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October 21, 2025 157 mins
Tuesday - Jack is back from vacation and talks about the Late Show and living in a Tiny House. We learn about the drug cartels connections to the lime industry. Prince Andrew, writing cursive and The Perfect Neighbor are also on the docket. We review a Public Enemy album for WYDTN. Froggers Football Follow-up reveals if Jim got his first win of the year. It’s Only Money with Scott Brown with Edgewater Family Wealth on alternate 401k investments and THC seltzers. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
For advertisers.

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

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Dad's right, guys, Here we go on a Tuesday 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 hot program set up for you.
This afternoon. We will get shot up on what's happening
in the world. Deb does that around three twenty with
JCS News four o'clock hour. It's what you do that's
new my choice. I made the guys listen to it
takes a nation of millions to hold as back by
public enemy. We'll find out what they think and then

(00:36):
find out what Deb has to offer a little bit
later five o'clock hour will do some trivia cool stuff
to give away there as well. Well. Ended up with
its only money with Scott Brown from agweaar our family
wealth and you heard it here first Here calls text
and talkbacks all day lawless for opportunities for you don't
want a thousand bucks. Welcome to the show. I'm Jim.
To my left, my lovely and very dangerous go hosting
is Deb Roberts. Hello. There good afternoons four seven one

(01:00):
text us at seven seven zero three one. Find it's
easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at the Jim crport showing
x just at Jim Culbert showing of course all day
every day a jimporpordlove dot com. This week. You can
check us out on YouTube doing the show live, where
you can watch it happen every day. If you'd like
to send a talk back, that's easy as well. Grab
that iHeartRadio app, go to the real Radio section and

(01:20):
use that mic to send your comment over to Jack.
Your three o'clock keyword it's money m O N E Y.
Go to Real Radio dot fm and send that off
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Money guys, is
your three'clock keyword good luck?

Speaker 1 (01:33):
We need a winner, man.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Yeah, we do.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
Man.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
I would dry up in here, dry up in here,
speak for yourself now, come on now. So I got
home last night, I was talking to my wife about
the screen cream. She was aware, Oh really, And then
I asked her, how are you aware? And then she
just turned around and walked away. Really no, She just

(01:57):
said she got it a bunch of long time ago,
and you did not know about it I'd never heard
of it before. I think she was joking with me,
what is this scream cream? Oh, we read a story
yesterday about a guy or a doctor's come up with
this cream that women can use topically to increase their
libido and their.

Speaker 5 (02:16):
Oh my, someone who's a pharmacy tech texted us at
seven seven zero three one to let us know that
they also have a product known as.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
A scream cream.

Speaker 5 (02:27):
But it has to you have to have a prescription
because it needs to be made specifically at a compounding pharmacy.
I see both gentlemen have bookmarked the words scream cream.

Speaker 6 (02:38):
Yeah no, no no no no yeah no no, no no.
I just got back from vacation. I don't need any
more streaming. Very good jump having no kids in the house.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
That's so funny. Yeah, So Jack leaves blow the roof
off that tiny house. She leaves last Sunday to go
to his home area, New Jersey with his beautiful wife.
Name me Bradshaw dot com. And really, to be honest
with you, and I even said this like last week,
I really had no idea what this trip was about. Usually,

(03:09):
when you go somewhere, you have like a goal or
you're doing something. You know, we didn't hear anything about
that before you left for Jersey this time, and we
kind of laughed a little bit because we're looking at
the weather and we're like, bradchall was taking off now.
And when you looked at Jersey at that point, it's
when all that Nor'easter thing was happening up there. And
when I looked at the radar, we all just laughed.
It was just the red blob of forty million hour

(03:33):
winds and wind driven rain and you were flying right
into it. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (03:37):
So the Nor'eastern which they were telling me about, but
it really hit the weekend right before we went in
on last Monday, came in, came through the clouds, and
then I could see Newark, New Jersey, that's where we
were landing, and.

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Like a ray of sumschine.

Speaker 6 (03:54):
Newark is always gray and miserable, and this was gray,
miserable and wet.

Speaker 3 (03:59):
Yeah. So it rained that day.

Speaker 6 (04:02):
Next day it was fine, and the next six days
the weather was perfect until yesterday it was raining all
day as we drove from our little tiny house in
the cabins in.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
The woods to the airport and flew right back here.
So you guys went to Jersey just you drove up.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
This was a wedding anniversary trip.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
You drove up in the New Hampshire to like get
a cabin or so.

Speaker 6 (04:24):
Yeah, so we drove in. We flew into New Jersey.
The idea was visit to my sisters. One lives in
North Jersey, the other one lives in Upper Manhattan.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
Flew in.

Speaker 6 (04:34):
I got tickets for us to go see a taping
of the Stephen Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
I can't wait to hear about that in the you know,
in the Colbert Theater.

Speaker 6 (04:42):
Yeah, yeah, So, you know, the four of us did that.
My other sister just happened to be in this city,
so we ran into her. So I saw three of
my sisters that one day. Next day we spent I
spent one night, my wife and I at one sister's house,
and you know, stayed in the city and did a
bunch of city stuff and back to New Jersey, did

(05:05):
New Jersey stuff, driving around my old town and you know,
the same tour I took you on Jimmy back and
oh one and then during the XFL days, and then
we rented a car at the end of the week,
and then my wife and I we drove to New Hampshire,
which is about five and a half hours away.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
Yeah, but a beautiful drive though.

Speaker 7 (05:24):
It was.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Stunning. That drive is crazy and of course it's a
leaf changing time.

Speaker 6 (05:31):
And that's what we really were timing. It was either
going to be the first week in October or the second,
and we pushed it back to the second.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
And it was perfect. It was just gorgeous or peeper
Do you think do you think people who have not
been up to that area, whether it be Appalachia or
even north of that into Vermont and New Hampshire, you know,
northern New York and really seeing those did they sleep
on the Midwest? Yeah, you're right. Look, man, this place
is like known for it. Like yeah, I mean there

(05:59):
are like tours and stuff. Not that you're right, I've
not been in the Midwest, but man, if you've never
seen that, if you're if you especially with the Blue Ridge,
because you can go around the Blue Ridge and have
these vistas that where you can see for miles and
it's just this kaleidoscope of color everywhere. And I know
that up in New Hampshire it's like that a lot
as well. Absolutely. Yeah. We even did a scenic train ride.

Speaker 6 (06:22):
You know, you ride out, you know for about twenty
five miles and then then it comes back and you
got to see all of that. But really and and
my my wife's cousin even mentioned she goes, yeah, the
drive up will probably be the best. And it through
you know, through New York into Connecticut, in the Massachusetts,
in the New Hampshire, just these tree lined highways and

(06:44):
it was just gorgeous. Yeah yeah, and this is for
your what anniversary? It wasn't that anniversary, just you know,
our vacatione just a trip there. Yeah, my wife wanted
to see her family in New Hampshire, and so we
took the opportunity and you know to see mine as
well in New York and New Jersey and got to
do some things around there. It was timed out lovely
for if the Yankees would have advanced, I would have

(07:06):
been there for a home game, but they fail too complong.

Speaker 3 (07:10):
Yeah, yeah, we know. Now it's gonna be the Blue
Jays and the Dodgers. Yeah yeah, Colbert.

Speaker 6 (07:15):
Yeah, So we went to the Tuesday Night taping a
week ago tonight. Matter of fact, at this time I
was online outside the Ed Sullivan Theater we got you know,
for that the tickets are free, you have to submit
for them in advance. So as soon as I booked
my trip, I put in. I got to told my sister,
she put in, she got approved, so we had four tickets.

(07:36):
We uh, you know, you're you stand outside the Ed
Sullivan Theater. Uh, that's about an hour. Then they let
you in and then you're about in line for about
an hour inside the theater. Then they seat you and
uh then they have a warm up guy Paul Mecurio.
He's been on The Monsters a couple of times. Yeah,
super nice guy, very funny and he does a lot

(07:57):
of you know, crowd work and getting everyone warmed up
and let him know.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Okay, you know what to expect.

Speaker 6 (08:03):
As part of an audio, they're you know, live to tape,
so it's happening live. Sure, they're recording it. They replay
it at eleven thirty at night. They're actually recording it
about five thirty six pm. Okay, you know, so that
that's when the show is happening. The guests on the
show were Bete Middler and Tim Meadows, who's on that
new DMV show.

Speaker 3 (08:24):
Well, that's the book ends of fame.

Speaker 6 (08:25):
Yeah, so but it you know, it's interesting. And then
they you know, he flubbed the line and the monologue.
He's like, we'll go back, and so they go back
and he did that line again. They did the sometimes
if you watched it that night, and I watched it
the next day. I recorded it. The they do the
Bett Middler interview and he goes and we'll be right

(08:47):
back more with Bette Middler. Go to commercial break, they
come back, We're here with Bette Middler right now, and
then you know, the interview resumes to the average view
where that looks like that was two segmented interviews where
they took a break in the middle. They do one
long interview and then at the very end he records that, hey,

(09:07):
we'll be right back with Beb Middler and thank you
for bed middle, and then they just edit those. They
chop up the interview and insert that to make it
look like it was two separate cool sections.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
It was all done in one time. That's pretty badass.

Speaker 6 (09:20):
At the very end of the taping, Stephen Colbert is
like he comes out, He's like, Okay, this is the
point where we would be done, but I'm going to
finish the show. Right here, I'm going to introduce tomorrow's guests,
and but I want you guys to stay. I got
something special. So you know, he does that, and then
he comes out. He's like, okay, we have one more guest.
This isn't going to be for the broadcast. This is

(09:41):
actually for something else. He couldn't tell us what that is,
but he goes, but it's going to be just like
it was on our show. You know, treat him like
a regularly. This is a very special guest.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
So it's like an internet skin or something they're shooting.
So the US were like online or whatever. I don't
know what. It's going to be used for his feature
show on Netflix, but no, it's on the set.

Speaker 6 (10:02):
And so they do it just like it's an interview
on the Late Show with Cepha Colbert. And so then
they roll tape and then he does ladies and gentlemen,
I like you to put your hands together for Charlie XCX,
and so she comes out and and I know, like,
my youngest daughter lost.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
Her damn ye I lost her ever loving mind.

Speaker 6 (10:22):
And then they do this pre written thing, but they
make it look like it's a live interview, but it
has to do with her announcing a tour and stuff.
So I think it more has to do with Charlie
XCX and a tour related announcement. But then they they're like,
they didn't like the way, so they did it a
second time where it looks like it's off the cuff,

(10:44):
but they're even telepromperty, right, Yeah, but that's not part
of the show.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
But that's going to be part of something else. But
it's got to see Charlie XCX as well. Did Bette
Miller perform, She didn't.

Speaker 6 (10:54):
She actually sega song, a capella that she wrote, like
to Win Beneath by Wings, but she wrote it as
a thank you to Stephen Colbert because she realized, you know,
she might not be on against it would be her
last appearance, you know, thanking him for kind of getting
helping her through the last decade of politics and for

(11:19):
his voice and his reason and had the audience singing along.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
It was. It was a pretty fun moment. Total legend. Yeah, yeah,
I mean that's she's a total legend, man. I mean,
she's had so many iterations of her career and she's
been relevant for fifty or sixty years, and she's a
complete monster entertainer.

Speaker 6 (11:38):
Man, she had some good stories and tell It's interesting.
I like, during the break someone's walking around on stage
sweat your just with a cell phone, like recording stuff
and cell phone. Then you watch her post just someone
doing social media, right, they have someone like like the band,
Like the band plays during what is the commercial break, right,
and they play one song NonStop, and so you know

(12:01):
they're recording that and they're just putting all of this
social content out. Wow, that's it was a fun time.
It was the third time I've been in the theater.
Second time I saw Colbert. First time I saw Letterman,
and then back in twenty twelve, then Colbert a couple
of years ago, and then again last week.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Wow. Man, Yeah, that was a lot of fun. That
would be very cool. I've seen I've actually met Tim Meadows,
so that I mean, and he's a he's an interesting
dude in a sense, like he's one of those cats
that when you see him on television, they're like, you know,
gregarious and fun and everything's like you know it's but
when they're off of TV, they're not really like that
at all. He was he was kind of hard to
get close to. When we talked to him a couple

(12:38):
of times with the monsters. He just was he didn't
really want to be there. He just and when he
did his stand up it really wasn't that good.

Speaker 6 (12:45):
It's interesting because he talked about, like, so he's on
a new show where he plays a camerginy guy. Yeah,
in his sixties, so it fits right, Oh, it fits perfectly.

Speaker 5 (12:57):
You know.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
At the end of the interview.

Speaker 6 (12:58):
It's funny because then he just goes on these sad
I just have to say thank you to Stephen Colbert.
And then he talked about what I didn't know was
his relationship. They knew each other back in Second City
days or doing the improv stuff from way back when,
and even when he was off SNL and you know,
not doing much, Stephen Colbert always got him work and stuff,

(13:20):
and so he just was just both of them were
really so effusive in praising Colbert, and I think you're
going to see a lot of that now towards the
end of his show.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
And that's very cool because a lot of those guys,
Colbert Correll and a lot of the people that you
see that wound up on a lot of the big
time sketch comedy shows. They came from a scene like
whether it be Fridays or SETV or The Groundlings or
Exit fifty seven or any of those sketchy kind of shows,
all of those people wound up making an impact in
the comedy movie or television scene. And you can go
and trace those roots back down some cool stuff as well.

(13:54):
All right, glad to hear that, dude. That's a super
fun stuff. A lot about thank you. What do you
get for news?

Speaker 5 (13:58):
Bond is revoked for a man in an Orange County attack,
Seminole County responds to the state's budget analysis, and it
was all smiles and butterflies, and we'll talk about.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
America's fancy est state.

Speaker 5 (14:11):
Really yeah, we'll talk about that and more coming up
next during JCS news.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
All right, don't forget money is your three o'clock keyword?
That's m O N E y. Slide over to real
Radio Dot a feminsen that offer your chance at one
one thousand dollars. Back in a second with Dev's news
and more the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 8 (14:28):
Hey, how's it, o'hannah? Oh, brother Jack back in the house.
You know they have a saying all over He kind
of never missed the water till the well runs dry
and bruh. Just want to say welcome back. You have
been missed all fightened up on all that high quality
cheese pizza you've been eating up there anyway, man, I
hope the trip was a baller for you in Naomi

(14:51):
and uh, everybody have a great day.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
Helloh hello, ha brother, I'm guessing airplane hangar. I was
hoping that and not the bad that was. It's too
big now wa yeah, it's big ass. That was big. Hey,
all right, welcome back to the Jim Golberg Show, Real
Radio one four point one, Brena. Matt's always calling in
with some positivity. Loving that for sure. Money is your
three o'clock keyword. That's m O n e Y talking

(15:14):
about positivity. Let's get some cash and some hands. Money
is the word, guys, go to Real Radio dot I
fenit's send that off for your chance at one thousand dollars.
Welcome back. I'm Jim. Jack is right over there, back
in the helm. Yep, back behind the steering wheel. Let's
do this. Deb has some news. Let's get it.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
It's time for JCS news. Wow, this guy got to
put his name on everything.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
It's in my contracted.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Here's the news on the Jim Colber.

Speaker 5 (15:41):
Show and JCS news is brought to you by that
mortgage guy Don. Governor Ron De Santa says he's glad
that the suspect in an Orange County attempted rape will
be back behind bars. The community, of course up in
arms when a judge released twenty three year old Jacobe
Tillman on bond despite him facing charges of attempted sexual
battery and battery by strangulation. That bond was revoked today

(16:04):
amid a new charge of attempted murder.

Speaker 9 (16:07):
In some of these jurisdictions. Unfortunately, some of these judges
get on the bench and they do everything they can
to benefit the accused criminal. I want judges that are
there to protect the public.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
Now.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
In their motion to revoke bond, prosecutors say Tillman posted
on TikTok and made comments toward a witness I believe
also posted on Instagram. Prosecutors say they planned to try
Tillman as a habitual offender, which could get him life
in prison if convicted.

Speaker 3 (16:35):
You got to find disaster first. They don't have a
Megan custody.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
No, the bond was just revoked. This morning. So all right.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
A woman won't face charges after her daughter went overboard
on a cruise ship off Broward County. The State Attorney's
office has announced it won't charge the mother for what
happened on the Disney Dream four months ago. The woman
had her five year old daughter sit on the railing
for a photo Jesus, but the girl fell backwards through
a porthole window and into the water about fifty feet below.

(17:02):
You remember, the girl's father jumped into save her, and
the ship's crew rescued both of them. The Assistant state
attorney says, well, the mother was negligent, her actions don't
rise to a standard of culpable negligence or utter disregard
for the child's safety.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Show it wasn't malicious, in other words, exactly. We all
thought it was the dad, grandfather, wasn't it. They No, no, no,
this is they're thinking of a different Okay, that's one
of the kids falling off cruise ships.

Speaker 6 (17:29):
You're not wrong, but this we thought it was the
dad putting the guests there. And then the sheriff in
Florida where they doc said the dad did not I
tell you, the dad did not put this child. And
so everyone. They're like, Okay, we give him a pass
because we thought the kid fell in. He put the
kid up there and then he got in. Was he
a hero because he kind of created the situation? But

(17:51):
it was the mother who.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Mother And he wasn't trying to be a hero.

Speaker 5 (17:55):
He was just trying to get away from his wife,
who was going to scream at him for the rest
of that.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Disney Dream crew. Ye, how could you put the child
in the porthole? He probably was, He probably considered it
multiple times throughout the trip. Yeah, but she was the
one who put the.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Turns out, she was the one.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
All right, this next story And I'm not a golfer,
but this is just a mean streak.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
Beyond mean streak.

Speaker 5 (18:15):
A joy rider is accused of causing of damaging a
golf course in Vlusha County. Newsmurrna Beach Police announced yesterday
it's investigating a case of vandalism at the club at
Venetian Bay. Someone apparently did donuts and ruined the green
on the second hole. The damage was discovered Sunday morning,
and we're not talking about a little bit of damage.
Police estimate the damages at over one hundred and sixty

(18:38):
thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
I've been told by golf course attendant or golf course
engineers and the people who take care of them that
say that every square foot of a premium golf course
green is about ten grand really maintain that, Like that's
how expensive that grass can get when it comes to
the base, and what they have to do to build that,
how long it takes to grow and condition it, and
they ruin the ending, the whole thing. It is a travesty.

(19:02):
I saw it today and they know it was a
pickup trug because somebody saw, but they were too far
away to give a discussion.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Yeah, no arrest has been announced.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
But you know the thing with people who do stuff
like that, they rarely keep their mouths shut. So let's
hope somebody thinks it's a good idea to brag.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
It's not on TikTok already.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
I know Florida's chief financial officer hands out federal reimbursement
checks to five county law enforcement agencies totally nearly two
million dollars. They're being reimbursed for the cost of helping
ice arrest and detain undocumented migrants. Speaking to a group
of state law enforcement officials in Saint Augustine Blazing Golia says,
the federal government is actually repaying local taxpayers.

Speaker 10 (19:41):
Our communities and our taxpayers are going to basically pay
for the enforcement of something that the federal government should
be doing. Then it's only right that the federal government
helped pitch in on that, and that's why you're seeing
this money.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
He says.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
More federal reimbursement checks are forthcoming to counties whose taxpayers
have been fronting the money for local mimigration enforcement. The
checks are being distributed despite a federal government shutdown. Meanwhile,
Seminole County is defending its spending habits. Okay, the county
yesterday released a letter it sent last week to Florida

(20:15):
CFO Blazing Golia because two weeks ago he accused the
county of overspending by forty eight million dollars. County Commissioner
Chairman Jay Zeenbauer, though, writes in Golia's analysis presents an
incomplete picture. Zeenbauer says, and Golia is overlooking state imposed mandates,
essential service demands, and community supported programs. Zeenbauer Asksngolia to

(20:38):
reconsider his conclusion that the county overspent its budget.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
All right, this nextor I thought was pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (20:45):
I'm thinking kind of like Allah and the footsteps of Shack.
A former NFL player has a new career here in Florida.
Former wide receiver Lavernius Coles was sworn in Friday as
a member of the Jacksonville Sheriff's office.

Speaker 6 (20:59):
Oh wait, really yeah, I had him on my fantasy teams.

Speaker 7 (21:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (21:05):
Cole's played at Florida State University before he was drafted
in two thousand by the New York Jets. The Jacksonville
Natives spent eleven seasons in the NFL and decided to
become a sheriff's deputy up in Jacksonville.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
All right.

