet
Tomatoes coming back to I believe it's Fort Myers. Oh really, Yeah,
there's one location they're reopening in Florida, but they're hopening
with that, hoping, not opening, they're hoping that with that one,
(25:31):
and they're one in two sun Arizona that reopened that
it's going to signal a broader reopening of the brand
coming back since it closed after the pandemic.
Speaker 14 (25:39):
Ye.
Speaker 4 (25:39):
So for those who have been waiting for the soup
and salad bar to come back.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Oh yea, yeah, there's hope. Anything that has a sneeze
guard did not do well. People were not looking, people
were not dressing the old sneeze guard.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
Now, when I saw the video of one woman like
licking the spoon of the salad dressing, I was like, wow,
all right, a SpaceX.
Speaker 5 (26:02):
Falcon thunker right loosely in your hand to just right
down the center of her forehead.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
No, it's not my fault. I dropped a raisin in there.
Speaker 6 (26:13):
I had to get it, But I like that thought
that Jack had just leave a nice little ring of
ranch dressing right there in her hair and her forehead.
Speaker 4 (26:20):
Right there, you dummy.
Speaker 6 (26:22):
SpaceX Falcon nine rocket was delayed from this morning to
Tuesday morning at Kennedy Space Center.
Speaker 4 (26:27):
Oh, Jimmy, don't worry.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
It's going to have close to thirty Starlink satellites heading
into low Earth orbit, while a United Launch Alliance Atlas
five for Amazon LEO is also set for early tomorrow
from Cape Canaveral. That means two busy launch days expected
on the space coast Before that, though, the six and
seven Miami Dolphins face these seven and six Steelers in
(26:49):
a frigid Pittsburgh and Monday Night football where a loss,
the Fins are out of playoff contention. Despite writing a
four game winning streak and besting the Steelers in three
of the last four, the voice of the Miami Dolphins,
Jimmy Seffalo, knows the odds are against the Finns.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
Steelers have not lost a home Monday Night game since
nineteen ninety one. They won two straight.
Speaker 4 (27:11):
That guy has a voice for radio.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
It sounds like Mark. He sounds exactly like the code.
Speaker 4 (27:17):
Yeah, well, nursing a rib injury.
Speaker 6 (27:19):
Finn's running back Devon a Chan with his more than
eleven hundred rushing yard yards, is expected to play. Meanwhile,
Steeler's edge rusher TJ. Watt is that with a partially
collapsed lung?
Speaker 3 (27:31):
Is it really? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (27:32):
Yeah, he went to the hospital last week during practice.
Speaker 3 (27:36):
What happened?
Speaker 5 (27:37):
He just took a shot, I guess so. But he's done,
he's recovering. I think they said he might be back.
He already had surgery.
Speaker 3 (27:43):
Damn, dude, really but he won't be back for tonight.
Speaker 5 (27:47):
However, the weather, everything I like about it is in
favor for me, is in favor of Pittsburgh, except for
that Watt being injured.
Speaker 4 (27:56):
Yeah, exactly exactly. But again both cool water, cold weather.
There's the Dolphins and yeeler. Oh yeah, so they'll be
playing in Pittsburgh.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Yeah, not good.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
You see the game of the Bills obviously saw the
Bills of Baits game. Man, Yeah, yeah, when it teed
up and they heat that field. I was telling my wife,
I said, watch this by the end of this game,
because it started snowing pretty early. I was like, by
the end of this game. This field's gonna be covered
except for the lines because they heat the lines. But
apparently they heat that entire field because it did not
even gather one, not one flake of snow. But if
(28:28):
you look into the stands, everybody's like they look like
igloos out there as the snow just gathered on them
as they were covered in blankets and whatnot.
Speaker 5 (28:34):
I think the same thing in Green Bay. It's just
like hot water pipes they have right out of the
ground that they just run hot water through.
Speaker 6 (28:40):
Meanwhile, you made you have to make sure you stop
by shop go to get some of those handwarmers that
you can stick them in every single pocket that you have,
you know, you know, yeah, well you're out there in
the fridge and well we're skiing.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
We put them. We were told by the locals. When
you get those pads, you put them under your toes.
You literally shove them into your socks and make sure
they're under your toes. That will keep the rest of
your body and your foot and leg warm. That's what
I've that's what I was told.
Speaker 6 (29:03):
Well, you want to put them underneath your sock. You
don't want them directly touching your skin.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Oh yeah, is that what I was in.
Speaker 6 (29:09):
Well, you said underneath your toes, but you'd want to
cue with fabric whole. Yeah, yeah, put them under your
toes with your socks because you don't want that touching your.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Keep your old body.
Speaker 15 (29:18):
Worm.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
It will, it really will. You won't notice the cold.
Speaker 6 (29:20):
I saw a game in November at Lambeau, and with
those handwarmers and appropriate places, you're okay, all right?
Speaker 12 (29:28):
Moving on.
Speaker 6 (29:29):
So a polor ball player in the Tampa Bay area
is a million dollars richer after Saturday night's drawing. I
would take a million. Oh yeah, you take a million?
Would you be cool with a millie?
Speaker 5 (29:40):
Wait a minute, he's fine if Jim wins no game.
Speaker 6 (29:47):
The winning ticket was sold at a Publix in clear
Water and matched all five base numbers. The jackpot rolled
over and now stands at one point one billion dollars
for tonight, the sick largest But can you imagine that
is the sixth largest and powerable history.
Speaker 4 (30:04):
It's not even the largest.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
Ye this time of year though, it is magical it is.
I tell you, I don't care what you say. This
time of year, you dream a little harder when it
comes to getting that coin.
Speaker 5 (30:15):
Well, real quick on the TJ.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
Watt thing. Dry needling Have you heard of that?
Speaker 10 (30:21):
No?
Speaker 3 (30:21):
What is that? So he wasn't hit.
Speaker 5 (30:23):
Dry needling is a process kind of like acupuncture, and
it collapsed as long.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
No way way.
Speaker 6 (30:30):
Dry needling is that kind of like an acupuncture type
of thing. It's like it, Yeah, but they put him
as Oh man.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
It's when I don't talk dirty enough to my wife.
Speaker 10 (30:41):
Oh.
Speaker 6 (30:42):
The next drawing is tonight at eleven fifty nine PM
from the Florida Lottery draw Studio in Tallahassee.
Speaker 4 (30:48):
Number two pencil over there. Huh oh taekwonder roga, I.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
Got it home. I don't want to be here right now,
None of us do.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
Again.
Speaker 6 (30:57):
The next drawing is tonight is eleven fifteen or ten
ftfty nine pm from the Florida Lottery draw Studio in
Tallahassee with a cash option of more than five hundred
and three million dollars.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
We're talking now, it's serious money, dright. Kneedling also is
when your wife is sober but still bitches at you.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
And that concludes your JCS news.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
In trouble all right? Seven seven seven zero three one
back in a second with more of the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 2 (31:31):
Oh Jimmy, you had me laughing out loud.
Speaker 7 (31:36):
Your your whole your you're drying needling joke that went
over Jack and Dead's head.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
He did not busting a gut instantly. That was good.
Speaker 7 (31:45):
That was a good joke as well timed.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Excellent work. Thank you friend.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
Sounds like you've got a boyfriend.
Speaker 3 (31:52):
Yeah, how about that?
Speaker 10 (31:54):
Hey there, Prince of the Island. You know, I just
heard your last talk back where you got cut off again,
and I wanted to give you a little bit of
advice on how to leave a properly timed talkback so
that you are not always getting you know, cut off.
You sound like you have some interesting topics to share
with us, so we want to be sure to hear everything.
(32:16):
So anyways, the secret to leaving a properly timed talkback
is to.
Speaker 3 (32:25):
All right, welcome back to the Jim Golber Show, wrote
Radio one oh four point one. I'm Jim. There's deb
head now Jack is here as well. Yeah, we do
have our question of the day. It's up in our
YouTube feed. You can find that go real Radio dot
FM slash watch. That'll take you right to our feet
where you can watch us do the show, Jack, Did
you understand the question today? Yeah, I'm actually working on
(32:45):
the wording of it right now to make that part
of the answer. But yeah, what let me ask deb
this and see what she says. All right, So we
had this thing a little bit the other day. You know,
is being at seventy three different degrees in your home
different when it's cool to seventy three or heated to
seventy three or whatever.
Speaker 2 (33:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (33:03):
How much of a difference that is? Let me ask
you this question, because I noticed this today, and I
think this changes as you age a bit. What is
what is better walking into an air conditioned room in
the dead of summer or walking into a heated room
in the winter.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
I'll take the air conditioning. You'll take the air conditioning, because.
Speaker 6 (33:23):
I mean, seventy three in my house would make it
almost untenable. Right now, we have it set at sixty nine.
Oh really, and that keeps it just perfectly comfortable. Woke
up at sixty six sixty seven.
Speaker 3 (33:33):
Wow, you keep your house wake colder almost anybody I know.
I don't know anybody that keeps their house in the sixties.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
Well, we don't keep it in the sixties except in
the winter time.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
Oh, I see what you're saying. Oh, I see you. Yeah,
eight to that, I got you.
Speaker 4 (33:45):
Well heat to that, because if you go any above that, it's.
Speaker 3 (33:47):
Just stifling, that weird feeling. Yeah, So I was trying
to figure out that most people thought it would be better.
And it's weird asking that in Florida, because of course
everybody knows in Florida. When it's you know, it's June, July, August, September,
and you dive out of anywhere into an air cognitioned room,
it's like walking into heaven. You can only think that
Jesus is gonna be on the other side of that door,
welcome you in, you know, finally I see you, my son,
(34:09):
kind of scenario. But I walked in today after going
outside dealing with the car stuff today and I just
had it on shorts and a T shirt. And it's
not cold by any means. But you know, if you're
out in weather that's like in the sixty one sixty
two degree range for an extended period of time but
no other protection, it can get a little it can
get a little nippy. And I walked into my house
little need and yeah, and it wasn't even like super warm,
(34:31):
but it was way better than it was outside, and
I was like, I don't know which one I like more.
Speaker 4 (34:34):
It's toasting.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
I think maybe walking into a heated room after being
balls cold is better than walking into an ac roomed
or ace room while being like steamy hot.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
I don't know. I'll check in with you again come August.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
I'm very interested to see how the audience is going
to take that. Jack is wording it now, putting it
up at Jim corpt Live dot com or a real
radio dot FM slash watch. That's our YouTube channel. That's
where we do that. So for you guys who are
over there can get involved, and if you're not involved,
you can hop on the YouTube feed, be a member
and then hop in there and do that.
Speaker 4 (35:06):
We appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (35:07):
I just read something more about the Rob Ryaner thing.
Of course, we're gonna have breaking news about this throughout
the day is as this comes down. This you know,
obviously happened yesterday afternooner on one or three o'clocker. I
guess they were found yeah, by his daughter, by his daughter,
And of course what I heard and just read actually
that just popped up that said, I guess there was
an after party, like the Conan O'Brien's show has like
(35:28):
an after party or something, you guys. I yeah, so
he has that show. What's the one that the one
that that Ross likes so much? What's it called Jack?
Speaker 5 (35:38):
Well, he has a travel show, but he does his
main thing is his podcast right now, like ConA no
Frien needs ConA O'Brien needs a Frost.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
That's the one I'm talking.
Speaker 5 (35:47):
Okay, that's his podcast.
Speaker 3 (35:48):
Okays, a podcast. Well, I guess they were at an
event after a Conan O'Brien show of some sort, whether
it be the podcast, maybe a sand Up show, I
do not know, and they got into a pretty heated
argument at that. The murders happened after that argument. Wow,
so there's some precedent going into the case. I mean,
they've already arrested the son and he's got a four
million dollar bail, so we know that he's the prime suspect.
Speaker 5 (36:11):
But you know, the latest statement says he is responsible
for the death of Robin Miche.
Speaker 3 (36:16):
Yeah, yeah, so you know, of course, now you wonder
what led to that. We know now he had a
history of drug abuse and being homeless. I did during
an interview that he was doing with his dad that
is now dead. Of course, he mentioned that he's homeless here,
homeless there, homeless here, homeless there. Rob Ryder did finance
a film project of his called Being in Charlie Charlie,
(36:37):
which basically was documenting his own struggles with drugs and
alcohol and being homeless.
Speaker 2 (36:43):
Well.
Speaker 6 (36:43):
In a twenty sixteen interview with People magazine, Nick Reiner,
who's thirty two right now, had said that he first
entered rehab when he was fifteen years old, and again
remember he's twenty two at the time of this interview,
and said that he would go another seventeen.
Speaker 4 (37:00):
Times to rehab.
Speaker 6 (37:01):
Yeah, and the homelessness came from apparently being told that
if he wanted to do rehab his way and not
go to the programs that were suggested for him, that
you weren't going to be able to come home. You
have to take responsibility for your choices. And that's apparently
what it happened. Said there were some very dark years,
but that they had made peace. And again when we
talked about Being Charlie, the movie loosely based on Nick's life,
(37:25):
his father had directed it, and I believe it also
you know bankrolled it as well.
Speaker 3 (37:30):
Yeah he did, and you know you and again we
know people who have you know, sideways relationships with their kids.
I mean, these these celebrity relationships are so different than
you can imagine anything ever being. You know, you you're
the son of someone famous, you know, and then the
grandson of someone famous. And there's four I guess there's
three four total kids.
Speaker 6 (37:50):
Three he has three, well four, he adopted Penny Marshall's
daughter Tracy, but the three children he had with Michelle, Yeah,
two boys and a girl.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
Right, Yeah, getting the pressure, he's got to be extreme.
Speaker 5 (38:01):
But uh, the argument of kurda Codin O'Brien's annual Christmas
party there you go, which is a famous thing, is
it really?
Speaker 3 (38:08):
Yeah? So apparently I didn't go this year. Yeah. Awesome
invite though, Yeah, very nice. It's a bit of a trap.
Speaker 4 (38:13):
Yeah, I bet with that.
Speaker 6 (38:15):
With that being the case, if the argument happened with
in front of some of these other celebrities, because detectives
had said they're going to be interviewing multiple family members
to find out what the relationship between Nick and Rob
Reiner was.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
I mean, does it need to I mean, do you
really need to dig all that deep. I mean, you know,
I mean, he's still going to get his day in court. Yeah,
no question, he's going to I mean he's you know obviously,
but I mean, you know, when when they say he's responsible, obviously,
I think we kind of know he was in there.
The knife is there. They're both dead from stab wounds
or wounds. What do they say? It's so funny when
they don't want to say something exactly right though.
Speaker 4 (38:51):
Wounds that are lacerating in nature, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (38:55):
Yeah, the same as being stabbed are consistent with a stabbings.
So don't know if he was asking for money or
doing whatever the case, or like you were saying, you
wanted to be back in his dad's graces because of
rehab and something happened there. I'm sure we'll hear more
as we find out what the argument was about as
people start talking.
Speaker 5 (39:13):
The latest statement from the Los Angeles PD says the
son of Hollywood director Rob Ryander is responsible for the
deaths of his father and mother.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
And that's from the LAPD. Okay, so that he is,
I mean, he's the guy. Yeah, and they have him
on a four million dollars bond. That's another sign he's
the guy.
Speaker 5 (39:30):
So I got this news at nine point thirty last night, right,
which six thirty, you know, California time, So I'm watching football,
and that totally shocked me.
Speaker 3 (39:40):
I'm a fan of Brian. I thought it was fake. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (39:43):
Yeah, Well unfortunately I didn't because the source that is
the source we get I get breaking news from in
you know, in my email right right.
Speaker 3 (39:51):
I was on Facebook when it happened, so I was like,
you know, this could be anything.
Speaker 5 (39:54):
So it's I went on X to see what and
already yeah, someone said suns responsible.
Speaker 3 (40:02):
Yeah, I saw that.
Speaker 5 (40:02):
I mean this was at nine point thirty last night.
They were putting that out there, way before even TMZ
was floating the idea, right yeah yeah. And then someone
else saying, you know, saying it's because he was TDS
Trump Arrangement syndrome. Since he was he did not like
President Trump. You know, people on X were already blaming.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
Yeah, well, I mean Trump himself did it in his
Trump in his true social statement and maybe one of
those bombastic Trumpian statements about how that's what probably or
could have led to his death without any information or anything,
but out there inserts himself into the always yeah, so
that happened, and we'll see how that goes, because I
mean eventually people will start talking about the argument of
(40:47):
that party. You know, they will start talking. I mean
you will find out eventually through either witness testimony or
through just people hopping on social and saying I was
there last night. It was sad. Yeah, Saul, Nick and
Rob are arguing about blah blah blah blah blah or whatever.
But we will know for sure, all right from four
seven nine six one four one text us I know
at seven to seven zero three one back in one second.
(41:09):
More of the Jimi Colberger shows Tavee s.
Speaker 12 (41:16):
As someone who grew up in Orlando and knows how
good it feels to walk into air conditioning when its
balls out outside in August September, and then also as
someone who went to school in Cleveland who knows how
good it feels to walk inside of house that's set
at seventy when it's negative five degrees outside. I can
(41:36):
tell you if feel much better walking inside to heat
it grow, yeah, from the outside freezing cold than it
does vice versa.
Speaker 16 (41:43):
I'm so happy you brought up the temperature things. I've
been thinking about this a lot lately. So this is
that weird time of year where one day it's eighty
and the next day it's fifty, and it changes like that.
My crappy old AC doesn't just regulate the temperature you set.
You have to switch to AC or heat. So on
the warmer day, I set the AC to sixty nine.
On the cooler days, I set the heat to sixty eight. However,
(42:06):
when the AC is on and it's sixty nine, it
feels cold. But when the heat is on and it's
sixty eight, it feels hot. It's one degree difference.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
No world that we talked about that way different.