Speaker 5 (21:20):
Florida's five million seniors on Medicare are in the process
of changing plans. During open enrollment. Doctor memet oz oversees
the centers for Medicare and Medicaid services and advises Florida
seniors to review the new plans now. But if you
listen closely, maybe I'm not alone. It's the how he advises.

Speaker 11 (21:41):
Plans change, your health changes, your needs change. We have
a team of experts that improved the experience on Medicare
dot go and if you don't sign up by these s.
Then we'll decide for you, which may not be as
good as.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
You decided for.

Speaker 5 (21:56):
The communicating skills as so, yeah, man, doctor Oz says
there are significant changes.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
It's like he's talking to as eight year old I
know exactly.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Don't make me do this for you.

Speaker 5 (22:06):
Significant changes in twenty twenty six to premiums, deductibles, and
plan choices, and says if you have questions, you can
also call one eight hundred Medicare for advice. And unfortunately,
Floridians who rely on SNAP benefits will stop receiving payments
on October thirty first, if the government shutdown continues. The
shutdown has led to a lapse in funding for the

(22:28):
Department of Eggs, Food and Nutrition Service. How many people
receive SNAP benefits just in the state of Florida.

Speaker 6 (22:36):
Ooh, I will guess three thousand, three thousand. I wanted
to make it easy for you, Okay, okay.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
So twenty two million people in the state. That's way
too high, zero point one percent. I'll go five hundred thousand.

Speaker 5 (22:57):
Nearly three million peoples, dam and that's going to be
three million people that are gonna of the Florida Apparently,
all right, recent events are elevating concerns about teen mental health.
You were gone when this happened, Jack, But a forum
was held yesterday in Orlando after three teenagers committed suicide

(23:19):
last week in Seminole County.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
Whoa in one week? Whoa? Yeah a Lineman high Haggarty
And I want to say, uh, was it winter springs?

Speaker 1 (23:28):
I believe so, but I don't remember.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
But I know someone will text us and let us
know that we have that teacher that lets us know.
One of the topics discussed yesterday was social media. So
one speaker says, social media creates a bubble around teens
that leaves them feeling isolated.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
Right, I mean you often.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
Feel like they believe that's their only reality exactly.

Speaker 5 (23:49):
I mean we did too, but it's even worse with
social media. Former state lawmaker Dick Bachelor tells Spectrum News
thirteen we might need to redirect mental health funding to
the current generation. And speaking of social media, there's a
new challenge for parents to be aware of.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
Oh, I'll rub my head for you.

Speaker 5 (24:07):
A fourteen year old Saint Petersburg boy was hurt last
week and the TikTok jam Jar pulse jet.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
Challenge do you know what that is. No, that's a
whole bunch. Yeah, that is the last one I heard
was they were just mainlining super hot ramen.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
Just like K pop demon Hunters.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
Yea, yeah, that's the last I heard.

Speaker 5 (24:24):
No, this one involves lighting, rubbing alcohol, and a jar
on fire.

Speaker 3 (24:31):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (24:32):
A Saint Pete fire rescue official tells Fox thirteen News
the boy suffered life altering burn injuries.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Why right.

Speaker 5 (24:41):
Doctor Jasmine Patterson deals with pediatric emergencies at Movement Children's
Hospital at Tampa General, and she says she's seen several
injuries from social media challenges, including this one. Doctor Pattison
tells Tampa Bay's twenty eight parents need to be proactive
and talk to their kids about the dangers of social media,
video and just.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Being stupid, the dangers of just being stupid.

Speaker 6 (25:05):
When my daughter was young, she's twenty one now, and
I realize with technology and it's like, wow, this is
a whole experimental generation. That this is a live, real
time experiment that we are conducting on this generation without
a doubt, and it is not going well, No, it
is not.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
Let's see if they'll do this. I didn't expect that
everybody did.

Speaker 5 (25:28):
It and rather than slow down, now chat GPT comes
out and says, yeh Sin, you're going to be able
to sext with an AI buy Hey.

Speaker 3 (25:35):
Yeah, just when you thought, just when you try to
convince yourself that porn wasn't the reason the Internet lives,
they AI makes an announcement. Oh, by the way, now
you can just have sex with AI, right exactly. Yeah,
that's how important that is to these businesses. By the way,
you would never think that AI AI would need to
lean on human sexuality to stay alive. They're making announcements

(25:56):
about it. Yeah, it's not just like, hey, we're gonna
do it. We're announcing we're doing it. Yeah, there go
the rest of the rainforest. Yeah, no doubt we needed
the power.

Speaker 12 (26:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (26:06):
Well, Tropical Storm Melissa has formed in the central Caribbean Sea,
packing maximum sustained winds of fifty miles an hour.

Speaker 7 (26:12):
I think the first three days of the forecast kind
of just sitting in the Caribbean in that area. But
once we get beyond the third day there things become
much more uncertain, and that's where we're going to have
to continue to watch it.

Speaker 5 (26:23):
So the National Hurricane Centers Robert Garcia says there are
a significant number of situations that could impact where Melissa goes.
So again, the forecast is uncertain. It is expected to
gradually strengthen into a hurricane.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
What comes with hurricanes. Oh, mosquitoes, oh man.

Speaker 5 (26:38):
Sarasota County is now using drones to fight mosquitoes and
hard to reach areas. Yeah, the drones are going to
apply a larva side to swampy areas and flooded woodlots,
stopping mosquito larvae before they even become biting adults. Officials
say the treatment is safe and helps reduce the need
for stronger chemicals to target adult mosquitoes. Who sign up

(27:00):
for alerts will be notified the day before the spring begins.

Speaker 3 (27:04):
So I heard about that a couple of years ago
when we have that pond out back at the old house,
and that that thing, man, it was just like a
muck pond. Oh yeah, And during the summer you could
literally see him flying around like little bats. And then
they would say, you throw these tabs out into that
shallow area, and the tabs will release a non toxic
kind of thing that kills basically the mosquito embryo. That's

(27:24):
what they're saying, before it turns into something.

Speaker 5 (27:26):
Yeah, weren't we told that that's chemicals? Okay for your art,
go ahead and spray.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
Then that's how my fish smoking the cigar? All right.

Speaker 5 (27:34):
A crocodile with a spear sticking out of its head
has been caught and is on the road to recovery.
Florida Fish and Wildlife officials say it was first spotted
over the weekend in the keys and trap. Last night,
vetternarians at Zoo Miami have removed the object and are
treating the croc The goal is to release the federally threatened,
which means also federally protected species. The hunt continues for

(27:56):
the person who injured it, give them back their speary.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I have an idea how.

Speaker 5 (28:02):
Catch all right, before we get to fancy, what is
the safest city in Florida, the safest winter, safest This
is Florida's safest city and a new wallet Hub study.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
It's got to be something down in the southwest portion
of the state. It's going to be like, it's got
to be like Naples, that high dollar area. Yeah, something
like that. So you're going Naples, maybe, yeah, I'll go
Naples and you're going Fort Myers, Port Saint Lucy, which
is absolutely mind blowing because when my daughter played volleyball there,
we were literally warned by people who worked at the

(28:37):
school that when we came into town and watch games,
there are certain areas you shouldn't go in Port Saint Lucy.
I'm not kidding. That was just a few years ago.
East coast, south of zero.

Speaker 5 (28:45):
Yep, it's just north of Boak I believe it's just
a little bit south of Fort Pierce. Okay, yeah, Amazingly enough,
Port Saint Lucie. It plays thirtieth overall out of more
than one hundred and eighty US cities and ranked tenth
in Home and Community Safe d Fort Lauderdale came in
as the least safe city in Florida, landing near the
bottom nationally. The report looked at crime, natural disasters, and

(29:09):
financial risks. Oh wait, there is financial risks. And then finally, okay,
we all know. Sorry Jimmy, he told me I stole
this story from him, which means Jack, I'm going to
have to lean on you because he has the answers
to this.

Speaker 3 (29:20):
Okay, what you got?

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Will you say?

Speaker 3 (29:22):
This is the most mind blowing thing that you read today?

Speaker 13 (29:24):
This.

Speaker 5 (29:24):
I read this actually yesterday, and I saved this specifically
for knowing it was going to make what little of
your hair that was left it was gonna fry it did?

Speaker 3 (29:33):
It just sprinkled down like old icicles on Christmas trees?
What do you what you mean? Like that? That sound
that during the Charlie Brown special they make so wallet Hub.

Speaker 5 (29:42):
According to a new wallet hub report, the personal finance
website took a deep dive into where states are spending
the most money on personal care products by evaluating the
prices of toothpaste and shampoo Winter Park and all fifty
states because they're the main hygiene items that consumers purchase.
What do you think Jack is the number one spot,

(30:03):
the number one state spending the most on personal care products.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
And by the way, the label of this story was
where are the fanciest States? They called this like and
they attributed this being fancy. Now let me help you out.
I'm toothpaste and shampoo. I want you to get this
on the first try. No, I want you to get
this on the first try. I'm gonna give you one hint.
Think as outside the boxes you could possibly think when
considering this answer. Texas Mississippi. Oh my god, you're right.

(30:33):
That is way further on. It gets better. Mississippi the
top five.

Speaker 5 (30:38):
So after Mississippi is Louisiana as the second state spending
the most.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
The one that I knew. Jimmy was like, hell because
it's toothpaste.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
They're talking about toothpaste.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
West Virginia comes in.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
There's no teeth in West Virginia. They sold them Froxie.

Speaker 5 (30:58):
Alabama comes in at number four. Oh, Arkansas, this is ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
The sec min West Virginia.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
Arkansas came in at number five. Where do you think
Florida came in at jack.

Speaker 3 (31:13):
We're always in the middle of twenty seven. I think
we were in like twelve or fifteen ers of there,
we're fourteen y Yep, we came in at fourteen. But
Mississippi this list today, and I'm like, somebody's bad at lists.
This is this is the most ridiculous thing I've ever
heard in my life.

Speaker 5 (31:27):
This is why one of those stories you like a
wallet hub and then this comes out and says Mississippi
is the fancy est state.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
You're like, really, wallet Hub, really, it's not. I've been there.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
Is West Virginia the third fancy of state.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
Come on, now, I live there. I know it's not
totally Yes.

Speaker 5 (31:46):
Regardless, that concludes your JCS news.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
He's back.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
Ceiling was the only one that knew what to do.
Ceilanye us a straight up baseline yesterday. It was great.

Speaker 1 (32:00):
Nobody else we warned all.

Speaker 3 (32:01):
Right, seven seven zero three one, you gotta have fifteen
minutes or so to get over to real radio do
FM and send off the keyword money. That's m O
n e y. Just slide right over, send it off.
And remember, if you're playing the game, pick up your
phone and your phone rings, because that, my friends, is
that they tell you you've won. Back in a second
with more of the Jim Colbert Show, The Bruggers Which
Bob follow up is next call down for your choose

(32:21):
to win.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
Four oh seven nine one six one O four one.
It's time for the Froggers football follow up on the
Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (32:37):
That's right, it's time for the Broggers football follow up.
Right here the Jim Colbert Showker to see if our
friends over at Froggers Grill and Bar, four of these
beautiful locations all throughout Central Florida will tell you all
about those here in just a sec This is a
twenty five dollars gift card if you give me the
one that chooses who had the most correct picks this
weekend in NFL Action.

Speaker 6 (32:56):
That's right, thanks to our friends at Froggers all season long.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
We picked the games on.

Speaker 6 (33:01):
Thursday, we talk about the results on Tuesday, and it's
your chance to cash in. Like Jim said, it's a
twenty five dollars gift card good at any one of
the four area Froggers locations. We're talking Ovito, Mount Dora,
Apopka and Altamont Springs. You can always find their menu
and the one near su online at froggers dot com.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Don't sleep on anything in that kitchen. I swear if
you get a cheese steak for a progi to a pizza,
you are going to be happy. The wings are legendary,
Besz Blue Cheese, and Orlando simply awesome people. We love
doing business with them. You will love visiting Froggers for
all your favorite sports and of course the Magic Seasons
starts tomort night.

Speaker 6 (33:36):
Oh boy, anything you want to watch sports on TV,
Froggers is the location for you.

Speaker 3 (33:41):
Now. I wasn't here.

Speaker 6 (33:42):
Last week, but I looked at the results. I see Jim,
Ross and myself all had nine correct. But Debra, the
lovely Deborah had ten right last week and was the
best player last week.

Speaker 3 (33:54):
Was yeah yeah, just absolutely killing you. How about that?
How about that? And Jim, I see that you still
have out one a week? Yeah I have not won
a week. Yeah yeah.

Speaker 5 (34:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
By the way, Ross should be here today. Everybody who's
you know asking Usually he is here on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
He had an event today, he will be He'll be
with his Thursday and Friday. Yeah, at the end of
the at the end of the week. So uh yeah.
Ross still on the program, still with us, just today
was a bad day.

Speaker 6 (34:18):
And still eligible making the football picks. So what the
listeners have to do is decide which one of the
four of us did best in our prognostication skills.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Very nice this week? Very nice? Deb one, two, three,
four or five?

Speaker 1 (34:31):
Let's go one?

Speaker 3 (34:32):
One? Right up top is Sean, Sean, how you doing
doing well? Glad to hear that, buddy. Welcome to the
Froggers football Forecast. All right, buddy, Between myself, Ross, Jack,
and Deborah, who do you believe had the most correct
picks this week in NFL Action. We're gonna go Jab,
You're going deb Oh? Deb was his strong pick.

Speaker 6 (34:53):
Deb actually did have eleven right this week, which is
one better than last week.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
However, she was not first place this week. However, Yeah,
I'm making the first place this week. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (35:03):
Deb overall for the season is tied for first place,
but this past week she was not in first place.

Speaker 3 (35:10):
YEA, two, three or four, you're doing great? Two, three
or four. Let's go to two? Is Dino? Dino? What's
going on? Dino in the house. Indeed, Hey, buddy, goodness,
good hearing from you. Deb is off the off the table. Myself,
Ross and Jack still on the table. Who, my friend,
do you believe had the best week in the NFL

(35:31):
Action this week?

Speaker 14 (35:32):
I'm torn between Ross and you.

Speaker 3 (35:35):
Jim. I think you're gonna do it this week. Let's
go there you go. There is no one more overdue
than Jim. Unfortunately, this was not the week Pino thought
he had it. To come on. He is last place
for the week. He is the last place for this
season I've had. This has been a very bad year.

Speaker 6 (35:57):
He is just last place. He has not won one
single week this year. I've never seen a performance so poor.

Speaker 3 (36:07):
Don't you have another vacation. I'm gonna give you a
week of mine. I take off tomorrow. I talked to
Ross earlier this week. I go, I guarantee you.

Speaker 6 (36:15):
During the football pick segment, Jim will wish I was
on vacation.

Speaker 3 (36:20):
All right, three or four? Deb let's go three? Right
down the line. David, how you doing.

Speaker 7 (36:26):
I'm good, sir.

Speaker 15 (36:26):
I thought you were gonna get it this week.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
Oh buddy, I'm telling you I've had I've had a
couple of pretty bad weeks. Big dog.

Speaker 1 (36:32):
Well, I can help you with your pick something?

Speaker 16 (36:36):
All right?

Speaker 3 (36:36):
Between Buddy, she's crushing you between. I know. Look I'm done.
Between Jack and Ross. Who do you think had the
most correct NFL picks this week? I think it's gonna
be Jack. Well, Sir, you would be crazy. Now you're
a winner, buddy. We didn't even have to solicit bro

(36:59):
this guy.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
That's awesome.

Speaker 3 (37:01):
When they remember we forget I have it. You are
a winner. Twenty five dollars gift card to Froger's Grilla
Mark coming your way, buddy, and thanks for listening, Thanks
for playing. We appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (37:10):
Thank you, welcome, congratulations David.

Speaker 6 (37:13):
Yeah, even though I got that Thursday game wrong, but
came back and but you ran it.

Speaker 3 (37:18):
After that, you had a like I was looking at
it today, you had a you almost won the entire thing.
Points got me, Yeah, points got you. Jack loses the
Pittsburgh game on Thursday night and then literally goes on
an entire run. The only miss was the Chargers game,
and a lot of people miss that gamell ye, yeah,
I mean, I mean, you know a lot of people.

Speaker 6 (37:36):
And I thought I missed the Giants game. Then I
didn't think I missed the Giants game. Then I thought
I missed the Giants game. Then I didn't think I
missed the Giants game. The end of that game was
was so good.

Speaker 3 (37:46):
It was ridiculous, so good. Yeah. So Jack has another
incredible week, Buddy, Congratulations, you are a winner. Ross was
right behind me, by the way, yeah, right behind me.

Speaker 6 (37:55):
Devi and Ross are tied for a best overall for
the season.

Speaker 3 (37:59):
Then I'm in second. Jim, You're like, Buddy, it's way
far back then. Listen, can I tell you it makes
you a bad person to pylon right now, that's how
bad it is it makes you a terrible person to pilon.

Speaker 6 (38:10):
Look at that sea yellow that's wins. Jim has no yellows.

Speaker 3 (38:14):
Yeah yeah, yellows just my underwear.

Speaker 6 (38:18):
No, here's the deal, and this is why you should
be don't be bad at me, because I'm really only
the bearer of bad news. I didn't create the bad news.
Your horrible football picking skills did that? However, Really, I
think the blame lies with Ross Paget. Last season, he
was not making picks and you had a great season.
But now that he's back, you are in the toilet each.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
And every Here's the thing. I went with my heart
on the Bucks and they got crushed by the Lions
or a much better football team. They had a better record.
A lot of people took the buck.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
We're gonna smash the time.

Speaker 3 (38:52):
Yeah, I mean, look, look, here's the thing. I picked
the Chargers against Colts. I mean, that's that's a toss
up team. Who I mean, Indiana is a great I
mean Indianapolis is a great look football team. Right now.
Next week, I gotta tell you this. This week coming up,
I think I'm gonna have a stellar week. So don't
sleep on me this week, guys, I'm telling you, don't
do it. I'm rooting for you, all right, for you
at this point, you're going so poorly. Okay, seven nine,

(39:14):
one six one o four one ten. This is the
happiest he is, by the way. This is by the way.
Let me just tell you, Jack is never this happy
at home. He's not a happy around his wife or kids.
This is as happy as Jack is, is what I'm losing.

Speaker 6 (39:26):
Oh and I get to scroll through that list and
I see the names and I can't I'll look at
you in the screen.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
I can't even look at me on It's terrible. And
I sell my name and Dev's dame and Rosson dame
on my scroll scroll scroll. I am here. I am
fishing for catfish down there. I mean, it's Jesus. People
who didn't even make picks are doing better. This, Swear
to god, dude, I'm not kidding. I'm going to the
thing right now. I'm looking at the very bottom. I'm lenna,
go right week here. I barely beat two dudes who

(39:54):
didn't even make choices, barely beat him. Those guys didn't
even check in. I'll you be to my six games,
all right. Just take a little break we'll do what
you do. That's new next Stay tuned. This has been
the Froggers football follow up.

Speaker 2 (40:08):
Find the Froggers near you at Froggers dot com.

Speaker 17 (40:16):
What's up, Jackie, I'll talk a lot of craft to
y'all on the text messaging between you and the monsters
in the morning. I love in North Carolina, but I'm
coming down this weekend.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
I'm flying down Friday night. I will be on the prow.

Speaker 17 (40:31):
Us and we are going to have discussions about our
different views.

Speaker 3 (40:36):
Oh boy, I love you even though we don't.

Speaker 17 (40:38):
Agree on anything, and we're gonna hang out and.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Have a great time together. Bye, buddy, Love you been
listening for thirty five years, Mike, whether you like it
or not, Jackie, Wow, I love that.

Speaker 6 (40:49):
Let's see we have two buses, so there's a fifty
to fifty shot.

Speaker 3 (40:53):
Yeah, yeah, I'll be sitting next to this cat. Is
this a political thing, Jack? That you know? I would
tell that guy to gird himself quite well, because Jack
is no joke when it comes to this stuff. He
knows this stuff. So don't come in here. What's talking
points from Fox or Newsmax? Dude, you will get literally wasted.
By Bradshaw. If you try that, I mean wasted by him.

(41:13):
So don't try that. Don't embarage. I'm giving you a
preheads up. Don't embarrass yourself and try to get into
a political conversation with mister Bradshaw. That'd be a bad
move on your part. Just kind of keep it as
fun as you possibly can.

Speaker 6 (41:25):
There you go, well, thank you, But this is about
having fun where I'm sure it's gonna be a lovely,
polite conversation.

Speaker 3 (41:34):
I will any listener who's.

Speaker 6 (41:36):
Going to travel all the way down here to go
on one of our eventss it will to me.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
It tells me they have great taste. I love that
as well.

Speaker 7 (41:43):
Ja.

Speaker 6 (41:44):
And by the way, there's a few remaining seats if
you want to join us. Real Radio, dot FM, slash Brew.
It's gonna be a great time and we're really looking
forward to this.

Speaker 3 (41:52):
Iatterly never heard one person that went on a Monster's
Brew bus say they had a bad time. It's always
a good time. And by the way, they invite people
to show up at these bars, so it's not even
just a people in the bus. There's a caravan of
people who show up at those bars who live in
those areas, so the party's even bigger than what the
bus is bringing.

Speaker 6 (42:09):
In such a great point because today I put up
the timeline for when we will be at each one
of the breweries, and you can see that again online
at Real Radio dot fm.

Speaker 3 (42:18):
Slash brew very nice bills. Is your four o'clock keyword,
that's b I L L S. Just slide over to
real Radio dot fm and send that around or a
way for your chance at one thousand dollars bills. Guys,
that is your four o'clock keyword. Good luck. We hope
you win. Faux show. I'm Jim, there's deb Jack is here.

Speaker 9 (42:34):
Yep.

Speaker 3 (42:34):
Let's do what you do? That's new? What you do?
What did you do that?

Speaker 16 (42:44):
Hi?

Speaker 13 (42:45):
I to do?

Speaker 3 (42:47):
I need to do something right. Closman Law kla us
m A and Law dot com offices right there on
Wonder Park four oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen
car crash called Klosman. We'll talk to Glenn on Thursday
for Colbert Cord. What'd you do? That's new Every Tuesday
since we started the show in twenty eighteen. That's where
one member of the show will choose something for the

(43:08):
other members to watch. Read or listen to. We'll reconvene.
We'll do that and we'll move on to the next choice.
Deb is coming up here in just a few minutes.
I made a choice for you guys, because this is
one of the This was a game changing album for
me and I'm in this mode right now listening to
eighties hip hop, the hip hop that really started me
into my craze for hip hop.

Speaker 1 (43:28):
Yeah, and I wanted it interesting and.

Speaker 3 (43:30):
I wanted to share this with you guys. The first
one was paid in full by Eric being Rockim. That's
what we did last week. This week we moved into
Public Enemy. It takes a nation of millions to hold
us back. I like, and this probably has the second
most popular Public Enemy song out there. I think Fight
the Power is probably the song that most people realize
is the Public Enemy song. But Bring the Noise is

(43:52):
the song that was co opted with Anthrax, the thrash
metal band, and that video really broke a lot of
ground no differently than Aerosmith and the Run DMC collab.
So this was a really important record not only for
the hip hop genre, but also it kind of bridged
over into the rock genre as well. Yeah, I actually
like this better than the Eric bat and rock him.

(44:13):
Did you really? Oh, yeah, well, I appreciate that.

Speaker 6 (44:15):
I'm more familiar with Public Enemy, you know, I mean
the last rejoin we had a segment ago we you know,
in Public Enemy, but.

Speaker 3 (44:26):
This was fun. Their beats, it's just it's solid, every cut.

Speaker 6 (44:32):
It's I was listening yesterday in the Manchester airport with
my hairpods on.

Speaker 3 (44:38):
He's hanging out, you know.

Speaker 6 (44:40):
Just watching airport life unfold in front of me as
I was just like, listen.

Speaker 3 (44:46):
I love to see Bradshaw sitting it there, banging it
out in the Rebel without a pause, or Black Steel
in his Black Steel the Hour of Chaos. I got
the letter from the government the other day. I mean,
and just like.

Speaker 6 (44:59):
With the last one with Eric, as well as you
hear I, I personally hear so many things that later
get sampled in and they're saying about Chuck D's voice,
that's the greatest one of ever, greatest in my humble opinion,
it's the greatest hip hop rapper MC voice of all time.

Speaker 3 (45:20):
It commands so much respect.

Speaker 6 (45:23):
They talk about like the voice of God, right, It's
just it's it's so powerful.

Speaker 3 (45:29):
Yeah, just an incredible album. What do you think, debrih
You know you're a hip hop fan already, but you
like like you like new hip you like Migos and
stuff like that, which I love as well. But this
is really thrown it back. And by the way, guys,
this is music of rebellion. Oh you understand this is
this is literally this would be modern day like Bob Marley.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
This isn't be a veteran I'm a black man, yeah, I.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
Mean, this is ain't my heroes do on a par
of no stamps.

Speaker 5 (45:51):
So yeah, so first of all, you realize, oh, that's
where that sample came from. Oh that's where that sample
came from. Any anyone else think during the profits of Rage,
is that Obama?

Speaker 12 (46:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (46:04):
The guy who says, oh, okay, can we all get along?
And I'm like, right, that sounds like no, this is
nineteen eighty eight. That wouldn't have been Barack Obama. But yeah,
you see why it is one of the seminal albums
of the hip hop genre. I mean, and it's still
going strong. There's still being sample and.

Speaker 3 (46:20):
It's cute to see flavor flavor with a wooden clock
back in the day.

Speaker 1 (46:23):
Before he came forward.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
The gold Clocks. You know, I love the fact that
you know, Flavor was using the vernacular of the day,
like the street language of that day, and now when
you listen to it, it seems so corny because the
street languge of the day is just so much more
agro than it was back then. But you know, all
they're cute, Yeah, but those guys back in there, that
was like that's how they you know, that's how that
language was back then. And I just I'm so excited

(46:46):
to what I remember what I thought to myself, I'm
gonna make these guys listening to Dick some a nation.
And I kind of laughed at myself, but it wasn't
because of you. I knew that you didn't make it.
It's just how I thought Jack would approach it. But
I'm glad you guys both enjoyed it. It is one
of my favorite record of all time, and I do
think it's one of, if not the most important hip
hop album album, along with Fear of a Black Planet

(47:07):
that's ever been recorded. And I will tell any hip
hop fan out there that listens to a lot of
the mumble or bass rap, or you think these new
guys really saying things they're not. You go listen to
the Public Enemy collection and you'll hear actual people who
actually had street knowledge and actually knew these things, and
and and really them in dell themselves into what was

(47:30):
causing the strife between blacks and whites back in the
sixties and fifties, going into that and then really attacking
it with their language and there and what they knew
from the street. It's just it's a masterpiece in my opinion.

Speaker 1 (47:41):
Well, it was bigger than the Street Beef.

Speaker 3 (47:43):
Oh yeah, yeah, way bigger than that, you.

Speaker 5 (47:44):
Know, so a lot of times, Yeah, when you try
to compare the message of today with the message of
a Public Enemy, it's they couldn't be more different.

Speaker 3 (47:51):
Yeah. Man, Well, I'm glad you guys enjoyed it. We did,
and I'll probably have another trip down hip hop lane
for you guys to come in a couple of weeks.
But if you're out there and you have heard or
listened to it takes a nation of millions to hold
us back. By the band Public Enemy, I strongly recommend
that and Fear of a Black Planet. These are game
changing albums. This will make you look at life a

(48:12):
lot differently. In my opinion.

Speaker 6 (48:13):
I don't remember where I heard him say it.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
It was from Springsteen.

Speaker 6 (48:17):
It might have been on his podcast that he did
with President Obama, but they were talking about protest songs,
and when it's Springsteen, he said one of his the
best protest songs is Public Enemy Out, Fight the Power.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
Yeah, and again, if you listen to it night a
Living bays Heads, it's a band talking about what crack
is doing to the black community, and it's hitting black
people for what they're doing to their own community. Black's
the only hour of chaos is the government asking them
to join the army and their response considering how the
America has treated blacks in America for so many years.

(48:49):
Just it's brilliant stuff. And I mean there are five
or six just straight up revolution songs on this album
I think are very important to American culture and history.
So there you go. That's my choice. You'll excited that, Yeah,
just a little. What do you have for us next week?

Speaker 5 (49:03):
Okay, Well we're gonna do since it is the Halloween
season and it is a very popular show on Netflix,
but we're not going to watch that. I was Jimmy
very very tempted to assign BTK My Father The Killer
the Netflix documentary, but at an hour and thirty four minutes. Again, Jack,
I just didn't want to do that to you. Oh,
thank you, nep So, instead I'm going to give you

(49:24):
nineteen minutes and fourteen seconds about ed Gean, the real
life leather Face.

Speaker 6 (49:29):
Yeah, yeah, okay, is that Netflix or is that that
the YouTube?

Speaker 3 (49:33):
That's YouTube?

Speaker 1 (49:34):
Yeah, and I'll send you the link right away.

Speaker 3 (49:36):
Fantastic.

Speaker 5 (49:37):
It's just a way to get the history behind the
way that Hollywood, I guess is glaming it up.

Speaker 3 (49:42):
Yeah. The dramatization of this story of the Ed Gaen
thing is just it's really it's kind of stupid. It's
like they've tried to turn it into a fifties Hallmark
movie and it wasn't anything like that.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
It was not.

Speaker 6 (49:53):
And did you see it as well, that the dramatization
on Netflix.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
I didn't because, like Jimmy, I don't. Did he turn
you off to it? How he spoke about so many ways?

Speaker 6 (50:05):
I heard other people like it, and I just learned
it was directed by Henry Winkler.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
Yeahn oh wow, oh wow.

Speaker 5 (50:12):
I mean it's something I may still check out, but
I don't know how long that series is and really,
quite honestly, this is a cat that you only really
want to give nineteen minutes in fourteen seconds. I mean
the guy even warns you in the video.

Speaker 3 (50:25):
Yeah, yeah, he was one of the worst people.

Speaker 5 (50:28):
And when he goes through because we know who he inspired,
but when he goes through the history of the books
and the movies and and really gives you a background
about his family and how absolutely twisted his mother's mother was.

Speaker 3 (50:40):
The cause she really was, she created this monster. She
did so in a lot of those serial killers, that
is the catalyst of that. They have a very overbearing
mother and that leads into some really serious emotional issues
for young boys.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
For Gaysey, it would have been his father.

Speaker 5 (50:56):
Yeah, I mean he named him John Wayne, and Gasey
couldn't have been any thing further than at John Wayne
all right.

Speaker 3 (51:02):
For our seven nine four one text us seven seven
zero three one. By the way, if you want to
see all of the collection of our what you do
that's news. It's actually a really unique mix of interesting
stuff that you can watch going all the way back
to twenty eighteen. So if you ever get pinched and
you ever get bored of something to watch, just go
to the gym Coulpert Live dot com and look at
that master list for what'd you do that's new? You

(51:22):
can actually go back all those years and find the
stuff that we've offered up and there's some really interesting
stuff from anime all the way up to this public
Enemy record to what Dev just suggested. So go check
that out for sure. All right, let's take little break.
We'll come back and talk about another Netflix special that's
close to home. We'll do that next. Jesus jes.

Speaker 13 (51:48):
Croudy sponsored since day one by Glenn Klausmanclosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 3 (51:53):
Hi.

Speaker 4 (52:00):
Cole Bert Carew, Sarah My Gut Lola Love yacht Rock
Radio with the Jack and Miami Gradual lot Com. And
he was wondering if there will ever be a live
show that Jack will host for yacht Rock Radio on Sunday.

Speaker 3 (52:18):
I know, I know a few people who would go
to that, including me, should be doing that. I just wondering.
I'm open to the possibility. I have a good idea.
Any any chance to wear the Captain's hat with my
name on it that deb got me for my birthday
a couple of years ago. I'm there your four o'clock

(52:39):
the orders bills. That's b I L L S. Slide
over to you real radio dot I FIM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars bills. Guys,
that is your four o'clock. You were good luck. We
hope you win.

Speaker 5 (52:50):
Why do I have a feeling the captain's hat went
along with them on their vacation.

Speaker 1 (52:54):
Any of ahoy mate calls and that little cabin.

Speaker 3 (52:57):
In the wood, who let me throw you a line?
You ever stay in a tiny house? You gotta know
that person well. How tiny was his house? I mean
total square feet six feet? It may be in that
room you're.

Speaker 6 (53:11):
In about the size a little more narrow.

Speaker 3 (53:17):
Whoa, Yeah, you walk in.

Speaker 6 (53:20):
There's a you know, a little couch and a chair,
and then a little kitchenette and a tiny little bathroom
separated by a curtain.

Speaker 3 (53:30):
Oh so you're in a tiny house. Yeah, yeah, you're
in this tiny little house that is separated by a
curtain to the bathroom.

Speaker 6 (53:40):
So there's an exhaust fan. But like I said, you
better know that person well.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
And I need you to go outside for about five.

Speaker 3 (53:47):
You do a forage for mushrooms or something.

Speaker 6 (53:49):
So what I didn't mention was a bed because there's
no bedroom. There was a loft, so you had you
had to climb a ladder to get to the.

Speaker 5 (53:58):
Bed little frame and you probably stayed in one of
those great little airbnbs out in the middle of the woods.

Speaker 3 (54:04):
Anyway, Well, it was lovely. But during the night, I'm
good for two times.

Speaker 5 (54:11):
Oh you had to go up and down the ladder
to the midnight peeing.

Speaker 3 (54:17):
A gatorade bottle. No get out of here with that. Hey, well,
we stayed in the treehouse. It was this but it
was three flights of stairs. Yeah really and in January,
oh boy, so yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (54:29):
You're gonna want to put your parka and your boots on.

Speaker 6 (54:31):
We had an outdoor shower which I took advantage of.
And that temperatures it was forty seven degrees on Sunday morning.

Speaker 3 (54:38):
When I use that, really, honey, it's cold, look like
a scared turtle. I would say the most important thing
in a scenario like that is hot water. That's like
I'm miss say, yeah, I think hot I would almost
rather have hot water to electricity. We had hot water.
It was that was It was nice.

Speaker 6 (54:53):
It was a great little place, sceneic and just you
walk across the street.

Speaker 3 (54:58):
It's a nice vista.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Show it out there, no curtain, just you and the trees.

Speaker 3 (55:03):
There was a curtain, Okay, So were there a lot
of people around? Like were there other cabins near?

Speaker 6 (55:08):
So it looks like we were at what you would
call the gatehouse and then they had a carriage house.
So it's like they had a couple properties that they
turned into Airbnb's. I didn't see another person, like why
we were there. We were there really a few days
and I did not see one person.

Speaker 3 (55:25):
And it's season two. That's crazy for them up there.
I mean, this is the time you hear people go
up there before you gets two balls out cold.

Speaker 6 (55:30):
Yeah, there was in a you know, there were cars,
cars on the road, and you know, other tourists. Like
I mentioned, we did a train ride earlier and that
was packed because this is the time of the year
where people want to do this scenic train ride because
you get all the foliage and all the colors.

Speaker 3 (55:47):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's crazy. All right. Four seven nine
six four one text seven seven zero three one. We're
watching a lot of stuff on television right now. We
my wife and I will finish up task tonight. That
is the mark Ruffalo series that is absolutely crazy. Sabrina
and I have a text like chat thing just about
task because it's so good. I think Sea Lane has

(56:09):
seen the first two or three episodes, but he said
they were a little slow, so he kind of bailed out.
I said, you got to get back in their body.
It's really good. And then a new Netflix documentary has hit.
Now there's a couple of them out there that are
kind of interesting. That Genwin is more of a drama
or a dramatization of his life. But the BTK one,
the BCHK one just dropped, and that's an interesting one

(56:29):
as well because it's basically his daughter doing the documentary.
She actually goes back to talk to him in prison.
It's the first time she's seen him and since the
entire thing happened.

Speaker 1 (56:39):
And lives here apparently in Central Florida.

Speaker 3 (56:41):
Yeah, somebody said something about being in Gainesville, but I'm
not really sure. I heard it was closer to us,
That's what I had heard. But the new one out
there right now is actually really close to us and
involves a story we talked about at length on multiple times.
It's called the Perfect Neighbor and what this is, this
is the Actually currently this is, according to Yahoo and Entertainment,
is the number one movie on Netflix right now, oh wow,

(57:03):
according to their platform's public ranking system. And if you'll remember,
this is the story of the woman Susan Lawren's up
in Okalla who shot a woman and killed her through
her door. Yeah, and this is the same woman that
used to yell racial epithets at this woman's children. And
then this whole thing started where I guess she tried

(57:24):
to throw up their property and somebody threw a skate
at her or something like that.

Speaker 5 (57:27):
She was reportedly the one who threw the skates. So
apparently there's like that little strip of land sometimes that's
between houses and the victim's kids would play there, and
Susan Lawrence, you know, had always taken issue, was known
in the neighborhood as someone who would come out and
yell and scream at the kid calls them racial slur.

Speaker 3 (57:43):
I think she had in the six months before this,
she had like a couple of years before this, she
had six or nine nine to one one calls. Oh there, Well,
they call them on the kids all the time, all
the time.

Speaker 5 (57:53):
Apparently that last day reportedly threw one of the kid's
rollerblades skates at them and they ran. She said, go
get your mom, told them to go get your mom, right, yeah,
And so the victim comes up to the front door,
knocks on it, she's not opening the door, shoots and
kills her through the night for her children through the door,
and then tried to use a stand your ground defense.

Speaker 3 (58:14):
Right, which got shut down immediately. She's doing twenty four
years in prison. She will die in jail, and she
should because that's a murderous you know.

Speaker 1 (58:22):
That's murderous intent, certainly, and.

Speaker 3 (58:24):
It's even worse because there is a precedent of behavior
of hers towards these families and other people in the
neighborhood which were painfully racist. I mean, there's no question
it was racially motivated because she called them the name stay.
She didn't like them, partially because of their kids, and
the other part was because of their black And the
deadly tragedy that inspired this film happened in twenty twenty three.

(58:46):
This is actually pretty quick to get a documentary out
about this, but it is very interesting, and they will
I will watch this for sure. I do remember the
entire story. We talked about it multiple times here on
the show, and I had no idea there was even
a show in development about this story, and then boom,
there you go. Not only is it out, it's dominating
right now on Netflix.

Speaker 5 (59:07):
Somebody just texted us and said, I have the same
kind of lady on my street. Kind of scared to
watch that one.

Speaker 3 (59:12):
Oh really, yeah, yeah, yeah. I bet a lot of
people have that one neighbor in the neighborhood and that
they have to watch out for. I know Ross has
one in their neighborhood. Really, we had one when we
lived in our old neighborhood, even that gated neighborhood with
a bunch of people around, we had somebody out there.
They had a bunch of crazy dogs. They would go crazy.
And I remember making a statement about going up and
talking to the person, and somebody said, yeah, you may
want to reconsider that. Really, yeah, you know, you had

(59:35):
been almost better just to call the pound and have
them come take the dogs and then deal with it
that way. I don't know if I'd go on that
guy's property or not. Yo. Yeah, and Jack, didn't you
say that you had one, You had somebody in your
property that was in your neighborhood that was a little
sketchy for the for the crew or no, I can't
remember it was you or Ross? I know Ross had one. Yeah, no,

(59:56):
I don't remember one. Yeah, okay you may not. Yeah,
have you been looking enough? Don't have anything like this?

Speaker 5 (01:00:02):
I you know, I did have the you know neighbor
who used to come over with a fistful of dimes
and asked to use my phone and then come over
at midnight and asked to use my car because they
needed to go to publics.

Speaker 3 (01:00:13):
That is a ballsy request. Oh man, I know we
don't know each other and it's pretty obvious I have
a crack problem. But is there any way that I
could just borrow your car for like an hour?

Speaker 5 (01:00:22):
I just need to go to publics? You know, I
know it closed two hours ago, but they know me.

Speaker 3 (01:00:27):
You know. Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:00:28):
That is That is so super super super frustrating though,
because again, not only not only are you frustrated and angry,
but you have to really weigh how you're going to
approach someone, right, because like that guy in your neighborhood,
you would have thought it was just hey, neighbor talking
to neighbor, and another neighbor was like, yeah, no, he's
not going to see it that way.

Speaker 3 (01:00:49):
Yeah, I know he's not. And a lot of people
just simply aren't in that mode. And a lot of
people will also do this stuff as antagonist. I was
going to say, to instigate something to happen, to instigate
something to happen because they're bored, or are just bad people,
or they're angry. And a lot of this footage apparently
is from from bodycam. Yeah, bodycms. Oh okay, so you're
going to get a lot of actual footage. I mean,

(01:01:10):
there won't be a lot left to the imagination because
apparently it's all kind of stitched together bodycam footage of this.
So it's what actually happened in real time while cops
were dealing with this as it was going.

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
On, and real quick.