Speaker 4 (42:17):
The world of difference.
Speaker 5 (42:18):
It is the humidity, right, No, no, no, no, it's
because the heat coming from the heater is warmer than that.
It's a lot warmer than that, So the room gets
it up to sixty eight.
Speaker 3 (42:28):
All right.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
What you are feeling is that hotter air coming in
to make the ambient temperature sixty.
Speaker 3 (42:35):
Eight, got it.
Speaker 5 (42:36):
And the reverse is true for the cooling. It's got
to come through cooler than the room to lower the
temperature than on it. So when you feel that cooler
air moving past you, it's not sixty nine. It's actually
cooler than that to get the room down to sixteen nine.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
And might I suggest for your crappy AC.
Speaker 5 (42:53):
Just call Mills there, yeah yeah, yeah yeah, and be
thankful if your AC works at all, don't call it names,
ye say thank you.
Speaker 3 (43:02):
Is this the time of year you're also supposed to
reverse your ceiling fan or is it the other way around?
So what is that member ever?
Speaker 17 (43:08):
Ever?
Speaker 3 (43:08):
By the way, welcome back. I'm Jim Devin Jacker here
as well. What is the science there? You're okay? So
hot air rises, so really what you want is the
in the winter, you want the fan pushing down because
you wanted to take the hot air that's rising and
recirculated into the room. During the summer, cold air more
dense resting toward the floor, you actually want that fan
(43:28):
pulling that air up off the floor and circulating it
up against there.
Speaker 5 (43:32):
I believe, Yeah, I'm not changing anything, And let me ask,
you're lucky if I.
Speaker 3 (43:36):
Dust that though, because you you never said it, I
think deb answered. What is yours?
Speaker 9 (43:42):
Like?
Speaker 3 (43:42):
You if you walk in from because you're from Jersey,
so obviously you've had both of these experiences. You've lived
in a very cold climate. You've lived in a very
hot climate. Yeah, you know, so walking into an air
conditioned building when it's like August fifteenth, or walking into
a heated room in the dead of January in Jersey better.
Speaker 5 (44:01):
I love when when you are hot human just that
break when you walk into the ace. It's just so great.
Speaker 3 (44:08):
There's nothing like it. As a Floridian.
Speaker 5 (44:10):
However, I think it is trumped by when you are
bone chilling cold and you get into that heated room.
Speaker 3 (44:18):
It's it's changes the game. I agree, one thousand parts.
I have to touch.
Speaker 5 (44:24):
You can't do anything at least in the heat. Yeah,
it's oppressive. But when you are that cold, like we
were in New York. When we were out there, no
one that was so cold you couldn't even feel your limbs.
Speaker 3 (44:36):
Yeah, and we were in the city.
Speaker 5 (44:37):
So you in the city, you get the wind whipping
through down the roads, channel like channels like this, just
canyon of cold.
Speaker 3 (44:44):
They're coming at you. Oh buddy, that's how Sant Augustine
is designed, Like a lot of those coastal areas and
areas like that were designed by the original US to
take the predominating winds and blow it through the street.
Sin San Augustine has laid out. I think the northeastern
wind or whatever is the predominant wind. I could have
(45:04):
that wrong, but if you look at how those buildings
are designed, it's built to take the predominant breeze from
the ocean and filtered in through the city and have
it go back in blocks. And you can do that,
you can actually feel it. Kind of crazy. I'm with you, though.
I think coming in from the cold into the heat
is going to be the winter today. And I think
Florida is a unique place because we have a lot
(45:25):
of transplants here that can experience both of those. They've
been hot and they've been cold. I think for for Floridians,
I think most Floridians have like acclimated themselves to the
heat enough where, yeah, going into the ac is great,
but you know, during the summer you're outside most of
the time, hanging out anyway, and if.
Speaker 5 (45:42):
Glass of water can save you, but if you're freezing,
you need the heat.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
To save you, all right. Four oh seven nine one
six one o four to one text us at seven
seven zero three one. So Devi and I were talking
about this case before the show today, and it is
it is one of the more interesting cases that you
know that we've seen in quite a while here in Orlando.
I don't know if Jack is looking at me puzzled,
like maybe he doesn't know what we're talking about. So
(46:08):
back in Kentucky about forty years ago, oh, yeah, there
was a girl named Michelle Newton and she was abducted
in nineteen eighty three by her mother.
Speaker 6 (46:19):
Yep, all right out of Louisville, Kentucky, and the mother
did not have custody of her.
Speaker 3 (46:23):
She disappeared. She was only three years old. She was
abducted by her mom, Deborah Newton. The woman did not
have custody of the child, and she disappeared, literally vanished
into thin air. And even though it's in the US,
they were not able to find her until recently. Yeah, the.
Speaker 6 (46:42):
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children had done an
age progression photo showing what Michelle may have looked like
now at forty five.
Speaker 4 (46:51):
Years old versus when she was just three.
Speaker 6 (46:54):
What's interesting is the mother was arrested last week walking
her dog in the villages.
Speaker 3 (46:59):
Yeah, living a normal life. And when they went to
the girl and told her what had happened, she did
not know who she was. They literally walked up to
her and said, I'm sorry, but your reality isn't real.
Speaker 6 (47:10):
Yeah, you are not the person you think you You
are not the person you think you are. You are
actually the victim of a kidnapping.
Speaker 3 (47:16):
Man, Let me ask you something about that. Is Yes,
she solved the crime. It is her mom. Man, Is
that what you do?
Speaker 4 (47:25):
Like?
Speaker 3 (47:25):
You drop that bomb on somebody who's forty three years old.
Have lived their entire life, built their entire reality, living
their life, doing okay, making it through every day. The
reality is mom lives in the villages. We're down here,
I'm this person. Is it an advantage to tell that
person that their life has been a lie? It's your
(47:47):
obligation to tell me. Yeah, absolutely, even though it may
have a completely and unbelievably life unwinding detrimental effect on
the person. Yeah, you believe, it still has to be done. Well,
she's this person. If this person went off the rails
the day after this and her life spiraled out of control,
would you say the same thing.
Speaker 6 (48:04):
Well, here's the here's the real deal, Jimmy. If the
cops didn't tell her, she's going to learn it at
her mother's trial.
Speaker 3 (48:10):
Yeah, obviously, I know.
Speaker 6 (48:11):
So either way, she's not escaping the reality of what
her mother created, and it's not the cops responsibility. Those
questions should be reserved for the woman who decided to
do it, no.
Speaker 3 (48:20):
Question for sure. And we don't know that. We don't
know any of the circumstances behind the genie.
Speaker 6 (48:24):
She didn't have custody. That tells you something had to
have been a miss from the very beginning. Maybe so,
especially because when you think forty years ago, right, weren't
child custody cases pretty much ninety nine point nine percent
the mom would get custody, right, Yeah, So there had
to have been some precedent here for her not to
have custody and then to take her child.
Speaker 3 (48:44):
And it's wild because I see the story here today,
and you know, it's a relatively comprehensive story, but it
doesn't say anything about what happened with the if the
dad is still around, or what happened there, if the
dad looked for her, or whatever the searchons were. It
just shows that, hey, they just walked up to this
person and then said, you know you're under arrest because
forty three or forty years ago you abducted your daughter.
(49:05):
We know it. Where is she we need to tell
her that the life, the only life she's known, is fake. Well,
her life isn't. What's fake about her life? Well is
her mother? Yeah, but her reality is not true to me.
Speaker 18 (49:19):
Know.
Speaker 5 (49:19):
No, Differently, if you were she lied about her past,
like yeah, yeah, she lied about.
Speaker 3 (49:23):
It, But you don't know what her pather. You don't
know what her path would have been without that abduction.
You don't know. You don't know any of that, what
that what would have been? No, So I think that
makes it kind of disingenuous because you don't really know
what was bound you know what I'm saying. No, Like
the mom took her and took her away from the
reality she had. You don't know what you don't know,
That's what I'm saying. We do not know the answer
to that. We will never know the answer to that.
(49:45):
All we know is the reality she had there, Yeah,
which is kind of not real because I mean, it
is real in the sense that had happened, but it
isn't under the pretenses that her life was supposed to continue.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
Now, imagine the question she's going to have for her mom.
Speaker 3 (49:58):
Oh, no question. And I wonder how many other peop
dealt with this, like, I know, this seems kind of
odd been a man, I bet this probably wasn't that
out of the ordinary still back in the day, because
women also weren't empowered back then. So even if the
woman had a legitimate case against a dad or whatever,
women weren't listening to back then. That way, they could
have easily just dismissed everything she was saying and saying, oh, well,
(50:18):
what's the word they use back in the day, hysteria, hysteria, hysterical.
Speaker 6 (50:22):
I don't know exactly your mom got custody. My mom
got custody. I don't remember any of hysteria coming into
play with that. Yeah, you're right, So I just again,
these are questions for the mom, you know why, and
then talking to other family members. So what I think
this does is it could open the door for her
getting a lot of questions answered that maybe her mom
was always a little hesitant to answer or share information
(50:45):
about like what was like where was I born?
Speaker 4 (50:48):
You know, who knows what kind of fabricated story she
was told.
Speaker 3 (50:50):
So I didn't. I mean, it doesn't in the story
that you read, dev does it say anything about what
the girl is doing today, Like what the young.
Speaker 6 (50:56):
Lady is doing or I I just saw a short
video interview with her saying, you know, imagine officers knock
on the door and tell you your reality. You are
not who you think you are, that you're actually the
victim of a kidnapping. So yeah, she's been turned upside down.
Speaker 3 (51:11):
The wait on side for Christmas?
Speaker 17 (51:13):
Huh.
Speaker 5 (51:13):
So if you are presented with an opportunity to say,
mister Colbert, we have some information about your childhood, and
you know, would you like the truth or would you
like to continue to believe the life you had? Oh God,
are you going to say no to that?
Speaker 3 (51:29):
That's a great question. How many zeros does the truth?
And I'm joking, could you imagine? Man, I don't know, Jack,
that's a great question. I don't know. I think my
curiosity might get the best of me. But in that
same sense, you know, if you've got a pretty good
thing going in life, and if you've been very fortunate
and you've had a good existence and everything like that,
(51:50):
would you want to say yes and accept that wrench
thrown into the machine that you know is your life
at fifty eight years old? Or do you just want
to continue forward and the existence that you know that
is true and actual. The people that are around you
are those people. They love you, you all those friends
and family, and that reality.
Speaker 5 (52:07):
What your reality is right now is true and as
it is for her as well, despite the you know,
the relationship with her mother is forever altered.
Speaker 3 (52:15):
Yeah, well there's a question there. Yeah, she does have
a lot of explaining to do. Lucy would say, you
got some splaining to do.
Speaker 6 (52:23):
Yeah, But this also allows her to reconnect with family
that she's been kept away from for forty years.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
I would agree with that for forty years.
Speaker 6 (52:30):
There could be aunts and uncles and cousins and possibly
a father who is still alive who's been waiting for
forty years for answers. So while we're focusing on the
daughter and the mother, and shouldn't we just leave enough
well alone, No, because there's still another side of family
that's waiting for answers for four decades.
Speaker 5 (52:47):
And if she found out that people around her knew
that was true and they kept her in the dark,
I think that would be.
Speaker 4 (52:54):
That's what would be yea.
Speaker 3 (52:57):
And really she is empowered to find out as much
or as little as she wants to know about the
families she was pulled from Yeah, could she could easily
just from afar look at it and go don't want
anything to do with that? Or you know, hey, you
know I have a brother or sister, I have an
uncle and aunt, you know, a dad, stepdad, mom, whatever
the case may be.
Speaker 6 (53:15):
I would imagine she'd want to reconnect before cutting off
those ties because she doesn't even she didn't even know
they existed.
Speaker 12 (53:21):
Man.
Speaker 3 (53:21):
I wonder what people out there. I wonder if people
feel the same way out there listening. I wonder if
if they would feel that they would just kind of
want to continue on with the life they had, especially
if it was going well, or if they would want
to possibly open box three and let's make a deal
and you know, just kind of inject something into their
life they wouldn't know about, all right, four O seven
nine one six one four one. You can always text
us at seven to seven zero three to one back
(53:42):
in a second with more than Jim Colbert show.
Speaker 19 (53:55):
Hi, It's evil Life. I was adopted as a baby,
and I didn't know I was adopted until I was thirteen,
and then finally got to talk to my real natural
father in twenty nineteen, and then found out my mother's
(54:15):
my natural mother's name and.
Speaker 17 (54:20):
So.
Speaker 19 (54:20):
But my parents were my parents, and I didn't care.
Speaker 3 (54:25):
Wild kind of lost me at the end there. We
did get a lot of text about this. By the way, guys,
somebody says here, Ronda, I wasn't kidnapped, but adopted by
a bad family. I didn't know until I was twenty
four years old. Not cool, still going through some trauma
right below that found out my biological mother at twenty
one years old. I think I would have benefited from
knowing about her as a young person. A girl I
(54:51):
did in high school didn't know, was adopted as well,
into an affluent family, and she actually, if I remember right,
went on a quest just after graduating from high school
to find her her mom. And did I believe I
think those are coin flip experiences, really, I do. I
(55:13):
think that, you know, you feel compelled to find out
why you know. I think that's the number one reason
people want to do that is find out, you know,
why would you give me up? Why you know that
whole why wasn't I good enough? Thing? Not knowing the scenario,
but you know, they want the quest to find out
what exactly led to that decision, and then sometimes that
answer isn't exactly what you want to hear if the
person who's answering it doesn't have really any empathy when
(55:36):
it comes to your scenario now and just kind of
want to didn't want to deal with the overwhelming responsibility
of having a child. Just the idea that there is
information out there about your life that you were unaware
of it.
Speaker 5 (55:51):
I think it has to be extremely hard not to.
I almost see unnatural as not wanting to know.
Speaker 3 (55:59):
Yeah, I would think so as well. Jack. I have
to take that in consideration. By the way, Welcome back
to the Jim Colbert Show. Here on Real Ready one
ozer four point one. I'm Jim. There's Debb Hello. Jack's
here as well, talking about this case out of Kentucky
where a woman in the villages had abducted her child
at just three years old. They just found her and
she did get taken into arrest. The woman who's down
forty three, I had no idea any of that had happened,
(56:20):
so no clue whatsoever. So we kind of brought that
up to the audience, and people now in the texting
service are kind of sharing their scenarios, and.
Speaker 5 (56:26):
That's a lot there's a lot of long texts explaining
about a similar situation.
Speaker 3 (56:30):
Yeah, I would agree. As a matter of fact, when
I brought this story up, I think if you looked
like one of the first things I said was I
wonder how many people in our audience deal with this.
But in that same sense, check I would agree is
specifically with AI now and the ability for AI to
deep dive into every possible piece of recorded information that
has your name or social attach to it. I would
(56:51):
think it would be almost unnatural for you not to
want to know at least something if you found out
that your existence wasn't that normal path.
Speaker 6 (56:59):
You know, even you know in the case of a
parent who or the child who had a parent who
just never really contacted you anymore, right like why?
Speaker 4 (57:09):
But you may not get those answers.
Speaker 6 (57:10):
So sometimes you have to be honest with yourself going
into a family reunion and really, what am I after
for this? Because if I don't get it right, right right,
what's that going to do? Is it best to just
leave that schep intact or do I want to peel
it off and take my chances. That's what I went
through when you know, thinking about trying to reconnect with
my father, my birth father. I knew him up until
(57:31):
I was eleven, and then you know, it turns out
it was it was best that it was that I
didn't make contact again, because I ended up reconnecting with
an uncle who said he was searching for me.
Speaker 4 (57:43):
My uncle, but my dad wasn't.
Speaker 3 (57:45):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (57:46):
So that made me say, Okay, that apology you were
looking to get, you probably weren't going to get.
Speaker 4 (57:52):
And what would that do if you didn't?
Speaker 3 (57:53):
Yeah, I mean, I guess that is your own mindset.
Actually a guy who text us all the time, Rob,
he texts and said that is mom just picked him
and his brother up and moved across the country and
he never saw his dad again. If I read the
text right, didn't really ask why, and said that he
didn't think that reintroducing his father into his life would
change his life in me at all.
Speaker 6 (58:13):
Well, it would have, It would have changed the dyndamic,
But is it necessary? And to that end, I get
what he's saying. You know, if mom made what she
thought was the best choice, and that was the choice
that she made, but that was his mother's choice.
Speaker 4 (58:26):
I was going to be confronting my father's choice.
Speaker 3 (58:28):
Right right, right right, And even with the mom making
the decision for the kids. I mean, you have to.
You know, you hope that mom is doing it for
the right reason. You hope that mom is trying to
take you in a scenario to pull you away from
somebody that down the road could be bad. But you
also hope Mom isn't just doing this to punish Dad,
right exactly, because you know, Mom got pissed off at
(58:49):
Dad and said, well, you know, I'm taking your kids.
If you're gonna be that way, I'm taking your kids,
You're never going to see him again.
Speaker 5 (58:54):
And how do you know without doing your own investigation?
Speaker 3 (58:57):
How do you do that if you don't know? You know, Man,
the thought of injecting yourself at forty or later into
a family scenario that's established that you should have been
part of, that we're not. That must be. That must
be one of the more uncomfortable Thanksgiving scenarios. Like when
you sit down at a table and you're surrounded by
(59:17):
people that you are kind of you're related to because
of blood, but you were abducted as a young person.
You've now rediscovered that family and there you are sitting
around and you know you have a completely different existence
although you have blood relation. You know, where do you
even begin with that conversation?
Speaker 4 (59:35):
The beginning?