Speaker 5 (01:01:22):
I did just want to update folks that twenty three
year old Jacobe Tillman, he's the suspect and the little
Econ trail attack back in July, he has been rearrested.

Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
That was the one that got the ninety five hundred
dollars bond and everybody lost their gd mind over.

Speaker 5 (01:01:37):
Reading Orange County Sheriff Monique Wurel, the Orange Ostiola State
Attorney's Office everyone's like, listen.

Speaker 1 (01:01:43):
We told the judge this is a bad actor.

Speaker 5 (01:01:44):
But the judge was like, nah, so he has been rearrested.
He is back behind bars, and of course now he
is on no bond.

Speaker 3 (01:01:51):
You know, what are the interesting parts of this new
documentary The Perfect Neighbor is some statements made about how
the African American community views body cams and I did not.
I mean, this was kind of eye opening to me
because it says, what encourage Gondbier, who is the director
of this. I think that's how you pronounce her name,
Geita goanbi here and gone Bier. She's an Emmy look,

(01:02:16):
give me five more. She's an Emmy winning director, by
the way, And she told Indian Indie Wire, these crimes
unfortunately happen like every week you get gun violence, but
you only see the aftermath. You never get to see
the community as they were before in such detail. And again,
police body camera footage is for is for people of color.
It's a violent tool of the state. Right. It's often

(01:02:39):
used to criminalize us, dehumanize us. It's used for surveillance.
It's used to protect the police. But I want to
subvert that. That's a statement from the director of this
new documentary, I did you guys, were you aware of
Now I see am I reading that wrong? I see it?

Speaker 6 (01:02:57):
Well, it seems her shaving. Her opinion is it's pretty
clear on it. But I always thought it was to
let help protect police as well as the people at
the public.

Speaker 14 (01:03:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
Yeah, I always thought it was to tell the undef
I mean, the defined truth of what actually happened in
the situation, if it's viewed in context, from beginning to end. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:03:17):
Now, I someone texted in they said, this documentary it's
all police bodycam footage and no narration, so the whole
story is told through the interaction with the police.

Speaker 3 (01:03:29):
Yep, that's interesting. That's exactly it. And she wound up
getting twenty four years or twenty five years for fatal shooting.
So that was was it manslaughter?

Speaker 5 (01:03:39):
It was, And it was just last year in twenty
twenty four, Laurens was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced
to twenty five years in prison.

Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
If you remember, she was not arrested.

Speaker 5 (01:03:50):
Initially she was not, and then a law enforcement investigation
calls her claims into questions stand your ground claims, and
then she was subsequently arrested and since then sentenced twenty
five years in prison.

Speaker 3 (01:04:01):
Yeah. One shot, Yeah, she one shot through that doors,
is what did it?

Speaker 5 (01:04:07):
And again it was in front of her children. Yeah,
because she did not know the woman was armed. The
door never opened. The children, right, Susan Lawrence had reportedly
said go get your mother, so they came back with her.
So not only did she take a life, but she
ruined the lives of all those children standing there watching
their mother get shot.

Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
And she said she felt she was in fear of
her life. But yet the door was closed and locked,
and there was also a screen door, and the woman
was just knocking and asking to see her because she
threw a skate the woman. The woman, yeah, threw a
skate at one of the kids, and that's when she said,
you know, I guess one of the kids said I'm
gonna get my mom, and she said, I'll know.

Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
Susan Lawrence said go get your mother.

Speaker 3 (01:04:45):
I thought one of the kids prompted that, but that's
not true.

Speaker 5 (01:04:48):
Not from what I remember of the case. Was she
said go get your mother, because that was one of
the questions of it. Wasn't like you know A gk
Owens The victim rode up on her unannounced, right, Yeah,
you know this was and I remember when we first
talked about this story, you had people who lived in
that area saying she was horrible. You know, she was
a horrible neighbor to have around, always screaming at the

(01:05:09):
kids and stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:05:09):
Yeah, so that was the.

Speaker 5 (01:05:10):
Other question as to why wasn't she arrested because it
wasn't like the victim came over to start the confrontation.

Speaker 1 (01:05:16):
She was invited to her home.

Speaker 3 (01:05:18):
Do you let me ask a question because I do
not know this. She lived in that home by herself,
I believe. So if she owned that home and it
was paid for and she gets sent to prison, which
is going to be for the rest of her life,
what happens to that house? Does that house go into
like a probate or does it? I mean, I can
could she bequeath that home to a family member while

(01:05:39):
in prison? Is that house going to be sold for
a restitution for the victims or something like that? Because
she could all. I think she's also being sued civilly
by them. I think the family is also suing her
estate civilly, and they're going to try to get least
I think fifty thousand dollars. Maybe the limit in Florida
that they can get on this particular charge.

Speaker 6 (01:05:57):
Might be a question for Ray. But if you if
you're being sued, I don't know if they can say, Okay,
you can't liquidate because I remember.

Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
Remember in homestead exemption in the state, right, they can't
take you even with debt, they can't take the place
you live. Right.

Speaker 6 (01:06:14):
Even in the Jeffrey Epstein case, he was trying to
kind of move his money to his brother, and they
were like, no, no, no, no no. You can't like
hide your scroll your money. You can't protect your money
when you're in legal straits.

Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
Here.

Speaker 1 (01:06:29):
A lot of people are texting in to say she
was a renter.

Speaker 3 (01:06:32):
Oh, she was a renter. Yeah, wow, is that house
rent fast? Again? That'd be so wild to move into
that house. Well, and she was mad at the kids
for making noise out while they were playing, right.

Speaker 5 (01:06:47):
Yeah, and again it was you know that strip of
property that sometimes you see between homes.

Speaker 3 (01:06:51):
Yeah, And they had a right to be on they did.

Speaker 5 (01:06:54):
It was I guess a right of way, so it
wasn't her property, but she always claimed it was her
property and yelled at the kids to get, you know,
get off my property, quit making noise.

Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
So wow, and this, you know she.

Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
Must have thought.

Speaker 5 (01:07:08):
But again, with her research into stand your ground laws,
the weapon purchase, there were a lot of things that
kind of made it look like, you know, like, who's
really the instigator in the situation.

Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Yeah, you're playing up.

Speaker 3 (01:07:21):
I'm just trying to read a birth from the Nation. Oh,
I reckon, I can't get these words down.

Speaker 1 (01:07:30):
Sad but true.

Speaker 3 (01:07:31):
Yeah, man, so I'll check that out. I mean, I
got to check it out for sure. Yeah. She threw
a skate at the ten year old son as he
played in a neighboring yard, not even in the yard,
not even in her yard. When Owens heard the incident
from her kids, she went over to Lorenz's house and
demanded that she come outside. That's when we ruins fired
a single shot through her front door, claiming self defense,
and killed Owen's She was sentenced to twenty five years

(01:07:52):
in prison for the fatal shooting.

Speaker 5 (01:07:54):
Yes, so, a couple of people have texted us and
said it was the hardest dock memory they've ever watched.

Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
Really because of the reaction of the kids.

Speaker 3 (01:08:04):
Oh no, I can't do it. Then, because again she
shot her. Can't do it of her children. I can't
do it. That's one thing I cannot. I can't even
watch fictional movies that put children in situations like that.
I just can't do it. I empathize way too much,
and it just it's just such a bummer. I can't
I can't deal with it.

Speaker 5 (01:08:19):
Somebody else texted and said, good luck seeing the reaction
of the children during that documentary.

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
I haven't cried that hard in a while.

Speaker 3 (01:08:25):
Yeah, I can't do that. There's no way I could
do that.

Speaker 5 (01:08:28):
Well, thank goodness, thank you guys for texting us, because yeah,
you know, Jimmy would have been you know, far into
the documentary before you would have been hit broadside.

Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
Got the biggest bitch in the world when it comes
to that stuff. I'll be straight up. I I you know,
I've dealt with a lot of crazy adversity in my
life and had to be tough in certain situations. But
for some reason, when kids are in peril, oh yeah,
even if it's fiction, I cannot watch it. You can
ask my wife. I will literally turn my head away
or put my hand up if anything is going to
happen to a child. I just can't stand it because
they're so defenseless. And yeah, yeah, all the emotional stuff

(01:09:01):
that comes with that is not good for me.

Speaker 1 (01:09:03):
Yeah so.

Speaker 5 (01:09:04):
And again, because it's police camera video, you're you're going
to be getting their visceral first reaction after it takes place.

Speaker 3 (01:09:10):
No, thank you a hard pass on that, all right,
four oh seven nine four one. Again, you can always
text our show at seven seven zero three one R four.
Click keyword is bills. That's b I l LS. Slide
over to real radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. Something's coming back
to public schools. Guys, I'll tell you what it is next. Jack.

Speaker 15 (01:09:35):
If you can't think of who the crazy annoying neighbor is,
I got some bad news for you.

Speaker 3 (01:09:41):
Hey, wait a minute, it's like the sucker at the
bogger table. Yeah, bad news, dude. So I do remember,
I do have the neighbor with chickens. And then I
count came to find out I have two neighbors with chickens.

Speaker 1 (01:09:53):
I have a neighbor with chickens because one of.

Speaker 3 (01:09:54):
Them, his chicken dyed and I kept still hearing chicken noises,
and so I guess they add back to back kickens.
I was hoping he recorded it and just played it
to annoy you. All right, well, welcome back to the
Jim Gilbert Show, Roll Radio one oh four point one.
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello, Jackson is here as well.
Bill's is your five o'clock? Can you whre get about

(01:10:15):
ten minutes to get over to real, real radio do
FM and send that away from your chance at one
thousand bucks. It's Bill's guys. We'll have a freshman for
you at the top of the hour. Also a bit
of a heads up. I talked to Adrian from harry Sippin'
Saver this morning. We have exactly nine seats left. Oh wow,
that's it, so only nine. I put up a Facebook
post today just letting everybody know my wife and I

(01:10:36):
cannot wait to come out and enjoy and hang out
some with some time. Six gourmet dishes, six paired cocktails,
plus a greeting cocktail, and it's gonna be a great time.
Only seventy five dollars. If you get to Harry'spoolside dot
com slash Harry's Sipin' Saver you can book yours as well.
And I would say, do it as quickly as you can.

(01:10:57):
More than likely by Thursday they'll be gone, maybe even today.
We sold a bunch yesterday and people just kind of
come in waves. And we only have nine seats left.
The seventy seats is all we do, or at sixty
one right now. Yay. You talk about this event like
always sells out and you hit nine left with what
four or five days left? Yeah, you gotta move and

(01:11:17):
I want to move people. And it is like we
had the menu last week and it was mind blowing.
Do you really missed you chose a poor wheat you
on vacation because the food and cocktails were bananas good.
I mean so unbelievable, I will tell you. And this
is what I told Chef Tello when they were here.
The feta or the goat cheese pumpkin cheesecap, my goodness,

(01:11:39):
with the cinnamon toast crunch martini pairing maybe one of
the best pairings, whether it be savory or sweet, I've
ever had. It was. Man, you can't find two things
that are more complimentary than those two things. When you
take a bite and then take a sip of that,
it just it creates a flavor in your mouth. You
can't even explain.

Speaker 5 (01:11:58):
I mean, it was so good that chef Tella Luna
said that they're adding that cheesecake to their regular meg
he did. Yeah, and probably the cinniment toast crunch martini
as well.

Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
So good. It was so good, so delicious. So again,
it's Harry's Poolside dot Com slash Harry's Sip and Saber
and we hope to see you on Saturday night. We
love these events. It's a good time. My wife and
I like to meet new people and kind of hang
out and get a little buzz talk some stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:12:22):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Yeah, good time. So let me ask do you have
access to paper and a pencil or a pen meat
right now?

Speaker 11 (01:12:31):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:12:31):
Yea everybody? Yeah, I'm yeah, you know yeah, I'll just
use my trustee Rundown. All right, let's do this real quick.
So in Florida by July of twenty twenty six, there
is a bill out there and they want to breed
back cursive writing for Florida schools. Did you hear this, jock,
No cursive writing to Florida school.

Speaker 6 (01:12:51):
I just have a feeling I have to dust off
my offendanshift here.

Speaker 3 (01:12:54):
So we all have cameras here. Who do you think
has the worst cursive handwriting on this show?

Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Come on, dude, I can't be we're even asking this.

Speaker 3 (01:13:02):
We have to ask you to translate your own cards. Ridiculous.
We have I may have better cursive writing than I
do print. I may have that. You don't know. We do, No,
we do.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (01:13:13):
I about seven years worth of cards I still can't read.
And chicks have better cursive anyway, dead winds dead fills
out the rundowns by hand. Yeah, yeah, she doesn't how
to do the computer thing. And I'm telling you it
was a glory reading her handwriting all week last week.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Not really, I don't get better when Jackson, it's all neat.

Speaker 3 (01:13:30):
What do we need to write here? What's something we
can all write and show the cameras to see who
has the worst cursive handwriting? Bring me the head of
Alfredo Garcia. Okay, let's do that right now. Oh my god, dude,
this is so hard. No, it's not. Oh my god,
I don't even know how to start the be now
bring me wait, wait, I gotta give you some yeah

(01:13:51):
writing music here? What is it? What's the guy's name?

Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
Alfredo Garcia? Done. Here we go. Well, you can't even
see it.

Speaker 3 (01:14:03):
Oh God, come.

Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
On, you guys. She'd been done thirty seconds ago.

Speaker 3 (01:14:10):
I get the music, all right, I'm in prond of this.
You know what, yours Isn't that good? Jack's Look at that, Debra,
Yours is the worst. Deborah has the worst cursive handwriting
on the show. Look at that. Jackson's way better, and

(01:14:31):
she looks like a teenage girl. Look at that. Looks
like a teenage girl's diary.

Speaker 5 (01:14:36):
That's the first time I've been able to actually read
anything that Jimmy has written in nearly seven years.

Speaker 3 (01:14:41):
I gotta tell you something. Why do you guys want
the head of Alfredo Garcia. Let me tell you something.
If you guys wouldn't be if you weren't here right now,
I would have a small meltdown on that cursive B.
I didn't. It took me a minute to remember how
to even start forming a large A capital B incursive.
Sometimes I and S in capital gets It's like, wait, one,

(01:15:04):
you got to go the other way? Yeah yeah, an
MS too because they have that extra home. Yeah yeah.
It says here that a new bill in the Florida
House of Representatives would mandate teaching cursive in students two
through fars grades two through five, they would learn cursive.
The bill passes, it will go on to effect next July.
Uh do you think that's important in schools?

Speaker 17 (01:15:25):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:15:25):
I do too, And I can't explain why. I just
think maybe it takes more time and you have to
pay it. There's more style to it, is that?

Speaker 5 (01:15:32):
What do you think I actually had saved an article
to talk about this while you were on vacation.

Speaker 3 (01:15:36):
Oh really?

Speaker 6 (01:15:37):
Yeah, she hoards topics. Yeah, save it for next time.
Don't bring it up now.

Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
Well, but it's interesting because it was how scientists say
for people who still write things down, because I know
I still write lists for me. It's just easier than
putting into my phone.

Speaker 3 (01:15:52):
But Ross that drives Ross crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:15:55):
You can't understand why I would waste the time to
write things down.

Speaker 3 (01:15:59):
You remember better, don't you. That's what they say.

Speaker 1 (01:16:01):
You remember it better.

Speaker 5 (01:16:03):
And it also keeps you connected better between your mind
and your body because you have to engage another part
of your body right writing it down instead of just
typing it into a phone. And it also says that
you tend to be a little bit more nostalgic. You're
willing to look a little weird to hang onto something
that matters.

Speaker 3 (01:16:21):
Yeah, it says. Also it's very good for your motor skills. Yes,
it says. I definitely think something's good for them to learn.
It will help develop motor skills. Because I saw TikTok
the other day saying that motor skills in youth have declined. Well,
think about it. It's in a while. Because I heard
video games are really good for your motor skills. But
that's a completely different set of skills. Though it is.

Speaker 5 (01:16:38):
And when you hear even like local newscasters talking about
how their children can't read the Christmas cards they get
from their grandparents because they can't read cursive, we have
a whole generation of people who are going to go
and sign mortgage documents and only know how to print
their name. That is not your signature. Your signature is
the one that you write in cursive, right, so without

(01:17:01):
knowing that, think of all the legal documents you have
to sign.

Speaker 3 (01:17:03):
Yeah, the funny thing is I signed my name in
cursive all the time. It's weird for me to print
it here here, that's the same, like it's weird for
me to do that. But yet I could sign my
name in cursive because I've done it so many like
even when I was on the Morning show and you know,
I was doing the dirty gym thing. I figured out
how to do that just simply because it was the
easiest way to write it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:21):
And now you have a you know, a whole generation
of kids who can't read it.

Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
I can't write it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:25):
Someone texted in earlier when we were talking about, you know,
how kids haven't been even one grocery aisle away from
their parents. How kids, you know, zoomers and millennials with
children don't know how to address an envelope.

Speaker 3 (01:17:37):
That's unbelievable, man, unbelievable. We actually have somebody to make it.
Help us out here, Hey, Robert says, you're a school principal.

Speaker 14 (01:17:44):
Yes, sir, in elementary school, Yes, sir.

Speaker 3 (01:17:46):
Very nice. Well this is going to affect your students.
What do you think about this?

Speaker 14 (01:17:50):
I think it's stupid.

Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
I think we have way bigger fish.

Speaker 14 (01:17:56):
How to sign your name on a document?

Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
What would you rather uh, what would you rather focus
on rather than cursive writing the signatures? E signatures? Yeah,
that's all we use nowadays. No one's writing anymore. All
our stuff is gone online.

Speaker 14 (01:18:12):
Three program the uses on computers.

Speaker 12 (01:18:15):
They barely write anything with handwriting anymore.

Speaker 14 (01:18:18):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:18:18):
Really, even in elementary school where that is like where
you learn basic writing, they don't write.

Speaker 14 (01:18:24):
They write some notes and answer some questions on paper.
But all our state assessments are on computers. So it
seems contradictory and what the state's asking us to do
by having them learn cursive Yet everything's online.

Speaker 3 (01:18:36):
Platform, So what's driving that need? Then?

Speaker 13 (01:18:38):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:18:39):
What do you think that the House of Representatives? Well,
you know, what are they using to propel this? Then?
I think nostalgia? Oh really what you do? Yeah, like
we all grew up you know, handwriting this, that and
the other.

Speaker 9 (01:18:51):
It was even a grade for us.

Speaker 3 (01:18:53):
But nowadays we don't need that.

Speaker 16 (01:18:55):
Everything's done online.

Speaker 15 (01:18:56):
You can speak your essay into the computer.

Speaker 3 (01:18:59):
And it'll type it for you.

Speaker 5 (01:19:00):
Well, we have an occupational therapist who texted in and
said they highly recommend cursive writing for children because of
the fine motor skills that it creates.

Speaker 14 (01:19:11):
That's true, I mean, but they do it in other
ways too, and then we use, you know, other things
they do in a classroom develope those skills scissors and
cutting and things like that, but handwriting's kind of past eight.

Speaker 3 (01:19:22):
Wow, that's so crazy, man. How long have you been
a principal, buddy?

Speaker 14 (01:19:26):
This is my twentieth year?

Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
Is it really? You sound so unbelievably young, dog.

Speaker 14 (01:19:32):
I'm fifty five.

Speaker 3 (01:19:33):
Damn I'm there. Wow.

Speaker 14 (01:19:35):
Man, three, I'll be fully retired with drop.

Speaker 3 (01:19:38):
I'm right around the corner. Congratulations, buddy, keep your head
down right, he knows what I'm talking about. This is
all those fifth grader's gonna be a handful. Yeah, but
then you know what happens in fifth graders. Then they
leave for middle school and they turn into the worst
human beings on planet Earth. All right? For our seven
nine six four when we have another keyword for you
at the top of the hour, and I have to
tell you I learned something about cartels today that I've

(01:20:02):
never I've never known this.

Speaker 11 (01:20:05):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:20:05):
Of course we know about drug cartels, right, that's exactly
what we're talking about, drug cartells. I will tell you
a major source of their income that you've never heard before.
We'll do that next.

Speaker 16 (01:20:18):
Hey, JCS, care what's going on?

Speaker 13 (01:20:20):
This is right?

Speaker 16 (01:20:21):
I'm a teacher and teaching them, teaching students how to
cursive write. I'm having an issue trying to understand what
some students are writing on paper. Their penmanship is all
over the place, like some write like serial killer handwriting,
and imagine bringing cursive writing. It's almost going to look
like higheroglyphics in the Egyptian days.

Speaker 7 (01:20:44):
That's my point.

Speaker 3 (01:20:46):
Yeah, my wife's a school teacher.