Speaker 3 (59:36):
I guess, really right? I mean, how do you know
what isn't or isn't offensive, you know, or what you
can or can't say to somebody like that. You don't
really know how they've dealt with life going in You
don't know what is a sensitive question. I think that
would be really bizarre, man. I mean not saying it
wouldn't be achievable by any means. I see your ruffled brow.
What are you thinking?
Speaker 6 (59:56):
Well, again, I'm thinking that she's not inserting herself. I'm
thinking that at least you know. The way that the
stories are written is that a family who's been searching
for forty years now has answers. So I would like
to think that the family that's waiting, the aunts, the uncles,
potentially a father, have been waiting to embrace her into
their family and share what's been going on, and share
(01:00:16):
how much they've missed her, and you know, this is
who we are. And all you can do is put
one foot in front of the other and just take
a step at a time. It's you're not going to
get all of the answers at once. Maybe you will,
maybe you won't, but I mean it's either that or
just close the door forever and say I don't even
want to be bothered with it.
Speaker 3 (01:00:33):
Yeh, yeah, I get. What I'm saying is is how
uncomfortable that's going to be because there is this kind
of in my opinion, I mean, there's this kind of
understood connection there that you should kind of know. You know,
you're learning about somebody that is part of you, part
of your blood, part of your heritage, and you don't
know anything about it. I just think that would be
very bizarre. I didn't say it wasn't doable. I'm just
saying the idea of reacclimating yourself into a pond that
(01:00:55):
you're from, you know, after so many years and a
completely different reality with no knowledge of those people. You
can assume this mom was going going, oh and your
aunt and your uncle. She had to be very careful
of who she didn't didn't talk about.
Speaker 6 (01:01:07):
And again that's why I think for this woman it's
it's it's an age of discovery for her because these
questions that maybe she's posed to her mom over the years,
that mom was always a little you know, dicey or
not very open and honest about now she can finally
get the answers to those questions.
Speaker 3 (01:01:22):
And I would take some phone calls this in a second.
This is where you know, taking calls back in the
day used to be great because you could hear these
stories from the mouth of the people who actually live
these stories. It's so hard to type out on a
texting service and get the real vibe of it all.
Speaker 12 (01:01:35):
You know.
Speaker 5 (01:01:35):
Yeah, we have some pretty lengthy texts. However, if you call,
then we can actually hear the story. Otherwise it's just yeah, yeah,
there's so much to follow and then read and then
relay it. It would be lost in translation.
Speaker 3 (01:01:46):
All right four seven nine one six one four one
text us at seven seven zero three one. If you
want to hop onm we'll take some calls before we
go to break it about ten minutes or so to
get as many as in. But I mean they're coming
in left and right about you know, you know, was
adopted at twelve, don't know where I came from or
who i'm you know, who I'm from, or what family
I'm with? Right? Crazy is that I would think it'd
be very upsetting listening to them talk about events from
(01:02:08):
their past. That you should have been a part of
that warrant would be very painful. That's the same thing
I was thinking as well. Like, you know, they're talking
about all these great family events and births and reunions
and and you know, Christmases and Thanksgivings. You know, maybe
that family had a tradition, and you know you you
missed every single bit of those traditions. That there's gonna
be a little sadness in there, of course there is.
Speaker 6 (01:02:29):
And that makes you look to mom and say, why
what made you make this choice? What were you running from?
What were you saving me from? Again, the onus is
on the mother because she she put this ball in motion.
Speaker 3 (01:02:41):
Yeah, yeah, And and you know how much how much
do you let me let me ask you this? Because
I mean, you're a you're a really loyal person. I
know that about you for a fact. You're a very
loyal person. How much does that blood thing matter to
you when it comes to who you hold, who who
you revel over? You know, does that matter at all?
Do you feel an obligation to be nice or be
(01:03:04):
cordial with people that you have blood relation to or
do you feel that at all?
Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
It depends, like to the family that was loyal to me.
I'm absolutely one hundred percent loyal back. But again to
my father's family. Yeah yeah, they could call me today
and I wouldn't take the call.
Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
Yeah yeah. That's a wild thing, man. And there's a
lot of and I think that's a generational thing. You know,
back in the day, all I heard as a kid
is like, hey, we're blood, we're family. You gotta deal
with it. It doesn't matter what they did, it doesn't
matter what you did. You know, we're blood. It's family. Man.
Speaker 6 (01:03:30):
Here's used as an excuse, that was used as a hey,
just take it because we're family.
Speaker 3 (01:03:35):
Right, that's a dying I think that's a dying thought process.
I really do. I think maybe newer you are, younger kids,
and younger people don't really have that. I don't think
they tolerate families bs anymore. They don't hold that bloodline
is as sacred as they did before. For some reason.
Speaker 6 (01:03:48):
Well, if you've noticed there is a trend of adult
children doing the no contact thing with their parents and
other family members. If it's a toxic relationship and all
you do is fight. A lot of people are just saying, well,
then it's just best that we'd don't contact each other anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:04:01):
All right? For us seven nine one, we do have
a couple of calls. Let's get to them. Here's Rob, Rob.
How you doing, buddy?
Speaker 14 (01:04:06):
Hey, how's it going good?
Speaker 3 (01:04:08):
Brother?
Speaker 12 (01:04:09):
Hey?
Speaker 14 (01:04:10):
Yeah, I love listening to all the shows and everything.
It's not I was never adopted or anything. But my
dad cheated on my mom two times. And yeah, we
can go to Jerry's Springer route, but uh yeah, I'm
not gonna do that. So anyways, what I was gonna
say was, it's kind of hard when you kind of
(01:04:30):
resent your extended family that comes from, you know, cheating
on your mother two times, you.
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
Know what I mean? In other words, having having a
relationship with people that your dad created outside of wedlock.
Is that what you're saying?
Speaker 14 (01:04:46):
Right? Yeah, And they're they're decent people, they are, But
I you know, I just I kind of distanced myself
from it. I got my own drama and stuff like that.
But as far as like, yeah, not knowing your parents,
I know my parents, and I mean I love my
uncle more than I love my dad. My dad is
just kind of like a strange for me. And my
(01:05:07):
brother cares more about his new family than he does
his nephew. So I try to keep in touch and
patch things up when I can, but it's almost seems
like it's, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:05:18):
Work futile, right yet, like as much as effort as
you put in, it really ever never goes anywhere.
Speaker 14 (01:05:25):
Yeah, kind of. I still keep in touch with, you know,
my nephew, my brother's son, and yeah, he's a pos
so I don't really I talk to.
Speaker 3 (01:05:35):
Him, but yeah, I don't know. So for for you,
for yeah, yeah, Rob, for you, for sure, the blood
thicker than water does not really hold uh, you know,
you don't really look at it that way, obviously, He's like,
you know what, look man, it's just the person you
are has no no bearing on what's flowing through your veins.
Kind of thing, all right? For row seven nine one six,
Once go to Jim, Jim, how you doing, buddy, Welcome
(01:05:57):
to the show.
Speaker 7 (01:05:58):
Oh very well, how you guys do it?
Speaker 3 (01:06:00):
I'm good, brother.
Speaker 7 (01:06:02):
Well, I have a much longer story, but I'll try
to sum it up as quickly as I can. But basically,
my younger sister and I were both adopted, and when
we were around four years of age, we kind of
accidentally found out my parents were talking about something and
we were listening in, and so that created kind of
a weird drama in our family for many years, where
(01:06:25):
we always felt like we were the two outsiders because
we had a younger sister that was naturally born. We
always put that in quotes. But what ended up happening is,
for years my mom was who adopted me? Who is
really my mother? She's a saint. She always wanted to
avoid the subject because she was in tremendous fear about
(01:06:48):
somebody coming to get me. And what it really ended
up happening is nobody was actually coming to get me.
But there were a few incidences in a grocery store
where a lady would come up to her and YEO,
that's my baby, that's my baby, and it was really
traumatizing for her. So we didn't talk about it for
many years. And then when I turned around seventeen or so,
(01:07:12):
I approached her about trying to find out and she
really was devastated. Yeah, we never we never went that route,
And about five years ago I finally decided to do
something on my own and look into it, and it
turned out I had a half brother, which was fine
and great. He was really an interesting guy. We got
(01:07:34):
to know each other by phone, and then he invited
us to come meet him, and it turned out that
they weren't, you know, completely normal people. They wound they
wound up moving to about two miles away from where
we live in the Daytona Beach area. Oh no, we
met them twice.
Speaker 3 (01:07:55):
Now it was a bit straight, you know.
Speaker 7 (01:08:00):
Yeah, I a little suspect right off the back.
Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
I can only imagine. Thanks for recall, Bud. I appreciate.
You know, Ros kind of went through this a little bit,
you know. He he found out that, you know, he's
had the two sisters that are up north that his
dad had as well, and he just bet them while
we're on the show. Whilst doing that. So let's do
this last one real quick and we'll go to break.
Hey Solomon, how you doing, buddy, Welcome to the program.
Speaker 2 (01:08:19):
Not bad.
Speaker 11 (01:08:20):
This is an interesting topic that I can get into,
all right, all right. My mother was born in Detroit.
She was left at a she's left at a childcare place,
and person I called my grandmother took her and bought
her to Florida. Flashed forward to do My mom was
sixteen when she had me. The man I called my
(01:08:42):
father forty four years turns out was not my father.
I do have no idea who my father is other
than he went to dealer at high between sixty one
and sixty four. But my birth ticket has my father,
the man I called my father forty four years on
my birth team. But there's no way he could have
been her father because he was twenty two and in
the navy. Wow, but my birth tikets Yeah, But birth
(01:09:04):
Siket says, he's my father and only reason I the
only reason I found I didn't find until he was
forty four on the death when my mother died, it
slipped out and and then my dad didn't my dad
man I called my dad told me it told me
what happened. So but the man he raised me, I
had no problem with.
Speaker 3 (01:09:22):
He raised me. Well, hey, real quick, but we had
about thirty seconds. How did you react when you found
that out? Forty four years old on their mom's deathbed,
she tells you basically that your father isn't your father.
You confront him, he confirms, what's your what's your first reaction?
Are you angry at all?
Speaker 11 (01:09:39):
I was a little bit, But then I look back
and so what they different? This same man bought me
my first pair of track shoes unannounced. They sent me
to private school. I went to. I went to, I
got a schedus with college. My life was good. He
did know there was no but they had they would
have arten ones while out here and go, well, that's
your son. But I never thought about it. I never
They never hit me that what he was actually saying.
Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah he was. You thought he was
just uosing a like a term like you know, just
a yeah, just a way of speaking about it.
Speaker 11 (01:10:10):
Yeah, I don't. I don't think. No, I take nobody who.
I don't take no one out of Detroit because it
could be.
Speaker 3 (01:10:18):
All right, sol and drive save by there. But I
get to see you man. Good to hear from me.
On Facebook, he's putting up all these pictures from the snowstorm.
He's a truck driver, and on gym members page, which
is our page on Facebook, he posts all these pictures
of like stuff that he sees. Man, it looks gnarly
up there. Would not want to be driving a big rig,
much less a VW bus up there right now? Are
you gonna say Jack.
Speaker 5 (01:10:37):
Detroit off limits for his dating call?
Speaker 12 (01:10:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:10:39):
Yeah, yeah, all right for seven nine one text us
at seven seven zero three one back in a sec
with more of the Jim Colbert shows they put.
Speaker 15 (01:10:52):
So here's a different take for you guys. What if
she is introduced to her family, right, and they're all
just garbage, trash human beings, right, You can't pretend that
they just don't exist anymore. They now are there, and
you know, for her it's going to be a hard
decision of what do you do moving forward. It's these
people that quote unquote loved you so much and were
(01:11:14):
hoping for you and wanted to find out information. But
I mean they're also actually just garbage.
Speaker 4 (01:11:19):
That's a hard spot to.
Speaker 20 (01:11:20):
Be back in night.
Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
This one's a good one. We'll take a listen to this.
Speaker 17 (01:11:29):
Eighteen seventy eight, after living in an abusive marriage for
ten years, I took my five year old.
Speaker 21 (01:11:34):
And I was pregnant with another child.
Speaker 4 (01:11:37):
We loaded up a van and took.
Speaker 17 (01:11:38):
Off from that state moved to Florida. I didn't think
of it as kidnapping, and back then there wasn't any
law like that.
Speaker 7 (01:11:45):
But nowadays I do look back on it and think, geez,
I kind.
Speaker 17 (01:11:48):
Of did that.
Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
Yep, yep, you kind of kidnapped your kids, like when
you get divorced. For people who do not know in
this state, you know, you can't even you can't even
move fifty miles away without approval from the court. You
can't move your child far enough away where you can't
have visitation. It's got to be within the reason, you know,
(01:12:11):
before you do that. So it's interesting how that happens.
But I know, you know, the the help for.
Speaker 5 (01:12:17):
People in abusive relationships wasn't always the same. It's out there,
you have to, you know, find it, and people are
hesitant to write to do that, and sometimes you just feel.
Speaker 3 (01:12:28):
You know, this is our lives. We have to escape.
And if you think you're about to prob open a
Pandora's box, I mean it's even more you, I think,
maybe even more a little more hesitant to take that
final step as you to move forward for the answers.
Speaker 4 (01:12:40):
You know, well, back in the eighties it took the
movie The Burning Bed.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
Right exactly, Oh fair fauses, yeah, all right, four seven, nine,
one six one. Welcome back to the Jim Kolbert Show
here on Real Radio. One oh four point. What if
you like to text the show, That's easy seven to
seven zero three one. If you'd like to leave a
talk bag, that's easy as well. Grab the iHeartRadio app,
go to real Radio and use that Mike to send
your comment over. We'll get you on the air. I'm Jim,
there's death. Hello. Jack is here as well. Yep, we
(01:13:05):
had this oft. Tell me about this guy Jack. He's
a detective and he works missing person case. Very nice,
let's do it, Mike. How you doing, buddy. Welcome to
the show.
Speaker 13 (01:13:12):
Hey Jim. Yeah, I have a different perspective of what
the people are going through from the law enforcement end
of it.
Speaker 3 (01:13:21):
Yeah, go ahead.
Speaker 17 (01:13:23):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (01:13:24):
Well?
Speaker 13 (01:13:24):
All the victims that approach us have come to us,
you know, because something strange in their relationship with their parents.
Either they weren't able to get their Social secure number,
they were able to go to college, They can't get
a job because they don't have all the right documentations.
So these these people are grown, grown people.
Speaker 22 (01:13:44):
Now trying to get established in life and camp and
find that strange and then they'll take a test with
the with the local genealogy company and realize their parents
are not their parents.
Speaker 3 (01:13:57):
Yeah. We actually just had a text that came in
a minute ago. Deb read to me about a girl
who did that very thing. Found out she had what deb.
Speaker 6 (01:14:03):
Three brother or three sisters and a brother from a
twenty three and me test.
Speaker 3 (01:14:07):
Wow, Yeah, that's an interesting envelope to open for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:14:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:11):
Hey, do you find that when these people do kind
of find their parents or you know, reacclimate to their families,
does it go well? Do you know anything about what
happens after the fact.
Speaker 13 (01:14:23):
I got the contact with a few of them, and
it seems to go well, because the reason why they
came to us in the beginning is because things weren't
going well or things weren't adding up right. So it's
a different type of perspective. Everything wasn't, you know, all
sunshine and butterflies, right.
Speaker 3 (01:14:40):
Yeah, well, thanks for your call, but I appreciate that
very much.
Speaker 17 (01:14:43):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
The thing that's really weird is like if you think,
like if you had a child taken from you, you
know what, you would never stop thinking about it? Yeah,
or are searching, you would never stop. I mean you
think about the girl who disappeared in Bermuda, Natalie Holloway. Yeah,
you think about the night mayor that her parents live.
You know, they know the answers are closed they know
(01:15:04):
that she was on that island somewhere. The island isn't big,
you know, there have to be answers, somebody had to
have seen something. Again, you could run around the entire
thing in less than a day, I think. So you
know it. But that emptiness, that is, that feeling that
you don't know, is there all the time while you sleep,
the minute you wake up, the minute you go to bed.
I can only assume that maybe knowing that you weren't
(01:15:26):
from a set of parents, or the parents that are
your parents really aren't your parents, would also maybe have
that same draw right, kind of like.
Speaker 4 (01:15:32):
What Jennifer Kessi's family is going through.
Speaker 3 (01:15:34):
Sure, yeah, Michelle Parker exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:15:36):
I mean, and those are just two women here from
in central Florida who just up and disappeared, and you
know their family are still looking.
Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
And their parents will never ever ever go well, you know,
we tried, it's never going to be that way.
Speaker 4 (01:15:47):
Nope.
Speaker 3 (01:15:48):
So I guess maybe if you apply that same logic
to you know, if you didn't know who your parents
were and you found out you were adopted at maybe
seventeen eighteen years old, I can't imagine that the draw
to want to know, goes away from the instant you
find that information out. I can only assume that that's
the case, I would think, so yeah, yeah, out of doubt.
(01:16:08):
Yeah didn't they on we go through this a little
bit or no, Well, she.
Speaker 5 (01:16:12):
Dealt with, you know, having in this strange family, using
genealogy to kind of map out you know, yeah, exactly right, Yeah,
to find out who's who and so.
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
So she just went through one of those things where
she just wasn't sure from the people she knew from
her past what role everybody played and who they were, right.
Speaker 5 (01:16:32):
And you know, then went through the foster care system. Yeah,
you know, you know, life on the street a little
bit and as a runaway and you know, but came
through it.
Speaker 3 (01:16:42):
Yeah, yeah, very cool. I knew she had some experience.