Speaker 10 (01:20:48):
She just said, fat chance having time to teach that
in school.

Speaker 15 (01:20:51):
Exactly.

Speaker 18 (01:20:54):
Guys, STANDI meering here. I am listening to as I
go to pick up my son, and I wanted to
say that as I am homeschooling my son, we are
learning cursive. We're kind of in second grade right now,
but we won't be starting cursive until third grade. I
need to get kind of some basics down first, But
I think cursive is still important because of that hand

(01:21:17):
mind body connection.

Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
Yeh, I agree.

Speaker 3 (01:21:20):
Thanks Danny, We'll see you on Thursday, for sure. It's
a great Danny Myrin. What a wonderful partner. She's such
a good woman, such a good mom and h and
wife as well. Yeah, welcome back to the Jim Golber Show.
Your five o'clock keyword is check. That's CG C K
go to real Radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Check. Guys, that

(01:21:40):
is your five o'clock keyword. Good luck. We hope you went.
I'm Jim. There's death he now Jack is here as well. Yeah,
you know, in our classrooms back in the day, I
mean it was like, you know, every elementary classroom is
kind of set up the same way. You walked in.
You saw the chalkboard. What was right about the jog
board the cursive alphabet. It was that piece of paper
that the little A big A, little B, big B

(01:22:03):
and it was like one incursive one in print. And
I was like that was like standard issue equipment back
in the day. Like I remember learning cursive because you
had to write, and you had to have it touch
the top line, then touch the bottom line, and then
stay on the dott On line. That's where you were
kind of you know, that was your mean there.

Speaker 5 (01:22:19):
Apparently the book nineteen eighty four talks about no writing,
oh really dumbing down the masses.

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
Yeah. Yeah, there's a lot of interesting theories that came
out of the texting service regarding read some interesting stuff,
that's for sure. All right. So when I left you
last we were talking about cartels, right. Obviously, cartels were
in the news because of all the boats that were
blowing up and down in the Caribbean, with all that
evidence that they are definitely drug boats. But either way, we're,

(01:22:49):
you know, in a in a battle for cartels. I
think everybody could kind of understand that cartels obviously are
not good. They're bad. Okay, yeah, most of them are.
What do we know that cartel's uh, what kind of
businesses are cartels in?

Speaker 5 (01:23:02):
Human trafficking, drugs, weapons?

Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
Let's see? Oh uh sharing streaming passwords? Yeah? Oh, those
sons of bitches. That's the worst of it all. How
about extortion? Oh yeah, that too. That was a big
mob thing too, right Jack, Yeah, yeah, I'd hate to
see your business warner from what I hear. Yeah, I
hate to see your business burned down. It's so nice.
Must take agedly?

Speaker 5 (01:23:24):
Does Jack have a history? He just went right to
the Jersey guy.

Speaker 3 (01:23:28):
I tell you what, if you give me five percent
of the action here every month, I'll guarantee that your
business will never burn down.

Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
What's the likelihood you have a blure traxit?

Speaker 3 (01:23:36):
Exactly? Well, I found out another thing that cartels are
into and apparently this has been going on for decades
and it's a very interesting thing all right out of Mexico,
the western state of Is it mcoacon, mccolcon. Oh, god,
don't even I.

Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
Don't know what that's misspelling.

Speaker 3 (01:23:59):
But it was this guy was associated with this business
man and they and they and now it's a thing
in a can. And they smoked him because he came
out and said something about the cartels, you know, shaking
the business down, and he was tired of doing it.
They were tired of paying the the fees. And they
found that dude dead in his car on a road

(01:24:19):
like cartels will do. Yeah, what business do you think?
How do we know it? Was it natural? Cause? Yeah,
definitely was naturally naturally shot in the face by an
akh So what business was it? Let's just say that
you I think everybody here has definitely had bunch of
these over their lives. Shoes is a potos? See cobbler?

(01:24:41):
Is that close? It was?

Speaker 1 (01:24:43):
Yeah? That was good.

Speaker 3 (01:24:43):
Why did you shake your head and discuss that?

Speaker 5 (01:24:45):
Because it was just cute Sometimes I get that way. Potos?
So it wasn't shoes, diapers, no baby formula?

Speaker 3 (01:24:55):
Oh boy, is it is? It out of the box,
is it. It's not the post. This is a naturally
occurring thing that you can buy at the grocery store.
Oh ice, no limes. Apparently for decades, the Mexican cartels
have been shaking down the lime and avocado industries in
Mexico forever, and it is gigantic money. As a matter

(01:25:20):
of fact, they said, in the context of this story,
this is a CBS News story, by the way, In
the context of the story, they say that the car
tells if you've paid when you when you get mad
at how cheap or expensive limes are or main or avocados,
that you know, everybody's like wow, or President so and so,
we got our prices. It's not. The cartels actually run

(01:25:43):
the lime and the avocado business so tightly that they
can actually price fix, and that's what they've been doing
for decades.

Speaker 5 (01:25:51):
So, in other words, either tell the bartender you don't
need that lime slice with your rum and coke, or
use it.

Speaker 3 (01:25:59):
Yeah, just let it on your napkin, it says. In August,
more than half of the line packing warehouses in the
Lowlands were closed temporarily after growers and distributors said they
had received demands from the cartels for a cut of
their income. Limes have been a revenue stream for cartels
four years in Mexico. In twenty thirteen, lime growers founded

(01:26:19):
and lead Mexico's biggest vigilante movement cartels at the time
and taking control of distribution, manipulating domestic prices for crops
like avocados and limes, telling growers when they harvest and
when they could sell their crops. I mean they were
handling everything to maximize the value of that crop. And
if you guys notice, sometimes you can go to the
store and limes will be three for five, or will

(01:26:41):
be five for a dollar, or they're a dollar each.
That's how lemons are right now. By the way, do
you get a bag of them for five dollars or
you can pay eighty nine cents apiece for a gd lemon.
Lemons they used to throw at you when you walked
into the store.

Speaker 1 (01:26:55):
We'll say, plant a tree.

Speaker 5 (01:26:56):
You're in a state where you can grow avocados, limes,
and lemons.

Speaker 3 (01:26:59):
I ever knew that man that they were up into
all these businesses. Anything that comes out of Mexico, you
can assume the cartels have some kind of grip on
it in some way, shape or form. The one practical
thing to come out of this story is an overwhelming
request by the Texters to have you say other Mexican
town names. So just take Is it maturea con chillakan

(01:27:22):
matua con? Is that how it's pronounced? For real?

Speaker 1 (01:27:24):
I don't know. I didn't see the spelling of it.

Speaker 3 (01:27:28):
In twenty twenty four, the fishing industry complained of drug
cartel extortion and illegal fishing. He was shot to death
as well. So look, dude, Mexico, keep the cartels out
your damn mouth and you may make it literally. You
may make it to the next day literally, It says.
Ordinary citizens are also targeted with extortion. In January of

(01:27:50):
twenty twenty four, a cartel set up its own makeshif
Internet antennas and told locals they had to pay to
use its Wi Fi or they would be killed.

Speaker 6 (01:27:58):
Gee, it's so dangerous. You wonder why people wouldn't just
run to the nearest country and try to set up
a new life.

Speaker 3 (01:28:07):
Yeah, I wonder what.

Speaker 5 (01:28:08):
And apparently somebody said there's a Netflix show Rotten Avocados.

Speaker 1 (01:28:13):
It's been known for years.

Speaker 3 (01:28:14):
Oh wow, I did not know. That. I really I
literally read this story this morning and was blown away.
I was like, I thought that cartels specifically dealt in humans,
guns and drugs. Those were the things that cartels did
business in. That's where the most margin is. That's the
one thing they can control one hundred percent. They can
get these guns from other countries, they can get people
from their country. They can produce the drugs and import

(01:28:36):
those from other countries in South America right up through
Central America. All of that made perfect sense. But when
they shut down the line in avocado industry, I was like, well,
it makes perfect sense. You know, those are legal industries,
and there you don't have to worry any industry. You
don't have to worry about, like, you know, the trouble
of shipping people or drugs out of this country or
out of that country into this one, where we know

(01:28:57):
there's a massive push to bust all of that tally
the illegals right now. But I did not know that
they were in the produce business. Had no clue. Fascinating stuff,
all right, four oh seven nine, Well, just well you
sat there and I started talking, and you started talking.

(01:29:18):
I just wanted to talk.

Speaker 6 (01:29:19):
Go back to how you're in last place in the pext. No,
but it's like the mafia, like waste management, right exactly.

Speaker 5 (01:29:26):
Garbage right, Well, that's just because you needed a spot
to hide the body, but.

Speaker 6 (01:29:30):
It's also something everyone needs and it's a service that
you know, and it's just like when you can control
a big enough portion of a service, then that price
fixing is in plays.

Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
Remember we all saw the documentary pulp fiction. Yeah, we
all saw that. We know why you need to know
somebody in waste? Yeah, what were the biggest games in
New York? It was garbage constructions, construction, concrete namely right,
they handled the concrete business, and then it was the
loading dogs, right, and then of course all the money
running into the businesses in New York and Jersey. In Chicago,

(01:30:03):
the little shops.

Speaker 5 (01:30:04):
Yeah, they little shop owners having to pay that feest
that their business doesn't burn down.

Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
How did they determine that price? Do they just basically
go in and ask for the books and say, hey, look,
if you're making ten k a month, I deserve a
thousand or two thousand of that, or twenty percent of
whatever you make or whatever.

Speaker 5 (01:30:18):
I don't think they think of it as a fair amount.
It's just, Hey, this is what we want and you're
going to pay it.

Speaker 3 (01:30:28):
What do you do? What do you do? Man? If
you set up a pizza shop, set up any shop
in New York, get a little juice going, the mob
starts recognizing you got a little juice going. They roll
in one day and say make it a nice place.

Speaker 10 (01:30:39):
Here.

Speaker 3 (01:30:40):
You killing it? Man, God bless you. Your pizza is great. Hey,
I got a proposition for you.

Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
How about close down shop and move out of state?

Speaker 3 (01:30:47):
All about you write me a check for two k
a week, and I promise no one's going to throw
a can of gas lit into your front window.

Speaker 7 (01:30:55):
Cool.

Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
That's the tough question.

Speaker 3 (01:30:59):
It's not that you write that check or you take
your ass to San Diego.

Speaker 14 (01:31:04):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:31:05):
Four seven nine six one o four one. Don't forget
your five o'clock keyword is check. That's c ch ck.
Just slide over to real radio dot FM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand bucks back
in a second. Oh, welcome back to the Jim Corper Show.

(01:31:29):
Roll Radio one oh four point one. Five o'clock keyword
is checks eg c k. You know what to do.
Go to real Radio dot FM and send that off
for your chance at one thousand bucks. And remember, if
you're playing the game, you got to keep your phone
on and answer answer the damn thing, even if it
says no caller ID or it's a number you do
not recognize. If you are playing this game, you got
to pick it up. That's how they tell you won.

(01:31:50):
So good luck.

Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
Yeah, get that money.

Speaker 3 (01:31:52):
I'm Jumner's dead. Jack is here as well. Ross usually
here on Tuesdays. Condom back to make it today because
of an engagement he was already previously convicted to. But
he'll be with his Thursday and Friday of this week
as well. And Sarah I think from Fiicy Trivia is
coming in Friday for a massive trivia blowout as well.
Oh wow, yeah for sure. Man. Have you guys been

(01:32:17):
paying attention to this Prince Andrew stuff? Well, so there
there are some really interesting questions and situations arising now.
Virginia Goofree is Geffrey. Why do I always get her
name wrong?

Speaker 5 (01:32:30):
Because it's it's g u I f fre We always
thought it was Guffrie Jeffrey.

Speaker 1 (01:32:37):
But her her book is out today.

Speaker 3 (01:32:39):
It comes out today, right, so and it's I think
it's nobody's girl something like that, and she goes into
detail about her experiences with Prince Andrew. Oh yeah, yeah,
and it's not good. It's everything basically you thought was
going on, maybe even a little bit worse enough to
make you give up your royal title. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:32:57):
And literally the King told he and Fergie, and this
was after Sarah Ferguson, his ex wife, that after an
email had surfaced where she had called Epstein quote a
supreme friend end quote, the King let them know that
they were not going to be invited to any of
the Royal family Christmas traditions.

Speaker 3 (01:33:15):
Yeah. Yeah. Also, from what I understand, there's also some
evidence that she constantly hassled Jeffrey Epstein for money. Really, yeah,
that she was asking for money a lot.

Speaker 5 (01:33:27):
Also, London police are apparently investigating a report that Prince
Andrew asked an officer to dig up dirt on Virginia
jew Frey.

Speaker 1 (01:33:37):
They had a sixteen year old girl here.

Speaker 3 (01:33:38):
Yeah, they actually planted a story trying to discredit her
story and discredit her as a person. And then he
actually came back and discounted all of that and said
that she was traumatized and she was abused, which was
a really big deal for her and her team. Now,
the other questions that arise are actually even oh I

(01:33:59):
they're not worse because obviously he is a pos. He's
now out of the royal family. He can't call himself
prince anymore.

Speaker 5 (01:34:04):
Right, I believe he has kept the title of prince,
but it's all the other titles, duke of this, and yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:34:10):
I don't man, I gotta tell you. I thought they
stripped him literally to naked. Everything was gone, like, I
didn't think they could do anything. I think they've moved
him out of the houses, right, And is he part
of the royal and is it indemnity? Is that what
that is? Where you get a stipend of money from
the family every month or year or something like that.
Every member of the family I thought got that. I

(01:34:32):
don't think he gets out anymore, get a job. They
threw him out, That's kind of my point. They threw
him out of the house. They actually moved him from
the house that he loved into his smaller house that
he absolutely hated. It was like a summer cottage or something,
and he didn't think it was worthy of his presence,
is what I remember his stature.

Speaker 6 (01:34:49):
Yeah, so they chopped down his stature to match his dwelling.

Speaker 3 (01:34:53):
And I gotta tell you, Jack, the funny thing is,
you know, we know our buddy Darryl Payne was part
of Scotland Yard for a while, and actually he had
encounters with the Royals for a while and he said
they were very odd people. But he specifically told us,
and this is before any of this Epstein stuff broke,
I believed, deb Is that true that he told us,
like early in our relationship that Prince Andrew was one

(01:35:14):
of the worst people he'd ever met. There.

Speaker 5 (01:35:15):
Oh yeah, he used to accelerate his car as Daryl
and his crew were opening up the gates to Buckingham Palace.
Andrew would step on the gas and then laugh as
he got through the gate, like, ah, you get out
of the way just in time.

Speaker 3 (01:35:28):
Yeah, literally race at the gates because they were manually opened,
and the people would have to rush over and open
the gates to keep him from crashing, and he would
not slow down. If they didn't get out of the
way in time, he would have literally hit him and
run him over.

Speaker 5 (01:35:39):
And of course we all remember of the special team
of specially trained employees to arrange his teddy.

Speaker 3 (01:35:45):
Bears, teddy bears and other weird stuff. It was a weirdo.
She said he had a real foot issue, like a
foot fetish thing.

Speaker 1 (01:35:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
And she said also that she engaged with eight other
girls in an orgy with him. She was sixteen seventeen
when this was going on. Yep, here's the stuff that
is going to be interesting for the remainder of the family,
whether it be Charles or any of the other royals. There.

Speaker 5 (01:36:09):
Right, real quick title he still holds, but does not
use as prince titles.

Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
He's given up.

Speaker 5 (01:36:16):
Duke of York, Earl of Inverness, Baron of Kylie, Knight,
Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, Royal Knight, Companion
of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.

Speaker 3 (01:36:27):
Right. He was also the Queen's favorite. She loved him.
She thought he was the greatest. He was cheeky, you know,
it was a little bit of a bad boy. So
the Queen absolutely adored Prince Andrew. Right, she was his favorite.
Then she gave him the cover to get away with
any age, and he ran to her like a safety
blanket all the time through his entire life. If you
read about it, he used her literally like a bully

(01:36:49):
would stand behind and stick out the tongue type thing
because he knew that nobody would blink with the queen. Right,
here's the issue though.

Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
Let me go to my mummy.

Speaker 3 (01:36:56):
Yeah. With that said, now, one of the big things
is are we going to investigate the royal family? What
did they know and when did they know it?

Speaker 5 (01:37:04):
That's they're facing a lot of pressure in England, and.

Speaker 3 (01:37:07):
I got to tell you from what I understand, man,
the Royals are almost like one of those untouchable things
that it's you know, it'd be like getting something on
the Kennedys here, like when all that stuff broke with JFK.
How how big of a scandal it was because of
the stature that he had in America, that young swarthy
debonair president smart, you know, from the affluent Kennedy family,
almost American royalty with the with that that we've never had.

(01:37:30):
But man, this investigation into the Royal family about what
they knew when they knew it is going to be
very interesting because I'm not sure what the protocol is
over there when it comes to getting information from them.
I don't know how protected they are from you know,
from with the cups I don't really know how England
views the royals because it used to be a thing
where they really loved him and it was a big deal.

(01:37:51):
But is it really that same way over the what.

Speaker 6 (01:37:54):
The authority structure is for the police to investigate and
what they have a right to and the court. Can
they get a court order to force them to cooperate
in a situation and give them access like you would
get a subpoena here, you know, I'm not I don't know,
but I do know. In Virginia Giffrey's book, she also

(01:38:18):
says she was raped by a well known prime minister.

Speaker 3 (01:38:23):
Oh wow, really yeah, and that's why why would she
name him?

Speaker 5 (01:38:27):
I mean, well, that's why you know he quote unquote
committed suicide. There are so many powerful men around the
world who are watching what happened to Bill Gates's twenty
eight year marriage to Melinda.

Speaker 3 (01:38:41):
Oh yeah, who are watching? You know?

Speaker 5 (01:38:43):
Prince Andrew just every week, just another just he cannot
get past the scandal. And of course, now that her
book is out detailing in her own words what she
suffered at the hands of Prince Andrew, it is only
going to get worse. Across the Pond, I would imagine.
By the way, I want to thank the person who
texted us at seven seven zero three one who said

(01:39:04):
he's working at the White Castle.

Speaker 3 (01:39:10):
He he's keeping it royal. Yeah. In twenty fifteen, she
said Epstein forced her to have sex with Andrew three times.
In two thousand and one. Around that time, Epstein introduced
her to Andrew and then girlfriend Jelene Maxwell at a
London nightclub, where Giuffrey was later forced to have sex

(01:39:30):
with the royal at Maxwell's home. Geufrey alleged she was
later sexually abused by Andre a second time at Epstein's
New York mansion and then a third time at his
private island in the Virgin Islands. So I guess she
wanted to cover all of Epstein's properties. Yeah, just interested
to see how how the royal family is going to

(01:39:51):
deal with this. Usually a family that is insulated by
scandal of you know, within certain reason. I mean the
stuff that what's the kid that the hauled ass, the
one that kind of left the royal family for the woman.
The kid, what's his name? Oh, Harry, Harry, Yeah, Oh,
Megan and Harry Yeah, Like what are you talking about?
Wallace Spson and that's like the biggest scandal they've had

(01:40:11):
in a while. Is the Charles thing was a pretty
big scandal, Like Camilla, right, that was a big scandal.

Speaker 5 (01:40:18):
Especially when he was caught on wireless phone saying that
he wished he could be her nickers.

Speaker 3 (01:40:22):
Oh yeah, But I would think the Harry thing is
the latest, and that's just an internal family rift that
has nothing to do with them committing crimes. You know,
that's just him kind of piecing out because of how
they were treated or or whatever. It doesn't mean that
the Royal family covered up crimes. I mean, if it
comes down and they find evidence that Charles or any
of these people knew that Andrew was abusing a child

(01:40:46):
and they chose to protect him rather than out his ass,
I mean, I think that's a terrible look, right, It is.

Speaker 1 (01:40:51):
A terrible look.

Speaker 5 (01:40:52):
But I could see something along the lines of, you know,
like that of limitations, like.

Speaker 3 (01:40:59):
An amnesty or something like that.

Speaker 5 (01:41:00):
Because I mean, you know, the victim is dead, the
queen has passed, Andrew alive, Andrew is but you know
Epstein is dead. So I could see the Royal family
using a statute of limitation, or I see them circling
the wagons. I really do not see Scotland Yard being
able to pull the king aside and question him over this.
I really do not, with his health the way it
is with his health, just with the other issues.

Speaker 3 (01:41:22):
I just but Andrew's on immune to prosecution, right, I
mean that would be a what.

Speaker 1 (01:41:26):
Would you prosecute him for? The victim is dead?

Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
Yes, sexual porpetrator is dead, But I mean sex crimes
can be convicted even if the victim is dead if
you have enough evidence.

Speaker 1 (01:41:34):
I know, if England's laws are set up that way.

Speaker 3 (01:41:36):
If you have enough evidence, like you know, physical evidence,
are writing evidence, or maybe even admissions from him during
correspondence of some nature, I would still think that would
hope in court and you could still get a conviction
for Andrew.

Speaker 5 (01:41:47):
But I don't see anyone questioning Charles or Camilla.

Speaker 3 (01:41:51):
But still, you know, do you need a conviction to
really scar or maim the reputation of Buckingham Palace? That
already happened at this level, though child sex stuff it's
not happened, not at this level. I I mean, look,
in discretion with your wife is one thing. Your kid
being a bit of a prick is one thing. But
you're a member of your family, an immediate member, a
member of your family, having sex multiple times with a

(01:42:14):
child is a much bigger deal than everything they've dealt
with combined. I mean, you think about what it's doing
to this country and what it's about to do to
this government, and think about what it could do to
the royal family. It's just a few people, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
It's not gonna do anything.

Speaker 3 (01:42:27):
You don't think now a couple of hundred years ago,
people wouldn't blink at it right at this Yeah, in
the palace or in this country just in general. It's
not a couple hundred years maybe more than a couple
hundred years ago, but you know, not uncommon when you
know teens were married off with the older men. But

(01:42:49):
when you think about what's happening in the House of Representatives,
this guy will not approve a certified representative because the
fact that she will be the two hundred and eighteen
signature to get the files out, to get the information
out there. So what's this the third longest shut down
in the history of American government? You're telling me you
don't think it's impactful in this country. Oh, I think

(01:43:10):
it's grossly impactful in this country. Yes, I think it's
beyond impactful in this country. I thought you were talking
about the long term effects on the Royals. Yeah, I
mean I don't know, man. I mean, look, when you
get into the child sex stuff, I think games change completely.
It's like being in a party everybody smoking weed, then
some dude breaks out a heroin pipe. That's a completely
different party altogether. You have just brought the party to

(01:43:30):
a different level altogether. And I think this kind of crime,
I mean, I don't care all the indiscretions outside of this,
but when you knowingly cover up child sex crimes, that's
a completely different machine, I believe. I mean, I could
be naive in this completely well not understand the power
of the royal family. Look, I'm just a dumb yank.

Speaker 5 (01:43:49):
Well that's that's also assuming that they knew everything that
he was into.

Speaker 3 (01:43:54):
All this is an assumption, because I mean, the investigation
has just begun it. They are looking at it. I
mean I saw the today that they are they are
going to investigate this because there's too much evidence in
this book. And the fact is is that we know
for a fact that it's part of a Probert. They
have photographs with her. He has a photograph with her
at that age. Yeah, it's a famous photograph.

Speaker 5 (01:44:12):
But again I see the royal family using him as
raw meat toward the investigators to insulate the queen, or
rather the King.

Speaker 3 (01:44:22):
They cut it off with the tourna Gate.

Speaker 5 (01:44:23):
Yeah, you can have him, go after him, take them,
but stay away from Buckingham Palace.

Speaker 3 (01:44:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:44:29):
Wow, I think it like they serve everything to protect Yep,
the image.

Speaker 5 (01:44:35):
Their wagons will definitely be circling. Yeah, Andrew and Sarah
are going to be treated like the sacrificial lambs. And
somebody texted and said they still live together.

Speaker 3 (01:44:46):
Yeah. I think they were a weird couple from the start. Yeah,
because they're getting her.

Speaker 5 (01:44:49):
Toast sucked by another man. What you remember that scandal?

Speaker 3 (01:44:53):
I do not?

Speaker 1 (01:44:55):
Yeah you do.

Speaker 3 (01:44:56):
I don't know that I do. I'm serious. I believe
he's being serious. Okay, dear remember that though, Jack, Yeah, vaguely,
when she was caught on like that, lady, you didn't
question you twice She's.

Speaker 5 (01:45:05):
Caught on a balcony by a photographer having her toes
sucked by another man who was not Prince Andrew.

Speaker 3 (01:45:11):
I wasn't even in England. Then she'd gnarly. She used
to be actually kind of cute. She'd turned into a
woman to hand you a poisoned apple, though a little witchy,
all right, four O seven nine one six one O
four one. You can always text us seven seven zero
three one. Gonna be interesting to see how that goes, though, Yeah,
I don't know. I mean, obviously the Buckham Buckingham Palace

(01:45:31):
and the family has like all the juice you can
possibly have very wealthy, endless resources. But man, I mean,
it would take just one or two emails or texts
verified that it was him. That would be a bad scenario.
I'm glad the Queen's on a round for this. I'm
Joe can don't care, all right, four O seven nine
four one five o'clock keyword to check that's cgc K.

(01:45:51):
Slide over to real radio dot of him and send
that off for your chance at one thousand dollars. Load
him up for Trivia's next.

Speaker 2 (01:45:58):
You want to play a game, I should, Jim Colbert
Show Trivia is next, call now four O seven four.

Speaker 13 (01:46:12):
All right, hey Jack, before you play him the talk back?
Is there a rule about two drunkendor.

Speaker 3 (01:46:26):
Lords? Let us no, don't think we have a rule.
So yours is up back.

Speaker 13 (01:46:35):
One of the most royal families back in the day.
Just like oops, I slipped it into my cousin. I'm
wonder our kids have eleven toes on one hand or
something like that.

Speaker 3 (01:46:53):
My man, my man, I realized that eight day that
man maybe should have let five on a Tuesday. Maybe
you should have done that forty minutes ago, Doug, Love
you buddy, all right for us seven nine one six
one four to one. Welcome meg On Jim. There's nebel

(01:47:17):
Jack is here as well, and he's got the Jackie sack.
Let's find out what's in it all aboard chuck it
chugga jackety clack, clickety clack. Here we go.

Speaker 6 (01:47:25):
Got a pair of tickets to Jason Bonham's led Zeppelin
Evening at the Doctor Phillips Center that's happening November twenty fourth,
that it's getting closed. Jim, I know you are excited
about this show. I think I want to go as well.
Doctor Phillips Center wining the premier venues we have in
this city beautiful. If you want more information or tickets
on that, go to Doctor Phillipsenter dot O RG.

Speaker 3 (01:47:48):
Also in the Jackie Sack a pair of tickets to
Trans Siberian Orchestras The Ghost of Christmas returns.

Speaker 6 (01:47:56):
This is coming to the Key of Center December thirteenth,
two shows that nay and evening. You can get tickets
now at ticketmaster dot com or maybe you win them
right here.

Speaker 3 (01:48:06):
That's what's in the Jackie Sack.

Speaker 1 (01:48:08):
So back to you a calickity class.

Speaker 3 (01:48:10):
There you, young lady one, two, three, four or five.

Speaker 1 (01:48:14):
We're changing it up.

Speaker 3 (01:48:15):
We're going to let's go Logan, Logan, what's going on?

Speaker 2 (01:48:19):
Hey, how's it going?

Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
Not too bad at all, buddy. You want to play
a little game with us, Absolutely, let's do it.

Speaker 1 (01:48:29):
Show that Logan.

Speaker 3 (01:48:30):
Hey, Logan, are you the guy texting me?

Speaker 7 (01:48:31):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:48:32):
I was just gonna think that. Uh no, okay, all right, Logan,
this is a real easy game. Got a question here
for you. Four answers. One of these answers is not
true what I am truly trying to fool you. But
if you can see through it and choose the right answer,
I will send you over to jack where you can
pick something nice. Trans Siberian Orchestra Orchestra this time of year,
isn't that bad. Are you ready? I'm ready. Here we go, buddy.

(01:48:55):
On this day in eighteen thirty three, that's one eight
three three, inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prize,
Alfred Nobel was born on this day.

Speaker 1 (01:49:05):
Oh wow.

Speaker 3 (01:49:06):
Here are three fun facts about the Nobel Prize and
one explosive line. All rightbody, we're talking about the Nobel Prize.
Which one of these is untrue? Number one winners Carl
von Osetski, Martin Luther King Junior, and Nelson Mandela were
in prison when they were awarded the Nobel Prize. Number two, Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature,

(01:49:27):
and Peace are the original five prizes. Economics was added
in nineteen sixty eight. Number three, There are no posthumous
Nobel Prizes. The recipient has to be alive or Lastly,
the average age of a Nobel Prize winner is sixty
two years old. Which of those is a lie?

Speaker 17 (01:49:47):
Oh man, I'm gonna go with a I don't think
MLK ever got a Nobel Peace Prize.

Speaker 3 (01:49:55):
Yeah, dude, that's absolutely true. He did get it, and
he was in jail when he got it.

Speaker 6 (01:49:59):
Yeah, am there you go. He was a bad boy.

Speaker 3 (01:50:02):
Yeah. Well, with Nelson Mandela another bad boy down freedom
fighters exactly. All right, one, three, four or five. We're
gonna go five. Five, Let's go five. That is Scott, Scott,
how are you doing? I'm doing great.

Speaker 11 (01:50:15):
How are you doing?

Speaker 16 (01:50:16):
Good?

Speaker 3 (01:50:16):
Buddy? We're talking about the Nobel Prize here? Which one
of these isn't true? Number one Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature,
and piece or the original five prizes. Economics was added
nineteen sixty eight. Number two. There are no postumous Nobel Prizes.
The recipient has to be living or Lastly, the average
age of a Nobel Prize winner is sixty two years old.
I'll try number three. That's the one money you're do

(01:50:40):
you think it's Do you think it's older or younger
than that?

Speaker 7 (01:50:43):
I think it's older, younger. I mean probably fifty five.

Speaker 3 (01:50:45):
Fifty nine years old is the actual average age of
a Nobel Prize winner. Your winner, but I'm gonna put
you on old and two of your prize.

Speaker 1 (01:50:52):
I love that he said younger.

Speaker 5 (01:50:53):
And then when fifty nine, fifty five, even fifty five,
Oh yeah, yeah, that's true.

Speaker 3 (01:50:59):
Physics, Chemistry, medicine, Literature, and peace are the only five
original Prizes. Economics was aud in nineteen sixty eight, and
then after I wrote this, actually because it's his birthday today,
I wrote another little piece that says the Economics Prize
actually is not a Nobel Prize. It's issued by another
institution in Switzerland, I believe, and it's affiliated with the

(01:51:21):
Nobel Prize, but it actually isn't a Nobel Prize, which
I've not heard before, and I just saw that as
an excerpt today. There are no posthumous Nobel Prizes. There
is one scenario where someone was given the prize after
they passed. But what happened was is he died in
this way to pick it up after they nominated him,
and they did not know. So they actually had a

(01:51:41):
meeting in a giant conference to decide whether or not
he's still qualified, and they decided that he was. Oh wow,
that's the only person in the history that's ever done that.
And of course the average age is sixty two or
fifty nine. A couple other things you may not know
about the Nobel Prize before we get to the top of
the hour. Malala is it Yosef Ratt Joseph Rot Malala, Oh,

(01:52:07):
Yosef Zai, the Iranian, the young Iranian girl Iranian or
the Afghan girla was shot in the head as she
was trying to go to school. Malala Afghan? Yeah, yeah,
is it Afghan? I thought she's an Irani. But anyway, well,
thank you for earning yourself that she was only seventeen
years old when she received the prime. What university has
received the most Nobel prizes?

Speaker 5 (01:52:28):
Actually she's Pakistani. Which university has won?

Speaker 3 (01:52:32):
This university has one hundred and twenty Nobel Prize winning alumni,
more than any other university in the world. Harvard's the answer.
Oh wow, yeah, yeah, Harvard Cambridge.

Speaker 1 (01:52:43):
I was going to say Oxford.

Speaker 3 (01:52:44):
Stanford's up there too. I believe. I believe that we're
getting all the Yeah, Jim's getting all the buzzers, and
then last and then last year because Jack knows I
like the money stuff. The Nobel Prize medal is about
one third a pound of eighteen carrot gold. What's its
actual value for metal? Like, if you were to melt
it down, how much would it be worth? Okay, you

(01:53:05):
said it's it's a third of a pound of eighteen
carrot Because the numbers bounces five plus ounces eighteen carrot.

Speaker 1 (01:53:16):
I'm gonna go a million.

Speaker 3 (01:53:17):
Oh no, I'm going to go fifty thousand, yeah, sixteen
k oh okay yea yeah, because it's eighteen carrot. The
numbers here, now where gold is, you know, four thousand
dollars an ounce.

Speaker 2 (01:53:28):
Is?

Speaker 3 (01:53:28):
It's twenty four carrot. So eighteen carrot has some other
metals in there. I think it's silver, nickel or whatever
they mix with it.

Speaker 1 (01:53:35):
I'll take a Nobel prize.

Speaker 3 (01:53:36):
Yeah. And then somebody actually got almost detained for their
prize because after they won it, they had it in
their bag and they were trying to get on an
airplane and of course it's set the detector off, and
they went a little crazy when your.

Speaker 5 (01:53:47):
Carre Oh you mean this is this setting off the scanner.
I'm so sorry everyone. It was my Nobel prize. Yeah,
was my Nobel prize.

Speaker 3 (01:53:55):
You get a million bucks too, I think. So you
get a million bucks and you get the and you
get the prize. But a lot of the Nobells are
issued to multiple people. Matter of fact, if they have
a chart that shows you, like what prize has been
won by multiple people in each year, it's kind of interesting.

Speaker 6 (01:54:10):
And they have a rule that they're not allowed to
split the money, so one person gets the money, the
other one gets the award.

Speaker 3 (01:54:15):
The knife fight, they tie them together like Michael Jackson's
beat It video. Speaking of setting off for the alarm,
I set off the alarm at the airport. You did
the scanner vaping in the bathroom again, No, I don't
know why.

Speaker 6 (01:54:28):
It was the look at me naked scanner where you
step in and spread your legs, hands over your head
and they.

Speaker 3 (01:54:34):
Go, did you shake it a little? I didn't normally
come out.

Speaker 6 (01:54:38):
It's my belt, So I just take my belt off
because I know that's going to trigger it. But you
didn't have to take your shoes off on this that
they'll do that in Orlando anymore, which is great, and
coming back I shouldn't have had to, except there was
some trigger, Like I come out and there's like a
big block over my foot and they're like, you need
to take your shoes off, send them through and then back,

(01:55:00):
and so I had to do that. I passed, and
you know, they did the search and they're like, hey,
how you doing doing.

Speaker 1 (01:55:08):
You're like, can I have a drink and a cigarette?

Speaker 3 (01:55:10):
Yeah? A little grab down there to make sure things
find I don't mind. Oh, I did come through the
new terminal sea though, I oh, really, what was that? Pretty?
And long? It's long. There is a lot of walking,
a lot more walking than Terminal A and B and OI.

Speaker 1 (01:55:28):
They said they just put in people movers.

Speaker 3 (01:55:30):
Did not see one dab.

Speaker 5 (01:55:31):
I was looking because that's a big complaint on Terminal C,
is that it's beautiful, but you really expect me to walk.

Speaker 6 (01:55:38):
It's like you're suddenly you're in this fancy ball and
then it's like I gotta walk all the way over there.

Speaker 3 (01:55:42):
You guys, remember when they first opened that thing. Ross
went out there and told me they were selling a
day pass where you can make thirty five dollars to
go to a gd Airport terminal. Well, who does that? Hey?

Speaker 5 (01:55:51):
How about back in the day when you used to
go and park on trade Port Drive and lay there
and wait for the planes to come on.

Speaker 3 (01:55:57):
I did that.

Speaker 5 (01:55:58):
Many That was Ipe Entertainment and Orlando Beckon here, dude,
I had a gaze.

Speaker 3 (01:56:03):
Right near there that remember that that Uh it was
a lip sync contest thing. I used to run on
like Thursday nights and I would go out there and
in Frontage Road is like right there road, so we
would zip out of there and like you know, one
of thirty in the morning or whatever, because there was
like no lightwash, everything was dead, and we'd go and
sit and watch those planes come in. It was crazy
literally see him lined up on the horizon like ten

(01:56:24):
at a time.

Speaker 1 (01:56:24):
Yep, even late at night.

Speaker 3 (01:56:25):
Oh yeah, all right, four oh seven nine one six
one o four one Again. You can always text us
easily seven seven zero three one. You want to leave
a talk back, that's easy as well. Free grab the iHeartRadio,
go to real Radio and use that mic to send
your comment over to Jack. Take a break back in
a second with more than Jim Colbert Show. First deposit

(01:56:49):
is your six o'clock you word to have a glitch
there in the system. Deposit the E P O S
I T. Kick it over to Real Radio out of
him and send that on for your chance at one
thousand bucks. Deposits the word guys, go get the money.
We need a winter man. We have been dry for
a week and a half. Now got him. Might remember
if you're playing the game, keep your phone on answer
it when it rains. What are you mad about that

(01:57:10):
does not want to be associated with you? Claiming how
dry we are. Oh, I mean, you know we haven't
had a winter tim It's not a personal shut up problem.

Speaker 5 (01:57:17):
No, Actually, I was just upset that we have another
station down the hall that's leading us. I don't that
sound very uncomfortable with that?

Speaker 3 (01:57:24):
What leads me to believe something fishy is going on?

Speaker 6 (01:57:29):
Yeah, if we can't be the winner four times a
year for twelve straight years.

Speaker 3 (01:57:34):
And I'm not happy, Jack, something rigged? All right? Seven
to seven zero three one. That's how you text us.
I'm Jim, there's dead. Hello? Who is not dry? You?
You moisturize, You're very lotioning, thank you, And I don't
know what is it. Do you pick a time of
the day where you put on lotion? No, because every
day around like the five thirty six o'clock time, I

(01:57:57):
come in and it smells a fresh flower or whatever
is in that lotion you use, which by the way,
smells amazing.

Speaker 1 (01:58:03):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:58:04):
That's because I've gone and used the restroom and washed
my hands and now I'm putting lotion back on.

Speaker 3 (01:58:08):
All right, Oh, you you do that every time?

Speaker 1 (01:58:10):
I can't stink, do you?

Speaker 3 (01:58:11):
Guys?

Speaker 1 (01:58:12):
That's what bothers me the most.

Speaker 5 (01:58:13):
Using a public bathroom is there's no lotion in the
soap is so harsh?

Speaker 6 (01:58:19):
Yeah, we don't toilet paper and harsh soap.

Speaker 3 (01:58:24):
Then toilet paper you got something?

Speaker 5 (01:58:26):
Yeah, stuff Now it's like it looks like it's coffetti
in the bathroom.

Speaker 3 (01:58:30):
Irony of them get by the way, welcome back. I'm
Jim deb and Jacket's ears. The irony of them giving
you like single ply very breachable, by the way, Yes,
toilet paper and the breach is no fun no, The
breach is no fun no, because then what do you do?
Oh yeah, yeah, well, when you get the single part,
you have to double or triple it up to make
sure you don't have a breach. So it defeats the
entire purpose. But if you have a breach and you're

(01:58:52):
in a public restaurant, you scream to the top of
your lungs now, you screaming, You run down the hallway
sticking it out from you as if you're holding a snake.
But you can't put your pants back on you. No,
you gotta get some paper clean that. But yeah, you
gotta go. You gotta wash your hands. You're in a
public restroom and you can't, like sure you can't. You

(01:59:14):
just have to know how to use the other nine
digit exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:59:17):
You just you just gotta crab your way through it. Jack,
Just crab your way through it.

Speaker 3 (01:59:21):
Hey, I got a question for you business.

Speaker 1 (01:59:24):
Grab your way through it.

Speaker 3 (01:59:25):
Just crab your way through it. Trust me. Everybody after
listening has had a breach before it and has had
to crab their pants back on. It's it's like using
your left hand to do anything. If you do that,
you don't even know what to do. And then, let
me tell you something, that's the cleanest under that fingernail
will ever be. You will never in your life after
a breach. You will never have a cleaner fingernail than

(01:59:50):
after that.

Speaker 6 (01:59:51):
Oh God, remember we were talking about Mark Sanchez. Yeah,
Mark saying, former Jets quarterback. He is a color commentator
for uh the Fox for NFL games. Got in an
incident in the middle of the night. Apparently drunk attacked
a truck driver in a seven year old dude ended

(02:00:11):
up getting stabbed, But there was a sort of he
got maced first, but the mace didn't work.

Speaker 3 (02:00:16):
They said the mace was out of date or something.

Speaker 6 (02:00:18):
That's what I heard, and I mentioned that, and I
was talking to someone on my vacation. They said, well, actually,
mace doesn't work as well on Hispanic people.

Speaker 3 (02:00:32):
Really, And I'm like, excuse me, could you repeat that?
And he said was he white?

Speaker 6 (02:00:42):
This was a white person telling me that mace doesn't
work as well on Hispanic people because of their diet,
because they.

Speaker 5 (02:00:53):
Eat so much hot peppers and so they're used to
the capstation.

Speaker 3 (02:00:57):
Yes, so the pepper spray doesn't work as well.

Speaker 1 (02:01:01):
Yeah, No, I'm gonna I'm gonna say that's not true.

Speaker 3 (02:01:04):
That's what I was thinking. It wasn't true, but I'm
going to google was Then I asked, was that running
on the Chiron on Tucker's show? Is that what happened?
Was not? This person was serious? And then I asked
if it matters if it's locally sourced peppers? Hey, but
we none like but hold on for a second. Let's
not get to ahead of this because we know for

(02:01:24):
a fact there are there are certain situations that come along,
like we know with people with red hair have a
higher tolerance for pain. Uh no, that's one hundred percent true, though, right,
people were with red hair have a higher tolerance for pain,
and if I remember right, they don't react to painkillers
as well or something right, and when they go to
the dentist they have to have extra pain meds given. Yes,

(02:01:46):
something like that. I mean people have read here have
some kind of weird anomaly with their blood and system
where they it's not the same as everybody else.

Speaker 1 (02:01:53):
Well, this is okay.

Speaker 5 (02:01:55):
So no, mace or pepper spray does not have a
reduced effect on his people, and the idea that it
does is a discredited myth. This myth is rooted in
racist stereotypes. Linking the consumption of spicy foods to a
higher pain tolerance is not supported by any scientific evidence.

Speaker 1 (02:02:12):
Here's where the myth started, all right.

Speaker 5 (02:02:14):
So back in nineteen ninety nine, Cambridge, Massachusetts Police Department
found itself facing public outrage after it was revealed that
their training included the scientifically unfounded belief that Mexican Americans
and other ethnic groups were less susceptible to pepper spray
because of their diets.

Speaker 3 (02:02:32):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (02:02:33):
Police officials later issued a public apology, acknowledging there was
no evidence to support these remarks.

Speaker 1 (02:02:39):
That means we can't let you go to the Northeast anymore.

Speaker 3 (02:02:41):
Joe, Yeah, yeah, you know, former cop. Really true story.
Oh Manny work for.

Speaker 5 (02:02:50):
Cambridge, Massachusetts by any chance five times ranc.

Speaker 3 (02:02:56):
Well if that you know, here's the thing. Yeah, and
I when they said that the mace was expired, I'm
like that that happens, Like you, pepper spray has a
shelf life?

Speaker 1 (02:03:05):
Well, I mean fire extinguishers do I know?

Speaker 5 (02:03:07):
But I mean I would assume that, you know, I
would almost think that it was because of his state
of drunkenness.

Speaker 3 (02:03:15):
That's what obviously, I mean, that's what I.

Speaker 5 (02:03:17):
Think made it so that the mace didn't affect him
as much. What were we just talking about.

Speaker 3 (02:03:23):
No, I'm trying to find out the shelf life thing
because oh, there we go. Yeah, I'm just trying to mean,
you get an answer on the fire thing, we should
let me know because I've got about six of them
around my house. None are less than ten years old.
I've got him and the writings in like old English. Yeah,
I mean, but what do you do. I don't know what.
I'm not going to throw it out there. I'm just

(02:03:44):
going to wait till I need it and hope it works.
You have to no, no, no, you can't do that, dude.
You don't want to hope while your fire is burning.

Speaker 4 (02:03:50):
Down.

Speaker 3 (02:03:50):
What do you do You got to have a room
full of them, Well you have to what do you
do with them? Do you take them to the dump
like where you take old paint and gas, or.

Speaker 5 (02:03:58):
Do you call your fire station and ask them how
you dispose of them?

Speaker 3 (02:04:02):
By the way, what a great question. Or do you
just use him on trick or treaters? Oh that's a
good idea. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:04:10):
Mace generally lasts for two to four years from the
date of manufacturing.

Speaker 3 (02:04:14):
That's what I saw. One to four years dependent on that.
But look, man, even then, I would think that it
would have some effect. Do that. Apparently this is a point. Mink, chuck.
That dude's dome and he didn't even react. His name
is Sanchez. What do you expect?

Speaker 5 (02:04:29):
By the way, Jack, they have ruled that cameras will
be allowed in the courtroom during his trial.

Speaker 3 (02:04:34):
Oh really, Yeah, that is a great question about the extinguisher, Jack.
I legit have like seven of those old sons of
bitches around my house that have been there since the fifties.

Speaker 6 (02:04:44):
I think when I first bought my house, I you know,
oh I needed an singuachair, And then you know, many
years later, I'm like, oh, I should probably, you know,
up up eight and so now I too. Now I
have three, so I have them all around in various places.

Speaker 5 (02:04:58):
But well, it says you can dispose of old fire
extinguishers by contacting your local fire department or hazardous waste
disposal site.

Speaker 3 (02:05:06):
That's that thing out by Jack's house, whe where you
take old paint and old TVs and stuff like. That's
a regular dump.

Speaker 6 (02:05:11):
No, it's a transfer station where they collect that stuff
and then transfer to a dump or wherever this stuff
would go.

Speaker 5 (02:05:19):
You can also take them to a fire protection company
for recycling.

Speaker 3 (02:05:22):
Yeah, but I mean the but the mechanism has to
be right because some of the tanks, the design has
changed dramatically, just from the not the propellant, no, what's
in it the fire retardant, but the actual system itself
has changed dramatically, I believe over the last like even
ten or fifteen, twenty years.

Speaker 1 (02:05:38):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (02:05:38):
I just keep looking at that expiration date, going well.

Speaker 3 (02:05:41):
Yeah, well, that's the one thing you definitely don't want expire.
I mean, you would hate to know your house is
burning down. You pick that thing up, and it says,
you know, it was a good until two thousand and
four blanket. I think I'm just gonna have to start
my own controlled burn and see if I could keep
it controlled. Oh, I got some You can out of
buy house and pray and bring them all and bring
them all to I.

Speaker 6 (02:06:00):
You can spray them anywhere at my place. I think
there's a Halloween opportunity here. We can have our own Dwally.
It's get out there and spray them crazy.

Speaker 3 (02:06:10):
Wow. Do you guys hear what's happening in the land. Yeah,
I mean it's nothing big, but I find it interesting
because I see more of these on the road than
any I mean I see a lot of these things.
So you know, we had the electric scooters for a while,
right that was a bit of a scourge downtown and
all downtowns. We've had a lot of fun talking about
the injuries on that on those things. But now electric bikes, Oh,

(02:06:31):
let's do it. The e bikes are a big, big,
big deal right now. A lot of people are using
e bikes for transportation around their neighborhood. And matter of fact,
there's a there's an e bike I saw today that's
built that has like almost like Harley baskets on the
back and then Harley baskets on the front and they
call it not a heavy load. They caught a there's

(02:06:51):
a name for it. But the bike is built to
carry stuff. So they basically the idea is instead of
driving your car to the local stores, to grocery shop,
go to seven to eleven, or pick something up at CBS,
instead of tranking your car up, they want to use
this e bike. Well, apparently DeLand has been inundated with
people riding these damn e bikes and they're actually about

(02:07:11):
to pass some legislation up there, or they're thinking about
it to limit who can ride them, where they can
be ridden, and how fast they can go. It's about time,
let's do this. It should be sixteen.

Speaker 6 (02:07:22):
Other states have it where you have to be sixteen
for different classes. But this is really no difference than
a moped. I had a moped in New Jersey at
the time you had to be fifteen, you had to
get a license, and then they passed the helmet law.

Speaker 3 (02:07:37):
Fortunately a week before I crashed.

Speaker 6 (02:07:39):
My inlanded on my head. However, you couldn't have one
before fifteen. And with these e bikes, they cruising like
thirty dollars an.

Speaker 3 (02:07:48):
Hour to thirty five some of them.

Speaker 6 (02:07:50):
We've seen Mike Chipwood on the news talking about how
this is becoming an increasingly big problem. You're seeing more
and more reports of kids, you know, being kids. I
get that, but also it becomes a nuisance for others
where others are reacting poorly. I believe it's an a
Popka guy forty five years old.

Speaker 3 (02:08:10):
He's in jail, that's right, the run over a thirteen
year old.

Speaker 6 (02:08:13):
Yeah, and his wife got out was yelling at him
and they were losing it, and then he swerved that
one and ran over and destroyed the bike.

Speaker 5 (02:08:21):
What's interesting is that when police ask him why he
left his wife at the scene and drove home, he said, quote,
fear clouded my judgment.

Speaker 3 (02:08:30):
Yeah. And now you've got.

Speaker 5 (02:08:31):
The story of a UCF professor chasing a young person
on an e bike and smacking the helmet off his head.

Speaker 3 (02:08:38):
I'm telling you, those twos are driving us crazy. I'm
not ruling against that guy.

Speaker 12 (02:08:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:08:42):
Yeah, like Jack M'screto and by the way to Land,
they're like just trying to say twelve and under our
ban from riding them at all, which would leave the
door open for still thirteen fourteen fifteen year olds to
ride these things. Jack's right, they go up to thirty
five miles per hour. None of this has passed, but
I guess there's a movement all throughout the state of Florida. Yeah,
to really rain in where these things are written, because

(02:09:04):
people are riding them on sidewalks. And look, it's a
regular bicycle, and you know, if you don't know how
to contain the power, and it's way faster than you
think it is, and it gets there way faster than
you think it does.

Speaker 6 (02:09:15):
I had a kid pass me on it like I
was on well, I was on the sidewalk. He came down,
scooted around when on four to thirty five, I mean,
just zoomed by me. Yeah, you know, I was doing
like fifteen miles an hour, but under pedal power. And
he just oh, yeah, there's no no problem whatsoever and gone.
And look, the range of these things is pretty good.
I think it's like seven to twelve miles you go

(02:09:36):
on a single charge.

Speaker 3 (02:09:37):
If you're a regular weighted person, I wouldn't mind.

Speaker 6 (02:09:39):
I think it's a great form of alternative transportation, cleaner energy.
You know, if you have a short distance ago that's great,
even for kids if you're going to high school. Yes,
but I think they need to kind of It's one
of those things where you unleash it on the world,
it gets out of control. Then they try and put
some of that paste back in the tube. But I said, okay,

(02:10:02):
now we know we need to kind of bring this,
tighten it up a little with the with the rules,
and it's a lot of responsibility and power, yeah, for
young kids to have.

Speaker 5 (02:10:14):
And I don't think kids sixteen are under should be
able to go thirty five miles an hour unless they're
a licensed driver like everybody else, because you have to
wels assume maybe they're not stopping at stop signs.

Speaker 3 (02:10:25):
And by the way, you're sixteen, get a bike with pedals.
These things are for old people who can't move. You know,
they're making them cooler, now, do you know. Look, I
know they're great, but the thing is, like a sixteen
year old should be peddaling a bike. Get out of here.

Speaker 6 (02:10:36):
And the trails the bike trails are jogging in bike trails,
walking trails, but specifically they once had signs no motor vehicles,
like no motorized vehicles.

Speaker 3 (02:10:46):
And I've seen these things cruising up and down the trail. Yeah,
a lot of cities, like Indian Harbor, beach Land, a
number of cities are trying to pinch the use of
these where they're used, how they're used, And it looks
like that's coming pretty soon because I mean there's some
crazy easy stuff happening, age limits, shared space with pedestrians.
All of this is on the docket and they'll be
deciding it soon apparently. All right four seven nine saying

(02:11:08):
will break our buddy Scott Brown with its only money
is up next.

Speaker 19 (02:11:21):
Hey Jack. Just like you know, for the most part,
every single fire extinguisher should have a gauge on it
that says if it's good or bad, as well as
a card on it that says like an expiration day
for the most part. On top of that, the Portland
frog that you saw got maced through the air vents
in the inflatable costume. Yeah, the reason said their pepper
spray wasn't spicy because they were Hispanic.

Speaker 20 (02:11:43):
So maybe, hey, guys, you can take those fire extinguishers
to a fire extinguisher company and they'll test them, re
certify them with new tags on them with expiration dates.
And it's only like ten bucks apiece way cheaper buying
fire shirt.

Speaker 3 (02:12:02):
Yeah, they're expensive.

Speaker 1 (02:12:03):
Or wondering if the one you have either?

Speaker 3 (02:12:05):
Yeah, I had to check that out.

Speaker 7 (02:12:06):
I do I have.

Speaker 3 (02:12:08):
I must have at least six around my house in
just missllaneous areas. Before the whole fire alarm thing was
a big deal. They you know, because the house is
built in the fifties. I'll give you a week. They
would just put them around. I'm telling you, I think
I don' where at least four of them are all right?

Speaker 6 (02:12:20):
Now one week, I'm going to set your house on five. Okay,
get out as your warning, now you have a week
to get ready.

Speaker 3 (02:12:25):
I just put up an entire connected alarm system. Jack,
I will, I will not tall all succumb challenge accepting
all right? Seven seven zero three one. That's how you
text us six o'clock. Keyword is deposit. That's the E
P O S I T Real radio. Do FM send that.
I'll for your chance of one thousand bucks. I'm Jim,
there's deb hello check us here as well. Let's do
it's only money. Oh, people passionate about planning for the.

Speaker 2 (02:12:49):
Future, rise above investment myths to build. Isn't that really
just common sense financial advice.

Speaker 3 (02:12:57):
Turns out it's both.

Speaker 16 (02:12:58):
Okay, there's all the money Wiscott thrown from our family.

Speaker 3 (02:13:06):
Woud brobody Scott come in to town just for you.
How you doing, buddy, I'm doing fantastic. Good to see you.

Speaker 7 (02:13:15):
Man.

Speaker 3 (02:13:15):
I get a question. Am I allowed to ask questions?

Speaker 4 (02:13:19):
Oh?

Speaker 15 (02:13:19):
Yeah, that's great. I was and I didn't read the
contract fairly, so I'm not sure I'm supposed to ask questions.

Speaker 3 (02:13:24):
I love questions. Have an answer machine.

Speaker 15 (02:13:26):
I know you are, whether we like it or not.
So the the h are you speaking for the audie? I? Well,
I guess I've been talking to this.

Speaker 3 (02:13:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:13:35):
Yeah, the Seltzers, the th HC Seltzers.

Speaker 3 (02:13:39):
What about them? Are you aware of these? Quite aware?
Are you quite aware?

Speaker 18 (02:13:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:13:42):
Yeah? It could be in possession of a couple.

Speaker 15 (02:13:44):
Yeah, that's why I asking, like, I just feel like
that was a question to ask you because I you know,
in uh, I have had a chance to try them,
you know, five milligrams the breeze is that the ones
you try I have.

Speaker 3 (02:13:56):
The there are so many different Oh there's a zillion.
There has so many different ones. The wink and it's
uh not a bad thing, you know, what I've We've
only had the breeze which we have at the house.
Not only do we have we have the breeze as
the THC and the Lions Maine in it for the
calmness type thing. Yeah, they're very effective. Now you are

(02:14:18):
the big cancer. The smaller cans, the ones I have
no because they're only five milligras exactly same here. So
I mean you can just sip that thing taste like
a fresca, kind of like a strong fresco.

Speaker 15 (02:14:27):
You can kind of get the funk of the weed
taste almost like the smell, but in the taste for ye.

Speaker 3 (02:14:34):
Yeah, that's the terrapins. The terrapins. Yeah, that's what they
call those, the terrapins. I think that's what it is.
Are the terrapines. Terrapines, Yeah, terrain I think that's a
football as a turtle Maryland or something like. It's called
the terrapines or something like that. That's that. That's the
the skunky smell.

Speaker 15 (02:14:51):
Yeah yeah, yeah, that you smell when you walk for
the concert the minute you crack that thing. And the
funny thing is this breeze also makes a liquor version
of that as well. In other words, you can take
that liquor version and make cocktails if you're not into
just the uh the seltzers.

Speaker 3 (02:15:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:15:07):
Well, I so I had some people over and they're
big wine drinkers, and I'm like, you know, I drink
that too much wine.

Speaker 3 (02:15:12):
I can't sleep, I feel like crap.

Speaker 15 (02:15:14):
The next morning, I'm like, let me try this idea out,
and uh thumbs up.

Speaker 3 (02:15:19):
Yeah, let me help me out. There's no question the
only thing you wanted to say was I like it.
I'm just gonna give you thumbs out. I really just
wanted to endorse the product. To be honest with you,
you cut a side deal. Dude. That's awesome. Are you sing?
I'm a little bit. I like that. The other thing.
I am also a user, so I will tell you

(02:15:40):
on the wine thing. Are you a red red wine drinker?
I do like red wine, so I do as well.
But we have learned something. My wife has started having
like an adverse effect to American or NAPA or Oregon wines, right,
But we have noticed that Spanish wines, Italian wines do
not have that same effect on us. So now they're
not as sweet as American wine. They're more earthy. But

(02:16:01):
we've we've started buying more imported wines from Spain, from Italy,
from all areas. I mean, obviously Germany makes reasonings and stuff,
so we get all of that, and it has really
helped her. I never got the problem with that, but
she had it like here recently. She can't even have
a glass. It blinks her up.

Speaker 15 (02:16:18):
Well in not that I want to spend the whole
show on this, but we can. So red wine has
more histamine in it, So like, my sinuses jam up
with red wine, and when I've had wine in.

Speaker 3 (02:16:29):
Europe, it never bothers me.

Speaker 15 (02:16:31):
So I don't know if that's psychological, because I've asked
a few doctors. I'm like, was there different ingredients or
they're preservatives in the Americans or whatever.

Speaker 3 (02:16:37):
I don't know the answer to that.

Speaker 15 (02:16:38):
I'm sure somebody will text you in a second and
tell you the answer to that. But I just find
European wines don't trouble me, but red wines that I
like better than white wines bother my sinus.

Speaker 3 (02:16:47):
Yeah, that's wild man. She started. She just started experiencing that.
But my wife is the one who actually started the
breeze thing. She loves that stuff. Yeah, and I will
tell you know. One of the reasons it became very
popular is is people wanted out an alternative to alcohol,
and they he didn't want to smoke weed or chew
gummies or anything like that. They wanted a little bit
of both worlds. And I think that's a really good
bridge the ones that I've had where I didn't have

(02:17:08):
anything else on my system at the time. That's exactly
what it made you feel, like, like if you had
a little bit of weed and a little bit of
alcohol where you're not out of control, but you're very calm,
you're chill, but you're very aware. Still. Yeah, that's exactly
what happened. All right, all right, Sorry, we'll see you
guys next week. All right. Scott run's Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com.
That's they're a fiduciary here in town for over thirty

(02:17:30):
eight years, making sure that you are managing your money properly.
If you hire him to do so, he will do that.
Make sure at least give you a better chance of
it lasting longer so you can have a better life. Right, agreed,
for sure. I know we had some questions from last week.
I essentially like two screens them. Let's get to one
of those.

Speaker 15 (02:17:45):
Yeah, So this one was this was an interesting question.
It's kind of a follow on our four to one K.
You can take your money out of your for all
on k and have somebody else managed it if you
so choose. Not that that's always best, but it's certainly something.

Speaker 3 (02:17:55):
To think about.

Speaker 15 (02:17:55):
And the question was how do I how do you balance?
I think the essential of the question was, well, if
I take the money out of my four oh one K,
I won't get the match anymore.

Speaker 3 (02:18:03):
And that's not true.

Speaker 15 (02:18:03):
So remember when you're if you're let's say you're fifty
eight years old, your plan, your plan document, You go
to HR and they say, yes, you can do that.
You can take you know, you got one hundred grand,
you want to take eighty out or eighty five out.
You're going to give it to your financial advisor, do
whatever you want.

Speaker 3 (02:18:15):
To do with it.

Speaker 15 (02:18:16):
And then your worry is, well, now that I've done that,
I don't get No. The match is on new contributions, right,
so as you you'll still contribute, you'll still be putting money,
and it'll still be payroll deducted. And if there is
a match with your firm, with your company, that will continue.
So one does not get in the way of the other. Right,
if you say I want to take my eighty grand out,
I want to invest it, they don't stop matching what

(02:18:37):
you're currently putting in, or if you lose the ability
to continue to contribute. So I don't want people to
think that that's going to get in their way. And again,
I want it to backing up the last week when
we had this conversation, I want and it's also not
an absolute that you should do that, right, It's really
a matter of what you're trying to do accomplid.