I don't mean to bring that up as in a
bad I didn't am I all right, noverybody anything to
do it. Yeah, yeah, I was gonna say, we've talked
about it openly before. I just want to make sure
that we were cool. But yeah, I know that she
had some personal experience with that, and that's got to
be unbelievably difficult, like unbelievably difficult. So all right four
or seven nine six one one. You can always text
us again at seven seven zero three one, all right,
(01:17:07):
back in a second with more than Jim Courtious on
this subject.
Speaker 7 (01:17:14):
There is a absolutely fantastic documentary to watch. It's called
My Mom Jane, a film by Mariushka Hargate.
Speaker 3 (01:17:24):
It is amazing.
Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
If you're in this situation, watch it. If you're not
in this situation, watch it.
Speaker 7 (01:17:31):
It is fascinating the life that she had and the
things that she found out.
Speaker 3 (01:17:38):
Watch it, Hey, Colbert Show.
Speaker 23 (01:17:41):
I recently found out I have a half sister through
uh ancestry, and she contacted me, and through her found
out that her mother had had a one night stand
and that she grew up with the father she grew
up with. She always felt that he wasn't her father,
and apparently her mother admitted to that. And my dad
(01:18:02):
was the one night stand because he was in the Navy,
probably out partying. Wow, I'm almost holding pregnant.
Speaker 3 (01:18:08):
Wow.
Speaker 7 (01:18:10):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (01:18:11):
The web's deep, the things you learn the webs we weave.
Speaker 5 (01:18:16):
Yeah, but they and that's what I thought the game
changer with like Ancestry, DNA and twenty three and me
was revealing these familiar relationships where you know, where you
had to rely on the honesty and forthcomingness of your parents.
Now you know, now they're science saying yeah, what about
(01:18:36):
his yeah, yeah, maybe.
Speaker 6 (01:18:38):
Lie yeah, to the point that I mean twenty three
and me in ancestry dot Com had to open up
like a brand new almost department of people to take
the phone calls I just found out the man I
thought was my father is not my father?
Speaker 3 (01:18:49):
What do I do?
Speaker 17 (01:18:50):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:18:50):
They weren't prepared for that. Now the blowback on that.
You're right, they opened an entire like wing of that
business to deal with people who had found out about
missing relatives or relatives that weren't relatives and all of
that drama. God almighty, and that the My Mom Jane documentary,
the the text or the talkback was right. It is
an awesome documentary.
Speaker 5 (01:19:11):
We watched it for What'd you Do That's New a
couple months ago when it first came out.
Speaker 3 (01:19:15):
Yeah, and I do suggest that it's really good. And
you know, obviously you will recognize Marissa hartigate was what
was the n CIS thing or what what was she
part of? Noah, there you go. So she's been part
of that show forever.
Speaker 17 (01:19:29):
So you.
Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
He's very recognizable and her mom, Jane Mansfield, was one
of the biggest like pin up blonde bombshells outside of
Marilyn Monroe there was in the late sixties. So it's
a very interesting story. I agree it was good.
Speaker 5 (01:19:45):
Marishka Hargatea is the longest running character on television.
Speaker 3 (01:19:50):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, four seven nine one text us seven
seven zero three one. I'm Jim. There's deb Jack is
here as well, sure, I am so. I saw an
interesting piece this weekend on streaming services and how baddening
it's becoming like people are starting to kind of revolt
about streaming services because some will drop channels, they'll pick
(01:20:12):
some channels up.
Speaker 5 (01:20:12):
I'm getting fed up, right, So.
Speaker 3 (01:20:14):
You're actually one of the people I thought of immediately
when I saw this story. And it's interesting how these
companies are doing this, And basically this is a like
what companies do you believe host the most streaming And
the reason I asked this is because some of the
biggest names out there don't really have the impact you
think they have. I did not know that about some
(01:20:36):
of these companies. What's the number one company for streaming
you believe? I would assume it's Netflix. Same here, Yeah, Netflix,
three hundred and one point six million subscribers.
Speaker 5 (01:20:48):
Right, that's pretty good. Yes, Next, I don't know if
it's Disney or HBO. I'm gonna go Disneylus because they
have the who see that doesn't count.
Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
Hulu is different, right.
Speaker 4 (01:21:02):
I was gonna say Prime.
Speaker 3 (01:21:03):
It's part of that package, now, isn't it Disney plus Max?
Speaker 5 (01:21:07):
It can be yeah, yeah, but I heard Disney Plus
was pretty significant.
Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
Prime is number two, really, yeah, two hundred million subscribers,
Disney Plus falling seventy million subscribers behind that at one
hundred and thirty one.
Speaker 5 (01:21:22):
And see the Prime is See I don't know anyone
who pays for Prime for the video streaming?
Speaker 16 (01:21:28):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:21:29):
You got Prime to get your packages delivered in two days? Yeah,
you get your Prime because it's there is You're right?
And it's interesting because we know now with these numbers
that a lot of people have multiples of these streaming services,
because I mean, obviously the numbers are there. I mean
you can have what I'm so shat. I had a
nerve I was paying for two services, two of the
(01:21:53):
same services.
Speaker 5 (01:21:53):
Oh like I canceled one and then it was still
that I'm getting built because so and you like take
advantage of these free trials, you have to use alternate
email addresses. I had one out there that hadn't been canceled,
so that then I'm like, looking at my credit card
bilt I got built, I'm like, wait a minute, I
canceled that. I'm not even using it because it's canceled.
(01:22:15):
The hell it was on another email account.
Speaker 3 (01:22:18):
It's happened twice.
Speaker 4 (01:22:19):
Yeah, these check speakers out of it.
Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
No speakers and meat Oh my own Sling TV.
Speaker 5 (01:22:28):
I get it for the month of October to get
the Baseball playoffs because I don't have the channels, and
I just received a December charge on my credit card
for last month for sleep TV.
Speaker 3 (01:22:41):
I'm like, wait, I canceled that. I'm not going to
drive to the office in revolt.
Speaker 5 (01:22:44):
I can't because if you don't cancel it, then they
just renew it and it's in the fine print and
we agree to it, and I hate it.
Speaker 3 (01:22:53):
Who has more subscribers, Apple TV Plus or Peacock Peacock Apple, Yeah,
Peacock by a whole bunch. That's the store was. And
the story I saw that was so amazing was is
that with Apple TV producing some unbelievable content.
Speaker 8 (01:23:07):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
Matter of fact, that guy that Ross was talking about
the other day, that gentleman the the Instagram account that
we should follow Jason K. Parking exactly. That's what he
offered for what you do that's new? I yeah. This
guy actually does one of the videos about this, and
he says he doesn't understand. I forget what the angle was,
but he goes, he thinks Severance is the absolute most dominant,
(01:23:29):
best television show out there that's been out there for many,
many years. He says, it's absolutely perfect, and it's a
shame that it's on Apple Plus TV. He said, if
this show was on network television back in the day,
it would have been a phenomenon. It would have been
like you knows Roots was when they played Roots or
any mash any of those shows. When it hit television,
(01:23:50):
it changed culture. He thinks that Severance would be that
big if it wasn't on Apple Plus and he goes
because it has so few viewers, and he goes, his
whole video was, is what a travesty it is that
Apple plus TV makes all this great content and nobody
sees it because it's only got a few and it
has a percentage a tenth of what just Amazon has
(01:24:12):
and it's the one of the biggest names in tech
out there. How does that even happen?
Speaker 5 (01:24:17):
They they also they do something, they have a lane
where they do weird well. Severance Silo is another one
I enjoy. But the one Pluribus is the new one.
Speaker 3 (01:24:29):
Yeah, but they also had the soccer show ted Lassoes,
which is a Warner Brothers produced show that they licensed
they picked up, which it still makes it an Apple
TV Plus show. But it's like they didn't produce that
one that was a Warner Brothers. I'll give you an
idea how bad it is. Apple has thirty million subscribers, right,
that sounds like a lot. By the way, this is
global thirty million subscribers. Hulu has sixty four So Hulu
(01:24:55):
Hulu has double the amount as Apple Plus, like Apple
one of the most rick nine brands on Earth, and
they have a just a percentage. I mean, there's a
play a ten cent video which is I guess the
Chinese streaming service. It has one hundred and fourteen million.
HBO Max has one hundred and twenty eight million dwarfs.
A company that you would think that would pour as
(01:25:17):
much time and effort into promoting that service as anybody
out there, but they don't.
Speaker 10 (01:25:21):
You.
Speaker 5 (01:25:21):
Uh, if you want to keep track of your purchases
as far as your streaming services, make sure your bills
have them.
Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
Make sure that you get a push notification.
Speaker 5 (01:25:32):
I get a push notification every time my Apple TV
Plus subscription goes through, and it makes me mad every time.
Speaker 3 (01:25:38):
Tell them why am I, what am I doing? Why
do I have it?
Speaker 5 (01:25:42):
But then again, now, guess what I found? A show
plorivis is great. I can't wait for the next episode
on Friday.
Speaker 3 (01:25:48):
Yeah, I've heard it's okay, I haven't. I haven't really
checked it out yet. The other thing, too, is like
you're right, Like you know, I wonder how many of
those people would don't even go to Apple because it's
so difficult, or or how many of those subscribers are
there just because nobody knows how to how to take
the thing off, and like I don't know how to
I don't know how to stop it. I've told you guys,
I've literally paid nine ninety nine for the last five
years and I have no idea what even my password
(01:26:09):
is for Apple.
Speaker 5 (01:26:09):
And what you can do is you can cancel and
then it's like okay, when you get to a summer,
or you just pick a month and it's like, okay,
we're gonna subscribe, and then you I mean, you focus.
That's your Apple month, right, You watch all the shows
that they had and you get all caught up. Everyone
watches everything on their own time. Now no one's keeping up,
No one's yea. They don't have the water cooler conversation like.
Speaker 3 (01:26:32):
You used to. I talked to a buddy the other
day that does not look at it like the way
I like. He wants everything drop so he can just
consume all of it. And I said, you know what,
I don't have will power like that. I will crush
it and then I'll be pissed that I don't have
any new content to watch. So my wife and I
actually like it when they release it episodically like The
Great British Baking Show and some of the other stuff
(01:26:52):
that we watch. A severn's like that, or they drop
the entire seas No no, no.
Speaker 5 (01:26:54):
Apple TV is once once a week, yeah, and which
is great because I need somebody to regulate that for me. Know, Ploribus,
I've watched last Fridays, and now it's like I can
think about that and I anticipate the next one. And
in anything in life, your vacation, anything you're looking forward to,
the anticipation of doing something fun or something you enjoy
(01:27:17):
is such a huge part of the satisfaction you get
and the enjoyment you get out of those things.
Speaker 3 (01:27:23):
Trying to think of how many like planning a wedding,
I have Netflix, I have Amazon. We do not have Disney.
Plus I do have HBO Max and Apple, I have
every a Hulu, I have every one of those. Check
this out and I don't even know. I gotta tell you.
I go over to HBO Max and it's like going
to see an uncle I haven't seen in six years.
Like you just log onto it to see what's new there,
(01:27:45):
and you don't recognize anything, and you literally have to
dust it off, Like the Paramount video. You have to
dust that app off well even go to it, because
I literally watched nothing there. It's not even part of
my repertoire.
Speaker 5 (01:27:54):
But HBO has some great content and include that they
do so much original content, and that one of the
appeals for Netflix does desire to have Warner Brothers and
now the fight they're in with Paramount plus over who's
going to end up with you know, Time Warner, right,
HBO is part of that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:14):
That's I think the jewel in that. Yeah, and you
know what the divider is and a lot of this
stuff and I think where the real defined? And you
know you and you probably know, I mean, I know
you do. You know a lot more about this than
I do. Are the sports contracts being struck by some
of these you know like Amazon has thirty Thursday Night
Football now? Yeah, right, I mean, but that's happening. I mean,
you know they've had games on Peacock, They've had you know,
games on Did Netflix do a game yet? I think
(01:28:36):
Netflix did they have a cop I think it might
be Christmas something like that. Yeah, So that's gonna be
I think for me because it was. Isn't that for
you guys with baseball?
Speaker 6 (01:28:45):
Like when you decaw, baseball is going to be all
over the place this year. You've got some on Peacock,
some on I know wrestling is on Netflix's is baseball
going to be on Netflix as well?
Speaker 3 (01:28:55):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (01:28:55):
We went the schedule earlier.
Speaker 5 (01:28:57):
I think so like the the Iowa game that the classic,
the Field of Dreams game right right, you know, which
is now a thing, you know, so that they're coming
up with these, like specially things that they can then
sell to like Amazon or Prime has the Black Friday game,
you know for NFL football right right right now.
Speaker 3 (01:29:17):
So it's like they're all kind.
Speaker 5 (01:29:19):
Of creating their their parson that they're cutting up the
pie and as many pieces as possible and selling it
to everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:29:25):
So that's what sucks, is I mean again, this came
from an Instagram video of saying, you know, look, you
know we've we've advanced so much, we're right back where
we started, you know, we you know we you know,
when Cable when it was all under one and you
paid one feed a spectrum and you got access if
you wanted HBO just paid to have that package and
it was eighteen dollars or ten bucks and if you
wanted this, you paid to get that package and you
got all the content that came with that particular channel
(01:29:48):
and everything like that. But man, it's just it's so
different now that you have to have all these apps
and winds up costing you as much or more than
it did when you just had cable.
Speaker 5 (01:29:55):
It does, and I used to. So I don't have
Disney Plus anymore. But because my sister doesn't have Disney
Plus anymore, she doesn't have HBO Max anymore. Because I
logged into my HBO Max and kicked no, it said,
I thought about it.
Speaker 3 (01:30:13):
The timing was so bad because.
Speaker 5 (01:30:16):
I got I turned on HBO Max and it says,
we've noticed streaming from two different locations. You're gonna have
to log in via the website.
Speaker 3 (01:30:24):
Uh huh.
Speaker 5 (01:30:24):
So the day she told me that they canceled Disney Plus,
I had to tell her, well, you don't have HBO Max,
but it's unrelated, right, right right.
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
We went to log on Netflix about two or three
weeks ago, and I forget where we were, but we were.
We logged on the Netflix and it said, you know,
you know, multiple user type thing. I'm like, let's find
out which kid is stealing your Netflix. So we logged in.
Daughter text my wife thirty seconds later and said, you guys,
cancel your Netflix.
Speaker 9 (01:30:50):
Nine.
Speaker 3 (01:30:51):
I'm like, we kicked you off up because you're stealing
it from us.
Speaker 9 (01:30:55):
For your own.
Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
You asked, get your own l O L l O
l l O L. I'm like twenty four four ninety
five I like this kid.
Speaker 5 (01:31:04):
So in the subscription rankings here, where does Paramount plus
come in? Because this is interesting between the the mergers
and the you know, the buying a CBS and where
everything is right now with Paramount Plus and they're desire
to own time.
Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
Time Warner Yeah, says a content focus for Paramount Plus
is CBS, Viacom content, movie, sports, and original series. It
comes in eighth on the list. How many subscribers eighty
thousand or eighty million, seventy nine point one million, Joy
Cinema which is an Indian streaming company, their number seven. iQiyi,
which is a Chinese streaming service, It comes in at six.
(01:31:43):
Ten Cent Video again, another Chinese streaming service, it comes
in at five. The rest of them are all the
ones we'd mentioned before, primarily focused here in America. Yeah yeah,
and then Hulu nine, and then Peacock ten, and then
it gets like Sony Apple Plus. ESPN Plus has like
twenty five million subscribers.
Speaker 5 (01:32:02):
So you're seeing this fragmentation and raising prices and the
rising prices which makes people long for a simpler system.
Speaker 3 (01:32:13):
Which is what we used to have, right right, It
was easy, you paid one price. But the problem is
Is this all worth not having a cable box? Isn't
that what it is? I mean, it's all worth just
being able to hang your TV wherever you want it,
where you can plug it in, and then just stream
it because they're all smart TV's. Isn't that really what
we gave up? That's it.
Speaker 5 (01:32:30):
I think we're also starting to see how much is
too much as far as content, because they can keep
producing more content where you first it was the dream
was or the talk was way back when we were
much younger. Three hundred channels or five hundred channels. Yeah,
yea yeah, and that just blew your mind right, Well
they did that, and then they're like, well, we could
(01:32:51):
just keep going, right, But then it gets so saturated
and you can't develop enough of an audience for anyone
to make it viable or profitable, profitable to produce, which
is I mean, the severage is not losing money, but
to the point that you were making earlier, it should
have a larger audience for the quality of show.
Speaker 3 (01:33:13):
And I completely agree with you. They shouldn't have to,
like because what they're gonna make their money is licensing
this down the road. I mean, obviously having the ownership
is where they're gonna have their cash. But I mean,
I'm with you, I would be like, I'd want a
big audience now like Sopranos had, or like The Wire had,
or any of those shows that when HBO had those
shows and release them originally they were such a cultural phenomenon.
It's so difficult to find that now with all the
(01:33:35):
streaming services. You would think that would be happening bi weekly.
There'd be a cultural phenomenon, Like you're like your what
was the Game of Thrones? Or your ted Lasso, But
those are even with all of the content, those are
few and far between.
Speaker 5 (01:33:48):
Mash Season finale, what one hundred million people? The super
Bowl is the only thing that gets and that live
event is the only thing that really doesn't. World Series
used to get thirty million. Yeah, yeah, yeah, No, those
days are long a all right.
Speaker 3 (01:34:03):
For seven I went six four one text us seven
seven zero three one back in one second with more
of the Jim Coburg shows they put.
Speaker 1 (01:34:19):
And had a training office still to come, legal stories
and more with Ray tread to leave for TK Law
Today at six twenty on the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
Boom boom, boom, what are you Covert Crew. You know
you Vivity Bacon Rockledge Rockledge. I didn't look up the
holiday or not then, but today we your a.
Speaker 20 (01:34:44):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:34:45):
Hopefully you've had.
Speaker 20 (01:34:46):
A good year, and I wish you all the Marius,
the christ Mission and a happy new year.
Speaker 4 (01:34:54):
Go taking out.
Speaker 3 (01:34:55):
I quit smoking cigarettes, but not the lettuce.
Speaker 12 (01:35:00):
Good.
Speaker 3 (01:35:01):
If we're just being real, Jimmy is not going to
cancel any of.
Speaker 12 (01:35:04):
The subscriptions because, ay, he's afraid that if he cancels.
Speaker 3 (01:35:08):
Hulus gas will get shut off. It's got to be.
Speaker 4 (01:35:11):
If he cancels Apple, that means his electricity goes out.
Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
So you know, there's no way I appreciate that, buddy.
I can't be that. I can be that blunt sometimes
for sure. All Right, welcome back to the Jim Colbert
Show here on Real Radio one oh four point one.
I am the Jim Partner's the dead part. Hello, the
jackpart is here as well. This is our last week
before we get out of here. We've got a special
(01:35:35):
week coming up. Chase Paget will join us on Friday,
the very talented brother of our very own Ross Paget
playing a show I think Sunday at the Doctor Phillips Center.
Tickets are on sale right now if you want to
go check that out. An amazing, an amazing talent. I
think this is a Christmas forward six guitars, Yes, yeah,
he had a I think it's the same show that
(01:35:57):
I saw year ago. Yeah, I will find out on Friday.
Simply fascinating. Guy does six different styles of music, with
six different personalities and six different guitar styles. This is
a show that's traveled around the world, by the way.
Uh so if you go to check that out, that's
coming up this Friday. We'll talk to Chase then for sure,
and Ross will be here on Tuesday and Thursday.
Speaker 2 (01:36:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:36:18):
Awesome week this week for sure. So you know, we
try to warn people as much as possible in the
show as a PSA about getting scammed. And I know
that you had this in the news and it's been
breaking today everywhere. Have you heard about the Leesburg couple,
the Leesburg guy that got hammered.
Speaker 6 (01:36:35):
I saw I saw a sad photo on one of
the local news sites that said, you know, Jack and
Diane and it was like George and or George and
Diane sorry, and it really is.
Speaker 4 (01:36:44):
John Mellencamp came in second.
Speaker 3 (01:36:46):
It's a it's a really sad story, and I'll tell
you why because in the context of the story, when
the guy starts commenting about it, his name is George Hendricks.
You know his wife may leave him over this. They've
been other forty years, thirty nine years of marriage and
he got scammed for forty five thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:37:08):
That's a big chunk ear nast egg and he says.
Speaker 3 (01:37:11):
George Hendrix, who is sixty nine years old, said his
life quote doesn't really exist anymore after losing nearly forty
five thousand dollars to a scam that could cost him
his home and his wife of thirty nine years.
Speaker 4 (01:37:25):
Oh that's heartbreaking.
Speaker 3 (01:37:27):
Those are the bad times where shit go. Yeah, she
wants to get a divorce. When asked if it was
because of the scam, he replied, yep. It started when
Hendricks commented on an Elon Musk car giveaway group on Facebook,
one of many such groups online trying to scam you.
Let me help you out real quick. Guys, if you're
listening to me, and you know, anybody that you think
is what we like to call suggestible. In other words,
(01:37:50):
they believe a lot of stuff they should not believe
Elon Musk is not going to talk to you about anything. No,
he doesn't care about.
Speaker 4 (01:37:56):
You, and he's not spending his time doing car giveaway.
Speaker 3 (01:38:00):
He's not going to do that. This is the richest
man on planet Earth. The last thing he has on
his mind is doing anything for you or anybody that
you know. You are not in his orbit. You do
not know him. He's not gonna And by the way,
let me just go aha and say this is Elon
Musk or any other dignitary or celebrity or celebrity is
not going to do this. This simply isn't going to happen.
(01:38:21):
If you're on social media and you think for one
second that someone is going to approach you with an
investment opportunity tied to any celebrity that is beyond the
realm on this stuff, just stop and think for a
second of how silly that sounds. I mean, wouldn't you
have heard about that anywhere? And I'm not trying to
(01:38:41):
call this guy dumb or anything. I'm just trying to
use this as a cautionary tale for people, because people,
when you get to that point where you feel that
it's too good to be true, you know, that's an
old adage for sure, but it's there for a reason.
But you know, people kind of get hyped up in
that they really the people who are doing these scams
are very good at what they do. It's easy for
us to sit here and go, well, who could get
caught up by that? But you haven't been under the
(01:39:03):
pressure of doing that, Hella. You just going to one
of these cruise things where they're trying to sell you
like a time share and it, you know, and you're
sitting there in your arms across in here, and then
that one girl says something will be like really and
then you know, when you do the really intilt your
head like you're even an inth interested. I mean, you
know they've they've chipped awave. That's what happened.
Speaker 6 (01:39:22):
So, which is this is part of the reason why
this is a story We had covered during JCS News
that Lieutenant Governor j. Collins and the Department of Elder
Affairs had recently announced operations Senior Shield and it's its
whole initiative is to help seniors not you know, be
aware that.
Speaker 4 (01:39:41):
These are scams.
Speaker 6 (01:39:42):
Yeah, yea yeah, but you know, for folks who grew
up in the publishing clearing house days where they just
pull your number and show up at your door with
a million dollar check. Yeah, you know, and if it
looks sophisticated and your questions are answered.
Speaker 3 (01:39:54):
It's you get a personalized video message, which he believe
was from Musk himself, promising delivery of the prize package.
Speaker 4 (01:40:00):
So a deep fake as video, that's exactly what it is.
Speaker 3 (01:40:03):
As matter of fact, in the context of this story,
I believe they go to and talk to our friends
over at Threatlocker. A matter of fact, I know they
do because it says it right here. Kieran Human is
the security enablement lead with cybersecurity company Threatlocker, and of
course we've had Danny on the show in numerous times
talking about these very things, and she just says, a
(01:40:23):
deep fake video is something that's being generated to look
like somebody, but it's not. These videos are not at
all difficult to make and can be made in just
a few minutes with very little input. Jack is working
with AI all the time now, and he tells me,
he goes, look, man, this is amazing technology, Like it
is groundbreaking, unbelievable technology, and we're in the infancy of it,
really are So did they have children. It doesn't say
(01:40:47):
it is.
Speaker 6 (01:40:47):
You know, I'd like to think kids are some other
family members. You know, Hey, I'm going to you send
this money and win a car from Elon Musk so
someone could scream stop.
Speaker 3 (01:40:55):
Yeah, that's what I would. Man. I got to tell you.
You know, you know, my mom has passed rest soul.
My dad is too crusty to be taken by anything
like this. I mean, he is not suggestible at all,
so he's not really in the realm of getting busted
for stuff like this. But if you're listening to me
and you're forty forty five, fifty years old or whatever,
and your parents are still with us, and they're in
their seventies and they dabble online, you need to create
(01:41:18):
a thing where they call you immediately if they consider,
in any way, shape or form putting one dollar toward
anything online. Just give me a quick buzz let me,
you know, tell me about it, and I will. I
will tell you whether or not you know, I think
it's legit, and where we can both go and do
research and find out what's the deal.
Speaker 5 (01:41:33):
Twenty years from now, are you gonna be open to
the idea of your kid saying now, Dad, But I.
Speaker 3 (01:41:39):
Do it right now. I wouldn't have any problem with
it right now.
Speaker 12 (01:41:41):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:41:42):
My son drops bombs on me all the time about
stuff online because he's pretty involved in a community in
some of these communities, and he drops bombs on me
all the time about what's happening online that I'm completely
not even close to being. I have my little like
most people, Jack, I believe I have my little safe
area online. I like going to I don't really you're
outside of that box very often. I don't like clicking
(01:42:02):
on websites that are sus just simply because I don't
want to be that guy. I mean, I just really
more of a self self protective nature for me, Man,
I just don't want to be the dude who clicks
on something stupid. I don't want to be the guy
to making the headline. I don't want to be embursed.
I don't I'm telling you, man, I don't want to
be that guy who wants to be that person. It says, uh,
(01:42:24):
I like to click on her picture, but I don't
want to be just enlarge it. It says. Promising the
delivery to the package, However, he was told he had
to pay seventy five hundred dollars in cash ship to car.
You know what, that's what most people who are worth
four hundred billion dollars would have you do send them
seventy five hundred dollars. Soon after that, he was presented
with investment opportunities and promising returns of one hundred and
(01:42:46):
twenty thousand dollars on a ten thousand dollars investment. He
expressed skepticism and then received another video message saying I'd
never take advantage of you or your funds. Trust me
with your whole heart. God knows I have no bad intentions.
Now they use the God word, that's right. And they
exchanged hundreds of messages with him, who ended up draining
(01:43:09):
bank accounts and maxing out credit cards, sending nearly thirty
seven thousand dollars more on top of the seventy five
hundred he sent initially. When no payout or car arrived,
he filed a report with Leesburg police in which they
left I'm joking. He's on alone, though, he says. AARP
(01:43:31):
reports more ads using Musk's image to steal victim savings.
And here's why, because they think to themselves, well, he's
the richest guy in the world. I mean, what does
he need my money for now he's the richest guy
in the world. I mean, he's just doing this because
he's benevolent, and of course he's using a lot of
the publicity he got through the Doge thing with a
certain crowd of people to kind of access them or
(01:43:52):
the scammers are they understand that when the whole doge
thing went around, there are a number of people who
looked at Elon Musk as a savior for doing that
with a government. So they're leaning on that nature. And again,
they can go right to your Facebook page. They can
see the content you put up, whether it be on
Facebook or Instagram. They know what you support or don't support.
They know who or who you didn't vote for. They
(01:44:12):
know where you spend your money, what kind of car
you drive. Most of the time, they can almost isolate
where you live because you haphazardly take photographs of you
and your house showing the address or your license plate number.
Speaker 4 (01:44:26):
They've got all of that.
Speaker 3 (01:44:27):
You're a mark. And if you live in a nice
house and you have a nice car, you're a mark.
They're gonna come after you. They're gonna try to do
it as much as they can. You have to fight it,
I says, as AI improved, so we'll deep fakes. Just
a matter of time until these people do start adding
to adding that breathing to the videos because what she says,
She says, there are signs to watch for if you
get one of these videos, and it says if the
(01:44:49):
body and neck don't move in the videos, even to
take a breath, only the face moves, chances are it's AI,
it says. But don't lean on that for too long,
because AI will learn. They will prompt it to breathe
like a human. Yeah, like you have to prompt it
to do everything like reread a video of Elon Musk
asking for seventy five hundred dollars and don't forget to
make him look as human as possible, breathing patterns, blinking, ie,
(01:45:12):
all of that.
Speaker 5 (01:45:13):
Texter writes in that they don't understand how seniors come
from a generation where money was tight and now are
freely giving it away to scams. I think it's because
of the method of the scam is something they've never
seen before, where it's videos. You don't because you also
grew up at a time where but it's him when
(01:45:33):
you see it with your like seeing is believing, yea yeah,
but seeing is no longer believing, right, And to make
that leap is something that an older generation has to now.
Speaker 3 (01:45:44):
Learn and they're gonna morph Jack because remember when this
first started and they're able to copy voices, one of
the first things they did was start copying loved one's voices,
like going to Instagram, Facebook finding audio of that person talking.
All they need is a few seconds of it then
they can build that basically that voice program and then
had that voice say whatever. So you're you know, as
(01:46:05):
a grandchild can call grandpa and asked for money because
they got towed and their cars locked up and they
need four hundred dollars to get it out. Can you
send it to me, Grandpa? Here's where you send it.
Speaker 6 (01:46:14):
And that's why having a password that you that is
only known amongst your family. Sure you it's not something
you post on Facebook. It's just something that if you
get one of these scam calls or emails, you just
say what's the family password, and if they can't answer,
then you know it's a scam.
Speaker 4 (01:46:29):
More often than not, just hang up.
Speaker 3 (01:46:30):
Could you imagine working for a place like threat Locker
and just seeing people get taken every single day. Good
people work their entire lives, yeah, save their money, did
all the right things, and just took one call or
looked at one thing they shouldn't have looked at, got
sucked into the rabbit hole by a very talented salesman
slash scammer, and next thing you know, you're sending on
your lawn. You're forty thousand dollars in credit card debt
(01:46:53):
at eighteen percent, your wife is thinking about leaving you,
and you could lose your home seventy years old. You
have a password?
Speaker 15 (01:47:01):
We do not.
Speaker 3 (01:47:02):
We do not have one. We just use the word
pissed because that's what I am mostly, and if somebody
says pissed, I will just pretty much acclimate to that
being the answer.
Speaker 6 (01:47:13):
Somebody just texted us at seven seven zero three, when
my grandfather is ninety four years old, and told me
he's getting emails that Elon wants to send him money.
Should he click on it? I told him absolutely not,
it's fake and he couldn't believe.
Speaker 3 (01:47:26):
It, can't believe it, can't believe the other thing too.
And this goes back to what Jack was saying that
generation was also very trustworthy. They would never automatically assume
firstly that you're lying to that.
Speaker 4 (01:47:37):
Well, you could do business on a handshake back in
those days.
Speaker 3 (01:47:39):
Right, yeap. Matter of fact, the guy I sold my
car to today handshake deal, Like there's the handshake. We
looked at each other as a deal, deal deal, and
we know that's buying me. And we're both from the
same era, Like they're does he does he have the car?
Speaker 17 (01:47:52):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:47:52):
No, no, but I got his cash. It don't matter.
He's coming back to this week. But that's the point
is they're so trustworthy because they never think of a
million years that a society at its core would be
built to lie to you, would be built to take
from you rather than just go out and earn that money.
Speaker 4 (01:48:08):
Well so twenty twenty five.
Speaker 3 (01:48:09):
And then when you tie in names that they have
a trusted kind of thing with, like you know, again,
why would he scam me? He's worth all this money.
Speaker 12 (01:48:16):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:48:16):
If anybody's gonna be trustworthy, it's a guy like this
who has nothing but good things in his heart for me.
And of course I don't know how Elon Musk is.
I mean, he may actually feel that way. I don't know,
but it didn't matter because it's not him. I kind
of do know, though, wild So how to he give
you the money? It's cash on then he sold the car.
Speaker 5 (01:48:37):
He gave you cash and didn't take the car. Yeah, no, no, yeah,
so you have his cash in the car.
Speaker 3 (01:48:43):
He's got the title. Jack. I mean, I'm not a dummy.
He's not a dummy either. But what he doesn't know
is I sold it three other times four oh seven
nine four one. Text us at seven to seven zero
three one. Loot him up, guys, it's time for trivia.
Let's give some stuff away, real.
Speaker 9 (01:48:59):
Out, Hello, don't less crew Susan's griddles.
Speaker 18 (01:49:13):
This is fuzzled off. So I got a few jokes
or just one jerk? What reindeer dame? The reindeer's plu
on sleepovers?
Speaker 3 (01:49:25):
What reindeers come?
Speaker 9 (01:49:29):
It's true hard dear.
Speaker 3 (01:49:36):
Killing Jack. What I like is how much they liked it.
I like how hard the yell flat ruther deer Jack,
dere deer deb ruth or deer deer all right for
a seven six one four one. Text us at seven
seven zero three one. Welcome back on, Jim, there's dead. Hello,
(01:49:58):
Jack is here as well, and he has a jack
what's in it all aboard chucket Chugga choo two, we
have oh Mondays. I love Mondays because we find out
what we have in the Jackie Sack for the week,
and it could be this is something really neat that
I'm like, that's a great use for this place, all right.
(01:50:18):
It's a four pack of tickets to the Orlando Science Center,
where you can celebrate the holiday season with its annual
dinos and light show. So you can joint stand the
t Rex and the shots old friends in the Dino digs.
Speaker 5 (01:50:34):
Dino Dino. That's not dinos, it's dinosaur. Ge Dino is
the dinosaur on the flintstones.
Speaker 3 (01:50:42):
I know. And okay.
Speaker 4 (01:50:46):
That's a random remember right there.
Speaker 3 (01:50:47):
Thanks buddy, Dino Diggs. No Dino O God Almighty, got almighty.
The bit's almost over, Okay, so real quick.
Speaker 5 (01:50:57):
Anyway, the whole Dino Digs is loaded Jesus so.
Speaker 3 (01:51:01):
Loaded with lights.
Speaker 4 (01:51:02):
I think you're loaded.
Speaker 5 (01:51:03):
You should go check it out. It's at the Orlando
Science Center. Very cool, and we got a four pack
of tickets also in the Jackie sack. They could choose
this a pair of tickets to say Kings of Leon.
Speaker 3 (01:51:14):
Oh nice, that's awesome, man. They hadn't toured in a while.
Speaker 5 (01:51:17):
Yeah, they're coming to Tampa at the Benchmark International Arena
January thirty.
Speaker 3 (01:51:21):
First you could be there.
Speaker 5 (01:51:23):
That's what's in the Jackie sack.
Speaker 3 (01:51:24):
So back to you as very nice, Deborah, one, two, three, four,
or five.
Speaker 4 (01:51:29):
Let's start this Monday off by going to number five.
Speaker 3 (01:51:31):
We'll do that, Pam. How you doing, Pam?
Speaker 2 (01:51:34):
How good?
Speaker 11 (01:51:35):
Are you good?
Speaker 3 (01:51:36):
Want to play a little game with us here? All right,
let's do it.