Speaker 3 (02:18:51):
That's a great question because let's say if you have
like you've been you know, you're you're like, I'm fifty
eight years old. Let's say you've been putting into a
four to one K and you've got like half a
million dollars in there. I would you pull some of
that money out and go with a guy like you? Like,
let's say I was just considering, is it more aggressive
a better percentage of return? I mean, why would somebody

(02:19:11):
do that?

Speaker 5 (02:19:12):
No?

Speaker 3 (02:19:12):
I wouldn't. You know.

Speaker 15 (02:19:13):
I'm not going to sit here and say if you
take your money out of the growth fund or the
S and P five hundred fund, you have it in
at work and give it to me, your return is
going to be better. It's possible, it could be. I
think it's really more a matter of planning. A lot
of times when that happens for me, I didn't say
to the client, will give me that money because I'll
do better, right, I'll get you a better return. That's
not what I'm saying. What I typically say is, if
you want to get the planning ball rolling, and you

(02:19:36):
have this, that's only money you have, right you have
Some people have five, six, seven, eight, nine hundred thousand
dollars in a four one kid and that's all they have.
And that's cool because that's still a lot of money,
but they don't have a lot of ability to buy
things other than the few things that are in that plan. Right,
So I might say to them, an example would be, well, look,
you know you've got seven mutual funds and their growth funds,

(02:19:56):
and they're these things and those funds, but maybe there's
some other things that I want to do for you
to begin your planning process and preserve that money. Because
you've gotten to the spot where you're comfortable and you
don't want to go backwards. Maybe what I'm doing for you,
is protecting eighty percent of it or seventy percent of
it so that we don't move if we don't have
a two thousand and eight the day you go to retire.

(02:20:16):
Got it, I'm protecting your downside, got it?

Speaker 3 (02:20:19):
So if you perceive market volatility, is that kind of
what you're saying there? Like if you if you go
to a situation maybe there's you know, a disruption or
maybe you see something coming housing market, you feel that
there's gonna be something going on that could affect that.
Is that Is that what you're basically saying, or no,
I don't know that it would be a vent driven typically.
I mean if we if like we'll use today as
an example, if some some people believe the market's topy,

(02:20:40):
it's too high, it's going to fall whatever, right, and
it may say for the next ten years and be wrong.
But the reality is if you feel again, if you've
gotten home, if you've if you've reached success, and you
say I needed seven hundred and twenty three thousand dollars
to retire, and you have seven hundred and twenty three
thousand dollars and you say, but in this four to
one k it's a little hard for me to protect it.
It's a little hard for me.

Speaker 15 (02:21:00):
Maybe you wanted to buy some individual stocks, you can't
do that in your four one K. Maybe you wanted
to buy some individual bonds, you can't do that in
your four one K. Maybe there was some you wanted
to buy gold, or who knows what you wanted to
do that you can't do in that menu. That plan
served its purpose to that moment. Right, you did great,
You did all the right things. You saved, you followed
your process, you followed your discipline. But now you want
more options. It's really what it's about.

Speaker 3 (02:21:22):
Got it? Okay?

Speaker 15 (02:21:22):
You want to do a little bit more thorough planning.
It should never be you should never money take money
out of your four o one k because somebody said to.

Speaker 3 (02:21:29):
You, I'll get you a better rich a. You got
that first because they can do that in the four
one all right, seven seven zero three one Talking to
Scott Brown edgwa our Family Wealth. We're doing its only money.
Scott is a fiduciary and financial planner here in orlandover
over thirty eight years. Edgewaterurfamilywealth dot com. If you want
to find him, and we have a couple events coming up.
We still have must have a couple of seats left.
We'll talk about those in a second. The non financial

(02:21:51):
spouse probably shouldn't be a thing, and we talked about
this before a little bit, that a lot of times
people's financial outcome will be tied to how their spouse
is when it comes to spending money. And that's why
you say, one of the most important people in your
life when it comes to your finance is is your spouse? Oh,
without a doubt, yea yeah. Not your planner, not your banker,
none of those things. Nope, you're number one thing.

Speaker 15 (02:22:12):
You person involved in your who will lead to or
not to your success will be your spouse because they
will be because you know, some of us are in
relationships where one's more of a spender, one's more of
a saber, and usually that we can figure those sort
of things out. But if you're both spend thrifts, if
you're not disciplining or checking each other, that could be problematic.

Speaker 3 (02:22:32):
So, yes, the spouse is a big deal.

Speaker 15 (02:22:33):
But really, where I'm going with this is, and I
don't really know what the impetus of this was, but
in twenty twenty twenty, rather twenty twenty one. During COVID,
I had more than half a dozen people, couples come
in in their sixties, and really what they told me
the reason was, And in all these cases it isn't
always this way, but in all of these cases, there

(02:22:55):
were six wives who said, if something happens to him,
I don't know what to do. So that non financial
spouse was kind of like, okay, COVID, maybe that somebody died,
I don't know what happened. They drove them to this decision,
but that husband. In these cases, sometimes it is the wife,
but in this case it was the husband's. They were

(02:23:15):
driving every financial decision. They were on fidelity, they were
had a Schwab account, they had an IRA, they had
a four oh one K.

Speaker 3 (02:23:22):
All the money was managed by him, and he was.

Speaker 15 (02:23:25):
To be fair, they were all doing an okay job
at it. They weren't bad at it. But their concern was, look,
my husband's sixty eight years old. I'm sixty six years old.
We know how mortality works in families, and usually it's
the husband that goes first, and if he goes tomorrow,
I'm going to be lost. So she talks him into
coming in and working with an advisor. He's still involved.

(02:23:47):
He's still the one I talked to the most, but
she knows that if something happens to him, she has
another person to call.

Speaker 3 (02:23:53):
It's more pliable there for sure, right yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:23:55):
Yeah, and don't I don't think that that should be
a thing. And even if you don't seek out an
ad and you're the non financial spouse, I think it's
a terrible idea to say he handles it. I've had
I have a couple of relatives where the wife says, oh,
Fred handles the money. I don't know anything about that, right, Yeah, Yeah,
that's well, first of.

Speaker 3 (02:24:15):
All, I've met Fred. Y. I really don't think this
is a good idea in any way, shape or form.

Speaker 15 (02:24:20):
Yeah, So I don't think you should be relying on
Fred in that example.

Speaker 3 (02:24:23):
So the point being that a lot.

Speaker 15 (02:24:25):
Of times people as they reach their late fifties, their
early sixties, and sometimes even into their seventies, they will
seek out an advisor because they know that the mortality
of the person.

Speaker 3 (02:24:36):
Who manages money is a thing. Yeah, that is not
my world. My wife is pretty much handles all the
financial stuff in our house, and I don't ask many
questions because she does a very good job. Yeah, and
I don't really. I mean, I know that's kind of
odd in families because usually it's the male that hander
handles the money. I guess in most now it's always
the alpha, it's always the as it's probably the case. Yeah, yeah,

(02:24:58):
but she's just a smart person. She's just much And
to be honest with you, I didn't want to take
the time to learn how to do it like that,
So I just make money. I know where it is,
I know what I know mostly what we have. But
other than that, I just you know, I've trusted her
and she's done a very good job.

Speaker 6 (02:25:11):
But when you want to bump in your allowance, how
do you approach her?

Speaker 3 (02:25:14):
I asked her very nicely. Jack hat in hand, Oh yeah, yeah,
hat in hand. I offer a lot of sexual favors.
Oh yeah, that is wind allowance talking to Scott Brown
for It's only money Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com. Well, that's an
interesting concept. So people out there, if you're in that
sixty sixty one sixty two three year old position, and

(02:25:36):
maybe the financial onus has been on one person, maybe
a phone call over to the firm for a quick
brush up on what should be happening there. Yeah yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:25:46):
And you know what's interesting is a lot of times
the the and again in this case it was all men,
but it can on occasion be females as well, is
that the men are a lot of times apprehensive. There's
ego involved, there's what do you think? I can't do this?
And it's really not that. And what I find in
all those instances where they do work with us that
they find it enjoyable because now they're still involved and

(02:26:09):
they're still kind of sore to call in the shots
to some degree. And I can think of a couple
in particular who have become our best some of our
best clients. That's awesome because they they now learn to
enjoy a different side of the process. Sure, yeah, yeah,
but they're not also tasked with which stock to pick,
which bond to prank? How does this all work? How
do the dividends get done? What's the administrative stuff? Does

(02:26:30):
is my IRA beneficiary set up correctly? Are the tax
implications correct? Are we taking from the right account? Should
we do the rock? Should we do the traditional how
about the four to one k? All of that stuff
that really isn't the fun part, the sexy part that
guys like to talk about, or the stock picking right,
Oh do you know I bought Nevedia and I went
up eight million percent? Course you lost on the other
seven stocks. But that's besides the point, friend.

Speaker 3 (02:26:52):
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, we do have some questions that have
come in. And remember, by the way, guys, anytime that
Scott is on, you're welcome to text the show at
seven seven zero three to one and ask a question.
We take a picture of the texting service, we give
it to Scott. Matter of fact, the very first question
we had today was based on a question from the
texting service. Somebody asked what ESOPs are things like that?

(02:27:13):
So we'll answer any of those questions. Just text us,
or of course you can go to Edgwordter Familywealth dot com.
They have a pulldown barber. You can email somebody on
the staff and leave a question there or a call.

Speaker 15 (02:27:22):
Yeah, you can call call the office. But again Edgewater
Familywealth dot com. The drop down is an easy way
to get a console. But the number is four oh
seven six four eight one eight eight one. You can
call in ask for anybody on my team, on the
Edward Family Wealth team and they'll answer. Should they should
all be able to answer your question pretty thoroughly. But
if you want a full blown console, you want it
to be five minutes, ten minutes, fifteen minutes, or an
hour an hour, you probably need to come and sit

(02:27:43):
down with us. And by the way, I'm pretty excited
about the event tomorrow and the event on Friday because
for the first time we're going to do live planning.
We're literally kicks ass. I can't wait for the audience interaction.
So if you haven't signed up for this, you said,
you know a lot of times telling my team the
other day, they're like, well, why do you think we
should do this? And I said, look, we every time
we do an event, it goes over well and people

(02:28:04):
enjoy it, and we talk about planning, we talk about
how important it is. But at the end of the
day they leave they still don't really know what that means,
or they think, well, you're just gonna get out of
yellow pad and draw some numbers and say some things
I don't understand, and we're going to move on. No,
planning is very thorough, it's very detailed, and it's also
very It's just something you can understand very easily, and
it's illustrative I think it's it's visually, it's something you

(02:28:27):
can get something from.

Speaker 3 (02:28:29):
So I think the planning is going to be the.

Speaker 15 (02:28:31):
Planning part during the live meeting where somebody can raise
their hand and say, well, what if that person wants
to go to Europe? Right, yeah, yeah, what if they
want to buy a car every five years? What if
they want to educate their grandchildren. We're going to be
able to do that in real time tomorrow and show
them how.

Speaker 3 (02:28:43):
Well that's awesome. That's winter part Ruth Chris. Starting at
eleven thirty. Not only will you get all that great information,
you'll also get a free lunch as well. You will
if you don't get it that one, you can go
Friday to the Lake Mary, Ruth Chris. That's at twelve
o'clock and any of these events. By the way, you
can reserve your seat at Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com just go
to the pull down bar. Does not cost a nickel
to come to this, and you get lunch and again

(02:29:05):
information that literally could change your financial life. Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:29:07):
I think again, as we've talked about a million times,
everybody's not going to be our client, but that shouldn't
keep you from coming to the event. Because hopefully you'll
take one or two things away that'll help you and
maybe some day down the road that'll make you a
person who wants to be our collient.

Speaker 6 (02:29:19):
Absolutely, you recommend spouses bringing that spouse who's not the financial.

Speaker 3 (02:29:25):
Persons, please do. I think that's critical.

Speaker 15 (02:29:28):
I think if you have a non financial spouse that
you're trying to get to engage, this is a wonderful
way to do it.

Speaker 3 (02:29:32):
By the way, we just got a text in and said,
I've been with this firm for a year and his
son is it Bracker Ratcher, Ratcher take great care of us.
I couldn't be more happy. Ten percent up right now,
right on track. So that's great. So that means we
connected you. Matter of fact, they send another text and said,
thanks for connecting us. So I mean you've made a
connection to one of our listeners and you've already changed
their outlook and it's right here. The evidence is right
in front of us. Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:29:53):
Now, that's always great to hear, and return numbers are
great to hear, and Mark has been good to us,
So we're geniuses right now. But but the reality is
the relationship's the important part. And if we can help
you get from you know, you're thirty five years old
to sixty and you accomplish what you want to accomplish.

Speaker 3 (02:30:08):
That's really what it's about that Scott brownd Edgewater Familywealth.
That's Edgewaterfamilywealth dot com. Not only can you make a
reservation for the event either tomorrow or Friday, you can
also send him an email and learn about all the
cool stuff. You can actually even download the books. We'll
tell you about that one second. That what do you
get for news? A new Florida law on tracking devices.

Speaker 5 (02:30:23):
Governor Desanta speaks about the Everglades and when a rare
green comet will be visible. We'll talk about that next
during You heard it here first, you.

Speaker 3 (02:30:30):
Got it seven seven zero three one. That's how you
text us. Don't forget deposit is your six o'clock keyword.
Got about fifteen minutes or so to get over to
real Radio dot FM and send that away for your
chance at one thousand bucks back In a second, Dev's
news and more than Jim Colbert show.

Speaker 6 (02:30:46):
Our friends at TK Law want to remind us to
look ahead, so we will look ahead Tomorrow Wednesday edition
of The Monsters in the Morning. Look for Friendly Ray
Trendly your Attorney at Law to be on the monsters. Also,
they have a lot of fun. They are getting ready
for this monster brewbus. Things are getting exciting on the show.
Tune in tomorrow at six I'm Real Radio one to

(02:31:08):
four point one, and don't forget to look ahead with
the team at TK Law when it comes to planning
your family's future. Visit one firm forlife dot com.

Speaker 8 (02:31:22):
Who what's going on?

Speaker 3 (02:31:23):
Cobra Cruecourage.

Speaker 12 (02:31:25):
You'all talking about the Seltzer drinks there? You gotta try
Oracle Organics. I think you can get them to like
face at thees vape shop there in Orlando. Oracle Organics,
good flavors, couple of different options there.

Speaker 3 (02:31:40):
Check them out, man, those are going to be killer
for sure. Is that CBD or THC though? I think
that gets the buzzer ready. Jimmy is on a roll today.
First with his mischwaphon he can't not pronounce mischwalkhon the
state in Mexico. Secondly, his analogy to everyone's sitting around
a party smoking weed and somebody breaks out a heroin,
you know, because people often break out heroin, Oh my god, Dade.

(02:32:03):
And thirdly, just now he says terrapinies, terpenes, guys turfing. Okay,
hit your weed vernacular up to snow. So I'm the
ass because I don't know drug vernacular.

Speaker 19 (02:32:12):
Hey, Jimmy terra pins, Oh my god, terrapines are the things.

Speaker 3 (02:32:17):
In the weed. Thank you.

Speaker 19 (02:32:18):
Terrapines are just a really, really really slow turtle.

Speaker 3 (02:32:23):
Well said, guys. Appreciate it for seven nine one six
four one. Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show, Real
Radio one oh four point one. Our buddy Scott Brown
in Its Only Money was great. By the way, if
you ever have a question, you can obviously go to
Edwardfamilywealth dot com or you can text us here at
seven seven zero three one, we took a picture of
the screen. Send it to Scott. He picks a couple
of those to feature on the segment and yours could
be next. So do that as well. Before we get

(02:32:44):
out of here today seven seven zero three one, do
not forget tomorrow Winter Park Ruth Chris eleven thirty. The
guys from Edward or Family Wealth will be there providing
a lunch and some incredible information. Like you said before,
they're gonna go through a live planning so you can
actually see what happens during this and get a better
grip on what these guys can provide for you. If
you missed that one, don't worry. Friday on the twenty

(02:33:05):
fourth in Lake Mary Rus, Chris. They got you covered
for a twelve o'clock and don't bring it again. That's
lunch and information that could change your life. Welcome back
on Jim, there's deb Jack is here alone with Scott.
Let's do you heard it here first? Just heard it
here first? Only month. It's time I got it right.
It's here first on the Joel Overt Show. All right,

(02:33:25):
I know, dude, it's the same for me.

Speaker 5 (02:33:27):
A new Florida law, it's harsher penalties on people who
use tracking devices.

Speaker 1 (02:33:32):
Holy hell.

Speaker 5 (02:33:33):
Senate Bill eleven sixty eight makes it a second degree
offense to use a tracking device to commit a violent
crime like murder, assault, or rape. Another law that went
into effect in twenty twenty four, Senate Bill seven fifty
eight makes it a third degree offense to use tracking
devices without someone's consent. Miami man was recently charged with
installing a tracking device without consent under the new law.

Speaker 3 (02:33:56):
We've talked about that so many times.

Speaker 5 (02:33:57):
Yeah, exactly, all right, Governor Desanta says florida effort to
remove invase of Burmese pythons from the Everglades as breaking records.
During an event today in Stuart, the governor highlighted the
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Patrick program, which removed more
than one thousand pythons between May and July.

Speaker 9 (02:34:14):
I'm requesting, let's keep this momentum going. We want to
work with the Florida legislature to make sure that this
funding stays in place so that we continue to do
what needs to be done.

Speaker 5 (02:34:26):
He credited a two million dollars state investment and a
new partnership with a Miami based in versa for the
program's success. All right, people across the US are going
to get to see a rare green comet streaking across
the sky tonight. NASA says Comet Lemon will make its
closest approach to Earth today, coming within about fifty five

(02:34:47):
million miles from Earth. Viewers will be able to see
the green comet shortly after sunset toward the western sky,
and it could be bright enough to be seen with
the naked eye. Binoculars or a small telescope are recommended.
How Along, with viewing from dark areas outside the city
for the best view.

Speaker 6 (02:35:04):
There you comment a green comment, that's comment, Lemon. I
know well they wanted to go with the line, but
the cartel wouldn't be a naming, right, sergeant.

Speaker 1 (02:35:14):
And you heard it here first on the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (02:35:16):
You're well here we have to think today. Scott Brown
from Edgewater guys on Pink Socks.

Speaker 5 (02:35:23):
In case you missed any of his timely financial advice.
His podcast has already been posted at the Jim Culbert
Show and then last but never leased, Sam Bow and
Candice Rich for running our YouTube check.

Speaker 3 (02:35:34):
Guys, appreciate that Jack question oh the day.

Speaker 6 (02:35:37):
Yeah, it was posted on Instagram as well as in
our YouTube chat. What political party do you think cares
about you the most?

Speaker 3 (02:35:47):
Now?

Speaker 6 (02:35:47):
The choices were Republican, Democrat, Independent or none.

Speaker 3 (02:35:51):
Where do you think it came down?

Speaker 11 (02:35:52):
Jim?

Speaker 3 (02:35:52):
I think none has fifty percent of the vote.

Speaker 6 (02:35:55):
None has fifty three percent of the vote, second place,
Independence Democrats with twenty four Independent in third place with
thirteen percent, and Republicans holding up the rear at nine percent.

Speaker 3 (02:36:09):
Wow, how about that? I always voting on Yeah, I
always voting on right and.

Speaker 6 (02:36:13):
It's pretty similar on youto on Instagram, except Independence and
lasts and.

Speaker 3 (02:36:18):
Republicans in third. Oh there you all right, Scott, Thanks always,
good toeing you buddy, Good pleasure, Edgwater Familywealth dot Com.
Go and reserve your seat for one of the events
coming up either tomorrow or on Friday. I know he
would love to see you there. All right, let's get
out here, guys. What do you say? Big big day
coming up tomorrow, Animal Housecot Maxwell.

Speaker 1 (02:36:35):
Darryl Paine from pop Fection Dog Training.

Speaker 3 (02:36:37):
Very nice. All right on, we have a deb Jack
and Scott. I'm Jim. We follow the new Junkie. They
follow the monsters of the morning, and for us it's
Tom dam with the corporate time and our friends from
Real Laughs. We'll see you tomorrow at three for more
of the Jim Colbert Show. Until then, have yourself a
fantastic Tuesday evening. See you tomorrow, Hid Ginger, Brandy.

Speaker 2 (02:36:56):
Have you missed any part of today's show? Check out
The Jim Comburg Show Hondo and for highlighted feature segments
listening to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are
available for free on the iHeartRadio app.
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Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

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