Speaker 1 (01:51:40):
Is he the puzzlemaster or is he the guy who's
currently writing today's game?
Speaker 24 (01:51:45):
Can he be both?
Speaker 2 (01:51:46):
Let's find out. Okay, it's time for j C. S Trivia.
Speaker 3 (01:51:50):
Y all right, Pam. This is a real easy game.
You got a question here? Four You have four answers.
One of these answers is not true, Pam. What trying
to fool you? But if you know a little something
and you look through it, you can find the answer
and get over there to see Jack and find yourself
something nice. Are you ready?
Speaker 4 (01:52:06):
Let do it?
Speaker 3 (01:52:07):
Here we go on this day in nineteen seventy three,
the theme park ride The Birth a film series Pirates
of the Caribbean opens this day in Disneyland. Oh wo
On this day in nineteen seventy three, the very first
day the Pirates of the Caribbean ride was open was today.
Here are three fun facts about Pirates of the Caribbean ride,
(01:52:27):
and one hairy leg of a lot. All right, we're
talking about the ride Pirates of the Caribbean. Which one
of these is not true? Pam? Here we go. Number one,
The Pirates of the Caribbean was originally going to be
a walk through wax museum, but the success of It's
a Small World turned it into a ride. Number two,
the Disneyland Pirates of the Caribbean is a fifteen minute ride,
(01:52:49):
almost twice the length of the Pirates of the Caribbean
here in Disney World only eight minutes. Number three, Pirates
of the Caribbean cost three million dollars to build an
nineteen seventy three adjusted for inflation, that would be twenty
five million dollars in today's money.
Speaker 2 (01:53:05):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (01:53:06):
Or lastly, here, Pirates of the Caribbean was the last
ride and project that Walt Disney personally created and developed.
Which one of those is a lie? Number two, No,
number two is absolutely true.
Speaker 4 (01:53:20):
Sorry, Pam.
Speaker 3 (01:53:20):
The Pirates of the Caribbean ride in Disneyland is fifteen
minutes long, as opposed to the eight minute version here
in Orlando.
Speaker 4 (01:53:27):
That means we should get to go twice, all.
Speaker 3 (01:53:29):
Right, one, two or four?
Speaker 4 (01:53:31):
Let's go to two?
Speaker 3 (01:53:32):
Is Howard? How are you doing? How you doing doing good? Howard?
Talking about the Pirates of the Caribbean ride? Which one
of these is not true? Number one, The Pirates of
the Caribean ride was originally going to be a walk
through wax museum, but the success of It's a Small
World turned it into a ride. Number two. Pirates of
the Caribbean cost three million dollars to build in seventy three.
Adjusted for inflation, that would be twenty five million dollars
(01:53:54):
in today's money. Or lastly, it was the last ride
in project that Walt Disney personally created in dep.
Speaker 7 (01:54:01):
The three million dollar one.
Speaker 3 (01:54:03):
That's the one money. Oh, way to go? Howard? Do
you think that's lower? High?
Speaker 14 (01:54:09):
That's high?
Speaker 3 (01:54:09):
No, it's really low. Actually, the original ride cost eight
million dollars to build, which would be sixty million dollars
in today's money. Wow, what about John hold though you're
a winner house still, that's right? It would it would
have cost it cost them eight million to build in
seventy three, and adjusted for inflation, that would be sixty
million dollars in today's money.
Speaker 4 (01:54:29):
All that just to take away the pirate chasing the west, right.
Speaker 3 (01:54:32):
And they did a bunch of it. Man, it's fascinating
when you read the changes that this ride has gone through.
Oh yeah, there are a number of them. There's a
pirate that would sit by that barrel, and remember that
the woman would come out of the barrel. Well, he's
swinging her dress. Oh so if you you know, that
implies that she's nude in there, and there's a lustful notion.
But that's everywhere when they were chasing the women around
(01:54:54):
the thing. Now the woman holds a pie as to
infer they're chasing for the food and not that hey.
Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
Oh they're still chasing for the pie.
Speaker 3 (01:55:06):
But just to go over these real quick. Pirates of
the Caribbean was going to be a walk through wax Museum,
but when they opened it's a small World and people
freaked out about how fun it was, they turned it
into a water ridees exactly like you think about it.
It's the exact same concept. When one's got Pirates, One's
got dolls.
Speaker 4 (01:55:21):
And one's got a song that won't stick in your
head for years.
Speaker 3 (01:55:24):
I don't know the Yoho Yoho.
Speaker 4 (01:55:26):
That's a fun song.
Speaker 3 (01:55:27):
Oh yeah, yes, I was gonna ask that. Actually, how
you because we have a bunch of people who listen
to the show that work at Disney or the theme parks, Like,
how do they ignore that? I guess it just becomes
background right when yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:55:39):
Or when you know, when you wear it, you're like,
oh wait, okay, we've got another vehicle of guests.
Speaker 4 (01:55:43):
Quick, get out of the background, and I'll.
Speaker 3 (01:55:44):
Tell you where else that happened. I worked for a
subshop for years when I first moved to Orlando. When
I would go over to my girlfriend's house, her family
would comment how I smelled like sandwiches. But it didn't.
I didn't smell myself at all, right, Like, you can't
smell yourself like that.
Speaker 6 (01:55:56):
So you get outside of the environment and you're like, damn,
I smell like French fries.
Speaker 3 (01:56:00):
Pirates was the last ride and project that Disney himself,
Walt Disney oversaw from the beginning of the concept all
the way down to the final ride. Wow, it was
a very last one. A couple of other things may
not know before we get to the top of the hour. No,
Brandon Craviatz today, he's got some other things happening. When
the ride first opened, they actually used real human skeletons
who as matter of fact, there was a rumor that
(01:56:22):
in Disneyland one of the remaining skulls was still a
human skull, an actual human skull.
Speaker 6 (01:56:28):
Well, we learned from the making of the Poultergeist that
it was cheaper to use, yes, real human skeletons than
to use the fake one because the ones.
Speaker 3 (01:56:35):
They created for science classes were I mean almost said
that word, really expensive.
Speaker 4 (01:56:39):
Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 3 (01:56:40):
The Pirates, the pirate that says dead men tell no
tells tales tales. Yeah, it's the same voice actor that
does the Haunted Mansion.
Speaker 4 (01:56:52):
Oh, that's my favorite host of.
Speaker 3 (01:56:54):
The Haunted Mansion. And by the way, if you want
something to see something very cool, you can YouTube guy.
His name is like Fred Deese or something like that,
and you could actually listen to the sessions of him
recording all of the parts that you hear for the
Haunted Mansion. In Orlando's Cool moved to the dead center
of the room. He does all that stuff, and he's
got a very breathy, kind of Vincent Price kind of
(01:57:16):
feel to it. But it's a very cool, like twenty
minute video if you want to check that out. Let's
see what else we have here. Lastly, Pirates of the
Caribbean when it was first built in Disneyland, was part
of the New Orleans Square, right because they had that
whole thing where it'supposed to be the New Orleans Square,
which totally costs fifteen million dollars to build, actually more
(01:57:38):
than the actual Louisiana purchase. Oh so, for Disneyland to
build a fake Louisiana, like a downtown New Orleans, it
costs more than the United States spent on the Louisiana purchase,
which actually was not just Louisiana, it was like the
entire mid part of the country. Right there.
Speaker 4 (01:57:56):
You go kind of crazy, right, that's a bargain, fear buddy, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:58:00):
For sure, right four seven nine six four one text
us at seven seven zero three to one. You mentioned
this in the news, and I have to tell you,
I know that a lot of people are super happy
about its return. We'll talk about that next.
Speaker 20 (01:58:17):
So there's another documentary kind of on this similar topic
that you got to talk about. I don't know if
you guys have mentioned it before, but it's called three
Identical Strangers. Really interesting, really crazy, really messed up.
Speaker 24 (01:58:29):
Check out, hey, guys, Michigan, chuck here. There's another way
of looking at this whole temperature thing. Because if you're
like me and it's like fifteen degrees out right now,
when it gets up to like sixty, it's awesome. But
in the summertime, if it gets down to sixty, I'm
(01:58:49):
freezing by period. And it's weird to some of the
people here in Michigan. They're wearing shorts when it's snowing.
Speaker 3 (01:58:57):
Yeah. Of course with that, that one player in the
NFL that shows up to his games every week, he's
like in shorts, no shirt, barefoot. I yeah, yeah, it's
like ten degrees and dudes rolling in the air like
he's headed to the pool. I was like, okay, you're cool.
Speaker 4 (01:59:16):
Run in college nice.
Speaker 6 (01:59:18):
After college, he would take his garbage out when he
lived in Minneapolis and flip flops and shorts, no shirt.
Speaker 3 (01:59:23):
Yeah. I know people like that. My son is as funny,
and my son is the opposite. I mean, it could
be like seventy five in the house. He's walking around
with a hoodie and sweatpants.
Speaker 4 (01:59:30):
That's just that generation.
Speaker 3 (01:59:33):
Welcome back. I'm Jim. There's deb Jack is here as well. Sure, man,
I did something so stupid this weekend, and I never do.
I never heard that on a Monday before. This was
like not dumb, like irresponsible, dumb in the sense that
you would think irresponsible. I went out and drinking like
ten beers and drove a unicycle home or anything like that.
(01:59:54):
I did something way stupid. Or I played golf without
a hat this weekend. Let me tell you something, because
it was cool, like you talk about this. The guy
who just you know, Michigan Chuck just text and said,
or I called and said, you know that weird thing
with temperature, Well it was it was pretty chilly on
Saturday or is it Friday? Saturday morning? I think, right, yeah,
pretty chilly Saturday morning, right, not in the afternoon. Wake
up there, get out there. It pants the nine yards.
(02:00:15):
I mean, by the time the sun came up, you know,
it was ready to go. But I only wore my
I only bore like a cap, you know, like a
nit cap to keep my head warm. Well, man, By
like nine o'clock it was time to shed that thing.
But I did not bring a hat with me. God,
what a dumb mistake that was. You know, even though
it's cool outside, I don't think it got over you know,
(02:00:36):
sixty eight or seventy degrees or whatever it was on Saturday.
But man, when I got home that night and took
a shower and was sitting around, my head felt like
it was on fire.
Speaker 4 (02:00:44):
Oh, you've got to be so careful with that.
Speaker 12 (02:00:46):
I do.
Speaker 10 (02:00:46):
Man.
Speaker 3 (02:00:46):
I just read something the O today about that skin
cancer thing even being more prevalent, like a friend of
ours had someone in their nose that had to be
taken out. I don't make that mistake ever. I have this.
I have a hat that covers my entire head. I
don't wear it just so a regular baseball hat anymore.
I wear like a it's called a.
Speaker 4 (02:01:03):
Yeah, because you got to protect the back of your neck, write.
Speaker 3 (02:01:05):
All of that. It's it's like a Safari hat. But
it's not. Oh.
Speaker 6 (02:01:08):
I saw one of those when I went to the
Birding Festival yesterday. Yeah, I definitely want one of those.
Speaker 2 (02:01:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:01:12):
Yeah, it's got like the curtains are on the side
in the back oh.
Speaker 3 (02:01:16):
Get out of here.
Speaker 4 (02:01:18):
A curtain at the old eighties painters camps.
Speaker 3 (02:01:20):
Uh, it's god, there's a word for it, because they
call it this like you would be a fedora, it
would be this drapery.
Speaker 4 (02:01:28):
I can't know our texters will let us.
Speaker 3 (02:01:29):
I can't think of the name of it. But it's
a popular kind of hat that old dudes wear. And
but it keeps my it keeps the song off my
neck on my face. I didn't realize how much you get.
And even right now that was like, you know, three
or four days ago, and right now it's still just
on fire. I hate him when to do stuff like
that good buddy of mine who played golf through college
and stuff, had to get some stuff taken out of
his neck when that go. When he goes to play
(02:01:50):
gofuless like a mummy. He literally wraps every You can't
see anything his eyes. He wears a turtle neck like
one of those suns are what they call. It looks
just like the fish in weary exact sleeves. You know,
just make sure it's it's thin and light and airy.
But yeah, especially you because you have the lighter eyes. Yeah,
and that makes you more susceptible to you v damaged.
(02:02:10):
So dumb, it was so dumb. Texas says they live
in the villages and Friday after Thanksgiving forty degrees out,
they had a forty five minute.
Speaker 5 (02:02:19):
Golf cart ride to play golf. If you had to
go somewhere that took you forty five minutes in the
golf cart, Nope, wouldn't you just drive?
Speaker 3 (02:02:30):
Yeah, I don't get that. When we went to the Yeah,
when we went to the Dominican, we said, at this
resort where they give you a golf cart when you
get in because the resort's pretty big, so you have
to have it to get around. We hated it by
the end of the week. I mean we were taking
it was a thirty minute drive from our condo over
to where all the stuff was happening. For thirty minutes
in a golf cart, you think, oh, that'll be fun.
Speaker 5 (02:02:50):
It's not.
Speaker 3 (02:02:51):
No, like the fourth time, it's not at all. You'd
like to just get there. Yeah, yeah, I don't know.
And forty five minutes in the villages get to a
golf coursings crazy.
Speaker 4 (02:02:59):
Yeah, we're sitting there's one on every block.
Speaker 5 (02:03:03):
Text are saying, is your hat a bucket hat or
a boony hat.
Speaker 3 (02:03:07):
It's not a bucket or a booney. I think it
starts with a god talget. Don't say b No, everybody
knows the hat. The minute you say it, people will
know it. And it's a famous it's a famous maker.
My in law's got this for me like two or
three or four years ago. It's got a lifetime warranting
on it. And it looks like kind of a safari hat,
but it's not quite that. A tendle or tender or
(02:03:30):
something like that. I can't remember the name of it. Oh,
the booney hats are cool. I've seen those before. I
put it up on the screen so I can see it.
I don't know what a booney hat is. Oh yeah, yeah,
I see. Mine's more like mine's more like the Magellan
outdoors hat, kind of something like that. Not quite a
bucket and it's got a it's got a brim to it,
(02:03:52):
so you can Actually it's not like a bucket hat.
That's like a like a sailor's cap. It starts I
think it starts with a tea though. Anyway. Yeah, it's
kind of like at a little bit like that most
schacker something like that.
Speaker 4 (02:04:02):
Yeah, yeah, that's after golf.
Speaker 3 (02:04:04):
Huh. So you mentioned that Sweet Tomatoes is coming back.
Speaker 16 (02:04:09):
Yay.
Speaker 3 (02:04:10):
I got to tell you, I think that's a great
I mean, I'm I think that you know, we have
like Jason's Deli now, is that like the only salad
bar restaurant that's a chain anymore? Like I I mean,
I love like my my wife and I love going
to Jason's Deli, but I think that's the only one left.
I don't think there's a place where you can go
in and build your own salad and get soup and
(02:04:31):
a sandwich or something anymore. And I'm glad Sweet Tomatoes
is coming back because it's got a much more comprehensive
salad bar than Jason's does. I'm excited about it.
Speaker 4 (02:04:39):
It does, but it's only going to what is it for, just.
Speaker 3 (02:04:42):
To Fort Myers for now. But this was a really
good brand. I can't imagine that they won't be able
to show that people still want to do this. I mean,
I would think even so more now because you know,
people are even wanting to eat healthy more now and
eat lighter.
Speaker 4 (02:04:56):
Oh, I want to see it.
Speaker 3 (02:04:58):
It's definitely not that how us. It's not a pith hat.
Wouldn't that be awesome? Come on, come on, it's just
for us. It's a chilly tilly is the word Tilly's that?
I think it's a tilly hat. Click on tilly hat.
Speaker 4 (02:05:12):
Someone asked if it's a pork pie hat.
Speaker 3 (02:05:14):
No, it's not a pork pie. I I look good
in those though. That's kind of what it looks like.
There a tilly exactly not too far off from the booty. Yeah,
you know, it's not far I said it wasn't, but
mine has a little bit more. Okay, see the guy
in the bottom left hand corner here.
Speaker 4 (02:05:26):
The one with the beard, It almost looks like you.
Speaker 3 (02:05:28):
That's exactly what it is. But it's more of a
tan color. And it's a really good hat stays on
the only problem is is it's built to wick sweat.
So when you're out there playing and you're sweating and
you tip your head over to putt the all the
sweat runs down the rim and it's like a nice
little like a little stream going right down in front
of your way. Ew a pure sweat.
Speaker 19 (02:05:47):
Ew.
Speaker 12 (02:05:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:05:49):
Yeah. They're gonna roll out this one in Fort Myers.
So they're returning to the Florida market after all of
it's restaurants closed nationwide during twenty twenty. Uh, they're doing
them in Tucson, Arizona, and Florida.
Speaker 6 (02:06:02):
Yep, just those two locations right now. But they're hoping
that the signals that the brand is gonna come back
in a big way.
Speaker 3 (02:06:08):
Yeah. I hope so too, because I think it's a
good brand. I mean, you used to go in there
and the kids love the free ice cream because they
have like a sweets area where you can get like
a couple of bait goods and some ice cream. I
didn't care about that at all. But they did have
a sup and the salad, soup and salads. Man, get
out of here. They had really good soups. Yeah, and
I love a good soup, So I would go there
and get a salad and a soup and I'd be
the happiest guy in the world.
Speaker 4 (02:06:29):
But a great place for lunch.
Speaker 3 (02:06:31):
That's why I like jason so much. You can go
to Jason's and get a really good crispy salad.
Speaker 4 (02:06:36):
There isn't one near us.
Speaker 3 (02:06:37):
Yeah, there's one alt the one right up the street.
Oh yeah, yeah, I mean it's not toward us, right
ye know, but I mean up there, there's one right there.
Speaker 5 (02:06:44):
I was there today, not inside but right on the outside.
Really to Jason looking at it, do you go I
haven't been there in years. I've only been there once
or twice. Bro let me tell you you are missing out.
And it's affordable, I think.
Speaker 3 (02:06:55):
I think for like fifteen bucks, you can get there
half in half, which is like a half salad and
a half sandwich, and then just add a cup of
souper like three dollars. Dude, it's great. Now you're at eighteen.
Speaker 5 (02:07:05):
Uh you know, I ate leftovers from a frozen dinner
the other night and I saved eighteen dollars.
Speaker 3 (02:07:13):
You know what.
Speaker 4 (02:07:14):
Else?
Speaker 6 (02:07:14):
When we had Faias on Friday for his review, Jack
sent a photo of his lunch for Faia's. Unfortunately, we
didn't get a chance to review the Kirkland hot Dog
for a buck fifty with a PEPSI.
Speaker 3 (02:07:24):
No no, no, now comes with Coca Cola.
Speaker 4 (02:07:26):
Sorry.
Speaker 3 (02:07:27):
Yeah for the dollar fifty, including I thought there was
a reason that it like two twenty five. They were not.
I don't know. It's a dollar dollar sixty one? After
task is the pizza stole a buck fifty with a
soda pizza is a little more, is it. Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:07:39):
The rotisseury chickens still for to any nine. Oh but
that Pj's in Cassebury buy me opens. I think it's Wednesday.
Speaker 3 (02:07:49):
Yeah, come home, listen to me real quick. I'm telling
you straight up, if you're not eating that roasted chicken
like twice a week, you are costing yourself too much money.
It's stupid. We get one of those chicken, we stripped
the meat off of it. Guy, I've gotten that down
to a damn science. I get every single shred of
meat off that thing. It may you can do anything
with it. A chicken salad for sandwiches, soups. Matter of fact,
(02:08:12):
the soup that I brought you guys, that was a
torn down roasted chicken from wherever.
Speaker 4 (02:08:17):
It's so much easier to do because then you don't
you just bring the chicken home.
Speaker 3 (02:08:20):
Oh my god, chicken Caesar. Yeah, yeah, I love it.
It's just and I'll tell you ment another hack. When
you go to Publix are now key Foods, But Publics
has that Moho pork that they have in there. It's
a roasted pork butt and they do it with that
Moho season which is basically lime and a little coonan
and chili powder. Right, yeah, but it gives you that
great flavor.
Speaker 17 (02:08:39):
Man.
Speaker 3 (02:08:39):
You can go in there buy a pound of that stuff,
a pound and a half in that stuff for like
nine dollars, and then you just make tacos with it
with like just cheese and shredded cabbage and like pickled
red onion. You can make it your house for nothing,
and that is a great meal, and it winds up
costing you for a family four, like less than twenty dollars.
Speaker 4 (02:08:57):
Oh that's a good deal, seriously, because you I mean,
the tortillas are nothing.
Speaker 3 (02:09:01):
You buy tortillas, like a pack of tortillas for like
fifteen or twenty tortillas is like literally five dollars, and
then you buy the pork, which is ten and then
just a little bit of cabbage and some red onion
and you're on your way, dude. And that we've done
that so many times, Dude, You're good to get so
many times. And the cool thing is is even if
you don't eat all of that pork, you can say
that ni sandwiches the next day. Sliders.
Speaker 4 (02:09:22):
Man, no way, get some King's Hawaiian rolls. You're good
to go.
Speaker 3 (02:09:25):
I'll tell you when you It's so funny. You just
learn how to eat like humbly when you kind of
grow up a certain way. You just learn how to
make stuff last.
Speaker 5 (02:09:34):
Isn't it a little suspect when you buy like those
great Hawaiian rolls and or any bread product and you
keep it and a week goes by and it still
looks fine, and another week goes by and it still
looks fine.
Speaker 3 (02:09:50):
It's just it shouldn't be fine. Yeah, yeah, it's ye, Yeah,
it really shouldn't be that fine. You're right, because when
you make fresh bread at home, that stuff's good for
about forty eight hours. Yeah, and it starts letting you know,
if you really want to know what it should be like,
go buy a fresh bag atte tell me how good?
How long that lasts?
Speaker 4 (02:10:09):
For twelve hours?
Speaker 3 (02:10:09):
Yeah, I'm telling you right the morning. By the end
of that night, that s is getting hard. So that's
what bread should be like? Is that? But the preservatives
and that and I'll tell you even worse. One of
the things about Hello Fresh it's kind of weird, is
they do burgers and like sandwiches and stuff, and they
send you these rolls that are all packed up like
salting crackers and that plastic, and oddly enough it just
(02:10:31):
has the weirdest texture. You kind of tell yourself while
you're eating it. Probably shouldn't be eating this. This probably
shouldn't have a shelf life of infinity as a bread product.
You know you probably shouldn't, all right, four oh seven
nine one six one four one Again, you can always
text our show at seven seven zero three one back
in a second with more than Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 21 (02:11:00):
Hey, Jim Colbert, just to let you know really quick,
have be an imagineer for Disney for twenty eight years
prior to the Caribbean actually opened at disney Land in
nineteen sixty seven and opened a disney World I Magic
Kingdom in nineteen seventy one. Pirates of the Caribbean actually
was not sorry nineteen seventy three. Sorry it wasn't going
to open. Original of the park open nineteen seventy one,
but they built it fast. But people really wanted it,
so that's why I'd opened in nineteen seventy three, not
(02:11:22):
when the park open.
Speaker 7 (02:11:23):
Have a great day, love your show.
Speaker 3 (02:11:24):
Thank you, buddy, appreciate that very much. Welcome back. To
the Jim Colbert Show. We're already one O four point
one Jim your'szep hell yeah here hell rows and tomorrow
plus we'll have all the normal Tuesday stuff. It's only money.
What'd you do? That's new all tomorrow?
Speaker 4 (02:11:43):
Oh progress football follow.
Speaker 3 (02:11:45):
Us right, the Froggers football follow up? Good job there.
Speaker 5 (02:11:47):
Oh yeah, Monday night football tonight, Miami Dolphins.
Speaker 3 (02:11:51):
Yeah in Pittsburgh, yeah, burr. Indeed. I think game time
yesterday for the Bill's Pats game. What a comeback that was,
Bill The Pats had them down twenty one zip in
the first half. I saw that.
Speaker 5 (02:12:06):
Then I turned off to watch a movie, and then
I came back and I'm like, Bill's are always a
second half team, and sure.
Speaker 3 (02:12:12):
That's such a great game. That was one of the
best games of the year. Man. This you know, I've
told Kravitz before that this has been one of the
best NFL seasons I can remember for a very long time.
And the reason why is, I mean, Kansas City's not
gonna make the playoffs. Like Kansas City's out. They're out.
I mean, the dominant football team for the last like
six years in the NFL. They're not even gonna be
(02:12:32):
in the playoffs this year. I think that's great for
the league. I do agree that those those those dominant
teams to stick around, those legacy teams for a while
have those runs. It's great, no question, because you get behind,
it gets a lot of attention for the league. But man,
seeing New England come back so fast, watching Denver like destroy,
seeing Jacksonville play well, you know, I mean, Houston playing well.
(02:12:55):
These are all teams that nobody really had in mind,
and they're just killing it and it's so much fun
to watch.
Speaker 5 (02:13:01):
I guess I have to start believing that Jacksonville.
Speaker 3 (02:13:04):
Might be good. It's still weird to you do need
to believe that.
Speaker 5 (02:13:07):
However, I remember when I was doing a sports show
two guys on Sports Show with our buddy Matt.
Speaker 3 (02:13:14):
This was fifteen years ago.
Speaker 5 (02:13:16):
I came across the stat and I don't know if
this stat still holds true, but at the time, out
of the twelve teams that make the playoffs, six are
always teams.
Speaker 3 (02:13:28):
At least six are teams that didn't make the playoffs
the previous year. Oh really so, And that was not
heard that before.
Speaker 5 (02:13:34):
That was the type of parody that Commissioner Pete Roselle
was trying to get for the league. He didn't want
just one team being dominant all the time. He thought
it was best for the overall health of the league. Yeah,
if all teams shared. And that's why they were talking
about it yesterday when they determined that when it looked
like Kansas City was done after Minchew's interception that you
(02:13:57):
know it's it's the system is the nind to make
it harder and harder for teams to repeat, like because
the pay system, not only that, but the how the draft,
the draft system, right, you're rewarding the worst teams, and
also your schedule, the schedule gets harder. You have a
harder schedule. The Patriots not stake too much away from
(02:14:18):
what they did, but they did lose in the Raiders
in Week one. Remember that everybody.
Speaker 3 (02:14:21):
They also had the greatest quarterback who also cut some
of his salary to make sure the rest of the
team was good as well, and the best coach. I
was talking about today's Patriots, Oh yeah, Drake May and yeah,
but they have an easier schedule. But you know which
you know who knows how far they're going to go,
And you know in the playoffs. But it's it's interesting
to see. Yeah, I love it. I just love the
(02:14:42):
fact there's new names. I mean, Drake May's a baller.
I mean, you're seeing you know, Bo Nicks is a baller.
You're seeing some really cool names come out. I mean,
and this has happened to the entire league. I mean
I remember it. It was Dallas and Pittsburgh. Every single year.
It was Dallas and Pittsburgh. Then Buffalo had a run.
We're in the nineties. It was like every year, four
three the Super Bowls. Right then it got Dallas. When
Troy Yeigman came around into Romo. You had those guys
(02:15:04):
doing well for a while. But but but this seems
so much different because there's so many other teams that
are doing well and they're fun to watch, like really fun.
The Rams super good, fun to watch, and the Lions
are still good, very fun to watch. Just a great league.
And these guys, man, I mean, they just never fail
NFL just they got it. I mean, yeah, it came back.
(02:15:27):
How crazy is that? It looked good. My favorite thing
about the Philip Rivers story was what he said when
when they picked him up, did you hear it? He
goes Dad Gumman, let's go, let's freaking go, you.
Speaker 5 (02:15:39):
Know, because he's like you say that I thought was
knocking him.
Speaker 3 (02:15:43):
That's him. That was That was his exact quote, Dad
gummantt let's freaking go because Philip is a good boy.
Yeah yeah, yeah, holding kids and a grand kid. And
by the way, big thanks to our friends of our
Magic one O seven seven. I know that we got
to do that shift over the weekend and yes Thursday.
It was absolutely wonderful and we got some feedback from
the staff over there, friend Janna and of course Jeremy
(02:16:05):
you know, shot his emails to let us know how
good it sounded, how much they were listening, which was
very cool. Thanks guys, we appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (02:16:10):
Ran into Chad and Leslie at the TSO show on
Saturday night.
Speaker 3 (02:16:14):
I was there. Yeah, a lot of listeners there. And
by the way, congratulations to the monsters man. That's crazy,
like you know, because Russ was on stage accepting the
check are getting you know, that is such a cool
thing that he started with the TSO because he really
he really started a really good relationship with the guy
who used to run that before was passing. God rest
his soul Ow Neil. Yeah, but I mean he really
created because Russ's son was in band at the time.
(02:16:38):
And I guess they you know, they give money to
a musical program every time they come into town or
when they go into your town, they raise money and
give a portion of that back. And he started that
relationship years and years ago and has nurtured that and
was on stage with those guys at the end of
the show, like getting this check like fifteen grand or something,
wasn't it.
Speaker 5 (02:16:56):
Yeah, it was fifteen thousand dollars. So what they do
is they take a dollar of every ticket sold and
they donate to charity. And they donated it. You know,
we were their media partner here in Orlando for both performances,
and so it was between Mel's Club and John and
Baby DJ, Advent Health and then the Carla K. Cancer Foundation,
(02:17:17):
And along with Chad and Leslie, Russ was up there
with Ambernova and Russ's brother in law. They were up
there to collect this giant check for over fifteen thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (02:17:28):
It is pretty cool. Yeah, very very cool man. So
a good job and I don't know how the shows went.
I saw some of the video from him and It
looked amazing. It was great. Yeah, he's so amazing and loud,
so loud. I've seen him half a dozen times or so.
I'm surprised.
Speaker 5 (02:17:40):
My Usually my Apple Watch tells me what I'm in
the loud environment.
Speaker 3 (02:17:43):
It did not.
Speaker 5 (02:17:43):
Maybe it just gave up. It might have just gave up.
But yeah, I had some you know, fortunate enough to
have some pretty good seats, and it was a.
Speaker 3 (02:17:52):
Lot of fun. What row were you in? First row?
Were you really?
Speaker 4 (02:17:55):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (02:17:56):
First row center? I had the best seats in the house.
Oh yeah, I know.
Speaker 5 (02:18:01):
Somebody I ran into. Somebody upgraded me. You know, someone's like, hey,
I can't use these, you want to use them?
Speaker 3 (02:18:08):
And it said was it better up there?
Speaker 5 (02:18:10):
It was floor well, yes, and to a degree it
said floor section three, roway, seat nine and ten and
section three. I'm like, oh, it's going to be back.
No no, no, no, no, no, it's right there. Section
three was the middle section. Uh huh, roway is the
front row. Nine and ten was dead center on stage. Wow, goodness,
I will tell you that.
Speaker 3 (02:18:29):
You know, we've been lucky enough to have a good
relationship with the Doctor Phillips Center, and were there were
the Broadway series. You know, we get to go to
a couple of shows to help them promote throughout the year,
and one year we got a front row seat for
one of the big shows. Yeah, and we were big
balling it walking up there the whole nine yards, you
know and looking around making surebody sees us walking to
the very front row. The experience was not as good
(02:18:50):
as fifteen rows back, right, Not for me. It wasn't
right for me. The way that building is designed. Man,
if you're like, really, it's about ten rows back in
the center, that's where the sound really the mix hits
you perfectly, and you get to see the scope out
of your peripher you can see the entire stage. So
that's a one right there. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:19:08):
So what they have with Trent Siberian Orchestra, they have
like these scissor jacks that the stage, you know, I
think there were seven of them, where a section of
the save will just go forty feet into the air
and someone will be on it, either guitar player or
maybe it's one of the singers carrifying. Yeah, but they
have they have four along the front, so when they
are all the way up, that view is a little different,
(02:19:30):
you know. Yeah, Ah, so you can't see that whole thing.
But I'll tell you the sound was spot on.
Speaker 3 (02:19:36):
It's always amazing spot on. Yeah, they mixed it up.
Speaker 5 (02:19:38):
Elliot Patrolli. He was the you know, the the senior
player of that group. There were twenty five people on stage.
Speaker 3 (02:19:46):
That's funny. And I saw the Usually they're they're a
little gothy. The last year when I went, there was
a lot of black on stage for a Christmas show.
This year wasn't like that. The photographs in the video
I saw it looked like they were a little bit
more festive this year when it comes to their dress. No,
everyone was wearing black, really black. Well maybe I saw
the one where there was a couple of guitar players
and they had some color on them, like a one
(02:20:08):
at a red scarf or something.
Speaker 5 (02:20:09):
So what when so they do the Christmas Eve like
the Christmas Show portion, they come out and talk and
then they play for another forty five minutes of anything.
Speaker 3 (02:20:19):
They didn't you know, a play.
Speaker 5 (02:20:21):
When they come out for the second time, that's when
you know they had their alpha time.
Speaker 3 (02:20:26):
Now they're the guitar there.
Speaker 5 (02:20:28):
Is sleeveless, you know, so it's like, you know, they
cut off the sleeves or whatever. So it was a
slight wardrobe change, but it was pretty they like all
all the male singers, I mean there were I think
nine singers, good like each one would have their own solo,
but they all would be doing background. And but they
(02:20:50):
were all dressed the same. Who wants to mix that? Yeah,
you know, and it's like they they had to set up.
They get there that you know, the night before they
had to set up. You were a two thirty show,
then a seven thirty show. Yeah, and he a patroli
from stage. He said it was twenty one trucks to
carry all that equipment. It's I mean, they they fill
(02:21:10):
up that entire ass into that that arena at the stage.
It just consumes the entire thing. That's another thing that
you go. It's kind of amazing, Like the infrastructure that
is that thing is crazy. And to be able to
book that because they play like they play an entire
day or two days. Are they here two days or
is it just two two shows one day, two shows
one day here and then they move around and they
you know, I think they said they did seven shows
(02:21:33):
in five days.
Speaker 4 (02:21:33):
Oh that's a lot.
Speaker 3 (02:21:36):
Man. We used to have a relationship with some of
the guys who did this for Motley Cruze, who toured
around with him, and they said the work. Matter of fact,
one guy told us, he goes, you know, I have
so many roadies are on coke is because they.
Speaker 2 (02:21:47):
Have to be.
Speaker 3 (02:21:48):
Yeah, because you couldn't. You couldn't live that life. You
couldn't pull that stuff off with as much sleep as
you get if you didn't have something helping you out
to stay up while you're doing that. Just that five
hour energy, Yeah, hours are ridiculous.
Speaker 5 (02:22:02):
Other things that happened this weekend. Did you see the
any highlights from the Lake Mary State championship?
Speaker 3 (02:22:07):
Just read that and I was just about to tell
you did you see it? I saw that the winning play.
Have you have you heard about it yet?
Speaker 17 (02:22:13):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (02:22:13):
I've heard about it.
Speaker 3 (02:22:14):
Yeah, I've never seen anything like that. That was pretty
as you did I have that.
Speaker 5 (02:22:18):
There was a did he Miami Dolphins game that that way?
Speaker 3 (02:22:21):
He handed the ball to him or did the guy
take it from him? I think it had to be
a combination of bath So, for people who do not know,
Lake Mary High School won the state championship this past
weekend on the very last play of the game. It
was a hell Mary Lake Mary, a Hail Mary pass
where he throws it down, it's tipped up. A player
from Hail Mary from Lake Mary gets the ball in
like the three yard line. He goes to get into
(02:22:43):
the end zone. Two of the other the guys from
the other team stop him, but a guy from Lake
Mary swings around and literally pulls the ball out of
his own player's arms to run in for the touchdown. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:22:54):
I remember Keith Buyers with the Dolphins. I remember there
was a play they did the same thing where the
one guy was held up and he just kind of
flipped it to the wide out who they ended up scoring.
Speaker 3 (02:23:05):
Yeah, this is crazy. Yeah you have it. I'm looking
for it. Yeah. Yeah. So it was like a nutty
play and at the end of it, like it was
just one of those white out noise scenarios. Yeah, where
it's just like so much noise you can't even see
or hear anything. Do you have you ever been by
the way, have you ever been in tso? Oh?
Speaker 9 (02:23:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:23:21):
How many times you go? I think twice just from
back in the day.
Speaker 19 (02:23:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:23:24):
Yeah, yeah, that's it's such a good time. And again
it's like one of those things that's that oddly pitch
them the spirit Jack hass it up right now at
Jim Culbert Live dot com or real ready a dot
FM slash watch there's the tip whoa goes in the
other player. Watch, the other guy comes around, takes it
from him, and off we go into the touchdown and
that's the game. Unbelievable like that'll make that makes national news.
Speaker 4 (02:23:49):
Oh yeah, congratulations Lake Mary Rams.
Speaker 3 (02:23:51):
Yeah, yeah, it's cool too. By the way, my daughters
used to play those guys in volleyball all the time.
They were really cool. Some of THEO schools in there
in someone the county not so cool. I won't say anything,
but everyone knows what we're talking about, all right. For
our seven nine one six one four one, you can
always text us at seven to seven zero three one
WF for news.
Speaker 6 (02:24:11):
We're gonna talk about Brown University giving an update as
the shooter is still at large, Lieutenant Governor j Collins
announces results of an operation, and Mariah Carey breaks another record.
Speaker 4 (02:24:22):
We'll talk about that next during you heard it here first, all.
Speaker 3 (02:24:25):
Just take a little break. We'll come back and get
Deb's news and get the hell out here. On a
Monday time to look Ahead thanks to our friends at
TK law.
Speaker 5 (02:24:35):
Looking Ahead tomorrow on the Monsters in the Morning, Detective Barb,
We'll be in update you on what's going on in
our search for the bad guys in Central Florida. Also Ambernova,
where she can explain why she thanked the members of
TSO for coming all the way from Pennsylvania. That happens
tomorrow on the Monsters in the Morning, and don't forget
(02:24:57):
to look ahead with the team at TK law. When
it's time to plan your family's future, start online at
one Firm forlife dot com.
Speaker 4 (02:25:14):
Hey everybody, it's your favorite uncle. Happy Monday.
Speaker 2 (02:25:18):
Hey guys, how.
Speaker 13 (02:25:19):
Come Elon Musk hasn't put out his own cologne or
shall we say musk Elon's musk yet?
Speaker 4 (02:25:26):
I mean that can make a lot of money, Not
that he needs it, but I mean i'd wear it right.
Speaker 11 (02:25:31):
No.
Speaker 3 (02:25:37):
Yeah, somebody said that that play made the number one
play on the ESPN the Lake Mary High School championship. Yeah,
the football player Mary. Yeah, I didn't see that it
did that. I just saw the play. I really wasn't
online much this weekend, but I look over to the
texting service They're like, look, man, it that thing made
the like the number was like number one on their
top ten plays of that day. So that's very cool.
(02:25:59):
Go Lake, Mary, good job guys. That's Rams, right Lee,
Murray Rams. I believe it is out there. Yeah, yeah,
all right for seven nine four one text us seven
seven zero three one. Welcome back on Jim. There's deb
Hello Jack is here as well. Yeah. I think they
got a cease and desist.
Speaker 5 (02:26:14):
Matter of fact, I think it was a basketball team
because they had the RAM logo, but it was the
the car companies, the Dodges ram logo. It was on
the court. It was the actual RAM and they're like, hey,
you can't.
Speaker 3 (02:26:27):
Use that, but they're like, we'll let you keep it
on there. Yeah, that's a bad look. I mean, what
are you doing there? They're not hurting anything, everything's fine.
Can't beat up a heist? Yeah, somebody said no, Ray Trentley, Yeah, Ray.
Last week was Ray's last appearance for the year. We'll
pick up with Ray in twenty twenty six, and of
course start right back off where we started with him
years ago. Giving great advice to you guys out there
(02:26:47):
as you try to find answers for some problems that
you may have. We will have Glenn in this week
for Santa Clausman. So remember on Thursday, you know, Glenn's
entire segment will be giving away twenty five dollars gift
cards to publics for Christmas Trivia, which he started writing
early this year, so he'll have that ready to go,
(02:27:08):
similar to what we did for Thanksgiving. He loves it.
It's his favorite time of the year. I was trying
to think about what else before we get out of
here this year. Chase is going to be on Friday,
Chase Paget. Yeah, Ross is going to be in on Thursday.
Danny will be here as well, saying you know her,
Actually Danny will not be here. Her last appearance was
this past Thursday as well.
Speaker 4 (02:27:25):
Oh really yeah, Oh that's right. She gets to finally
go on a risk.
Speaker 3 (02:27:29):
I think she's going on a Disney cruise. Good for her, Yeah,
God bless her. Yeah, boy, she's a hard work con. First,
I was going to say that woman work. Sorry, does
you guys have no idea man behind the scenes? She
comes in here and the fact that she even makes
it up here to do that short segment, you know,
to have to drive all the way from our house
to do basically eleven minutes of radio h We appreciate
that very much. She has been a great asset to
(02:27:50):
the program. We really like your company. I think we're
doing something with her a little more involved next year
as well.
Speaker 6 (02:27:57):
What you can notice is that we're getting closer of
the holidays, because while the parking lot was full at
about one one thirty this afternoon, the closer you get
to five Oh hello.
Speaker 3 (02:28:09):
Yeah, yeah, you could oozy this entire building, know how
it gets hurt?
Speaker 2 (02:28:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:28:14):
Have you guys done all your shopping? And by the way,
we're doing our gift exchange on Friday, I assume yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, okay,
good deb you. I have one more thing for you.
And I've yet to buy anything for Jack. And I
don't know if Jack has any suggestions, if he's listening,
if he has any suggestions, I would take some, because
(02:28:35):
if not, we're gonna we're gonna, we're gonna revert back
to the old standard, which is a really nice bottle
of bourbon, which I know you appreciate. I just don't
want to wind up being that guy, and I don't
want you to think I'm insensitive, and I don't think
about you, because deb's I thought about.
Speaker 5 (02:28:49):
I believe you're saying you're that guy saying you don't
want to be thought of as Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:28:55):
I think that's what you're saying. I am that guy,
okay uh, And I do want to just get you
a really nice bottle of bourbon. But I don't want
you to think that I'm not thinking about you. Is
that fair? That's fair? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:29:06):
You know what is whatever's in your heart, that's I appreciate.
It's lovely for me. And here's the deal, and this
is this is a me thing, not a youth thing.
I don't have the palette. When I realized that, you know,
I'm just adding sugar water and bitters and orange and
(02:29:27):
cherries to all these different bourbons, they end up all
tasting the same to me, right, so.
Speaker 3 (02:29:33):
You don't ever drink them straight? No, So therefore I'm like,
you know, well, that makes me want to headbout the mic.
I'm gonna be honest with you. Why should I step
off the members that the maker's mark? Yeah? Mark, And
you're a thousand percent right. I did not know that's
how you. I didn't know that that's the only way
you consumed it. I thought occasionally you would have some
neat so you could really taste the craftsmanship in the spirit.
Speaker 5 (02:29:54):
So I plan on doing that, which is why each
bottle I have saved a little bit.
Speaker 3 (02:30:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:30:01):
Yeah, like I'll get down to like maybe that last
quarter maybe a little bit. You should do that at least,
so I save each one. So I have about six
bourbons right now, but I'm only usually have six ounces.
Speaker 3 (02:30:14):
One yeah right, you know about six bottles and ounce each. Hey,
that's fine though, I mean the thing is you should
taste that. I mean, I know I need to do
it that way.
Speaker 5 (02:30:22):
Maybe with an ice cube, right, I need is one thing,
but maybe a.
Speaker 4 (02:30:26):
Little chill, yeah, a little ice kid.
Speaker 20 (02:30:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:30:28):
I also ads a little water to it. Bourbon actually
breeze a little bit more, especially the higher proofs, when
you need a little bit of water in there. That's
what I found. That's what the experts say as well.
And the higher the proof, just a little drop of water,
a couple drops, break it up, really make it. It
opens the spirit up so you can really taste it
in your on your palate.
Speaker 6 (02:30:44):
Do you have any suggestions for you golf balls? You
said that last time you didn't want golf balls.
Speaker 3 (02:30:50):
Here's the thing now, I need them. I will tell you. Look,
I want golf stuff because it's that's what I use
more than anything. And I mean you guys can't get
me anything I don't have out side of that, like
you know, So the thing if you really want to
help me as a gift, like and I like practical
stuff like golf balls and gloves, and I can tell
you exactly which ones I don't have. Okay, I'm you know,
(02:31:12):
I'm fifty eight. The surprise element's gone.
Speaker 4 (02:31:14):
To give the golf balls. It's titleist, right.
Speaker 3 (02:31:16):
Yeah, I'll tell you what don't you tell me? Maybe
I may have switched brand.
Speaker 4 (02:31:20):
You don't know that, Okay.
Speaker 3 (02:31:21):
Us golfers are very fickle. Okay when it comes to
our ball choices.
Speaker 4 (02:31:25):
Do you have anything to mark your balls?
Speaker 3 (02:31:27):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah you do. I don't like per se.
They do make like little printer things that you can
do it with.
Speaker 4 (02:31:33):
Yeh, the little stamps, right, but you don't need something
like that.
Speaker 3 (02:31:37):
No, no, no, I'm good. Jack. Is there no tech
stuff that you guys? I mean, you I got. I
think I need one little small thing for you, but
I need something. Jack always likes techie stuff but are
you all TechEd out? Are How are you on? Headphones?
Speaker 4 (02:31:49):
You got them? You got them, earbuds, you've got them,
an Apple Watch?
Speaker 14 (02:31:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:31:53):
Yeah, very generous.
Speaker 4 (02:31:54):
How about an iPad this year?
Speaker 3 (02:31:56):
No, he didn't need an iPad. What the hell's he
gonna do with an iPad? Playing Red Dead on it? Oh?
Speaker 4 (02:32:02):
No, he's going to want a bigger screen than that.
Speaker 5 (02:32:04):
Yeah, the zones do an upgrade. Yeah, even I can't
afford that. Sorry, sorry, four seven nine?
Speaker 3 (02:32:14):
What are you for?
Speaker 17 (02:32:14):
News?
Speaker 2 (02:32:17):
Good time for You heard it here first on the
Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 6 (02:32:21):
Officials in Rhode Island say they're working around the clock
to apprehend the man who's shot and killed two students
and wounded nine others at Brown University on Saturday. Providence
Mayor Brett Smiley said officers from several agencies are working
on the case.
Speaker 2 (02:32:36):
This community will heal from this. We will move forward.
Speaker 24 (02:32:39):
But that doesn't make light of and I'm certainly not
making light of the fear and anxiety that persists.
Speaker 2 (02:32:45):
But the only way we're going to move forward through
it is one step at a time. In today's one
of those days.
Speaker 6 (02:32:49):
He added that student should feel safe to return to
campus police have released new video of the suspect, dressed
in black wearing a mask. It can be seen walking
away from the Ivy League school after the shooting.
Speaker 3 (02:33:00):
He's a portly gentleman. Yeah, yeah, he is. It's full
figured fella, and he looks like he has a security
guard jacket on. That's kind of what it looks like.
Like there's almost like bomber looking the jacket, back jacket
of some kind of kind of a wildly thing. He's
a bit of a waddler.
Speaker 6 (02:33:14):
Yeah, yeah, interesting video though, and I think it should
be easy, hopefully to ide him.
Speaker 5 (02:33:19):
I just see the one where he's like walking around
the corner.
Speaker 3 (02:33:21):
Is that it?
Speaker 4 (02:33:21):
Yeah, there's another one that's like front.
Speaker 3 (02:33:24):
On Oh really yeah, look into a neighborhood, like on
a sidewalk.
Speaker 6 (02:33:27):
He is wearing a mask, you know, like the COVID days.
But hopefully between his size and his height, he'll be
able to hopefully be fairly you know, identifiable.
Speaker 3 (02:33:36):
He's got that nit cap and what looks to be like,
like I said, is like a bomber jacket, cop jacket
kind of thing. It looks like it like a security
guard kind of jackets. What it looks like also has
a security guard kind of shoes looking. I'd hate to
think you get away with something.
Speaker 11 (02:33:49):
I know, I know.
Speaker 6 (02:33:51):
Lieutenant Governor Jay Collins was in Orlando today to announce
the results of a multi agency operation. He was joined
by FDL Commissioner Mark Glass at the highat Regions.
Speaker 4 (02:34:00):
See gives to Me.
Speaker 6 (02:34:00):
Police Chief Charles Broadway also spoke at the press conference.
Speaker 3 (02:34:04):
When we all come together and work together, we bring
multiple resources to the table, technology, intelligence, and manpower, specialized expertise.
That collaboration is what allows us to achieve results.
Speaker 6 (02:34:16):
Collins announced the arrests of three Central Florida men for
possessing child sex abuse material, as well as a sex.
Speaker 4 (02:34:22):
Doll need to look like oh man, yeah, oh man.
Speaker 6 (02:34:25):
Colin says, the operation is ongoing and they're committed to
public safety.
Speaker 3 (02:34:29):
Yeah. And then finally, I mean you can I guess
you could say you accidentally downloaded.
Speaker 4 (02:34:35):
Some stuff, but that's that's fifteen images.
Speaker 3 (02:34:38):
Yeah. The sex doll's kind of hard to shake. That's
that's hard to kind of get away from you. You
don't trip and fall and have one of those in
your closet exactly. And then finally, no surprise here, I
haven't heard it enough. Yet it's a good tune. Man,
(02:34:58):
it's a good tune like it. I really I think too.
It's a great It's a monitoring classic. It's a great song.
Speaker 5 (02:35:03):
I love how it builds. I just think it's so
well done.
Speaker 3 (02:35:06):
That thing's been around for like forty years. I say new,
I mean new to us because we had the standards.
Didn't she record that thing in the nineties or late eighties?
They had to be nineties, right, Oh, that's a good question.
Speaker 6 (02:35:15):
So Mariah Carey now holds the record for the most
weeks a song is spent at the top of the
Billboard Hot one hundred charter. Christmas classic All I Want
for Christmas Is You is once again the number one
song on the chart, marking the twentieth week it has
reached the peak. Carrie previously shared the record with Shaboozie's
a Bar Song, Tipsy and Little NAS's at Little nas
(02:35:36):
X's Old Town Road. This also marks the seventy seventh
week the song has spent on the chart, and that
ties it with Dualipa is Levitating for the longest charting
song ever by a female A really yep and you
heard it here first?
Speaker 4 (02:35:49):
I'm the Jim Clobert Chew.
Speaker 3 (02:35:51):
Thank You deb nineteen ninety four. All I Want for
Christmas thirty one years ago. Man, it's an old ass song.
Three decades to build up all those records. It is
a great song, though timeless. That song could have been
recorded yesterday and you would say it fits right in.
Speaker 4 (02:36:03):
Yep, We're still gonna play it and still want to
hear it.
Speaker 3 (02:36:05):
Do we have to think they young one?
Speaker 6 (02:36:06):
We have Sam Bowen and Candice Rich We want to
thank them for running our YouTube chanow And.
Speaker 3 (02:36:10):
This is the first time in a while we've had
zero features on the show. All day long has just
been us.
Speaker 5 (02:36:14):
It's been fun question of the day in our YouTube chat,
which is better going into ac in the dead of
summer or going in the heat during the winter.
Speaker 3 (02:36:23):
I'm gonna tell you I think more people get annoyed
from being cold than they do hot. I'm going to
say going into a warm room out of better cold
is better than the other. Okay, and what percentage? Oh,
I'm gonna say sixty eight percent of the people believe that.
Speaker 5 (02:36:42):
Sixty nine percent of the people believe the opposite. They're
really saying AC in the summer is better and I
think those are people who I've not been cold, those
people who have not lived up north truly cold.
Speaker 3 (02:36:54):
That's for sure. That's okay, good questions, that's great man,
a good response. All right, tomorrow, we'll do what you do.
That's new. We'll do it's only money. Of course. Russ
will be in with us tomorrow. Big fun coming up
all day on the show tomorrow, starting at three o'clock.
Roger's football follow up and the follow ups that twenty
five dollars gift card to Frogger's Grilla and Borrow. We
have Devin Jack, I'm Jim. We follow the new Shoggie.
They follow the monsters in the morning. After us, it's
(02:37:15):
Tom and Dam of the Corporate Time and our friends
from Real Laughs. We'll see tomorrow at three for more
of The Jim Colbert Show. Until then, have yourself a
fantastic Monday evening.
Speaker 4 (02:37:21):
See you tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (02:37:22):
Bye.
Speaker 16 (02:37:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:37:27):
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.
Speaker 2 (02:37:34):
Both are available for free on the iheartra