All Episodes

May 6, 2026 162 mins
Wednesday – Should kids in liquor stores? Do people still read magazines? Should you ask for extra meat at Chipotle? Should artists share their politics on stage? Kenny Tallier from the Pet Alliance is in for Animal House with trainer Joelle and REMI the dog. Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell on the lack of affordable housing in central Florida. Rauce Padgett updates us on Good Sauce. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Listen
Watch
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Someone's going to get offended. It's just the way the
world works, so hopefully save everyone a little time and
or energy.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Here's this.

Speaker 3 (00:06):
The opinions that you hear.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
Are those of the host and callers and not those
of iHeart Media, It's managements or advertisers. You are now
listening to the Jim Colbert Show on Real Radio one
oh four point.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
One's right, guys, you were going to a Wednesday edition to
the Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much for tuning in.
We appreciate that, as we do every single day, and
we do have a stack up program for you. This afternoon.
We will get caught up on what's happen in the world.
That will do that Round three twenty with JCS News
four clock Hour's Animal House, Kenny Tower drops five I
the ped Alliance of Great Orlando. Scott Maxwell will join
us as well. Fuck Like Howard's Trivia and we ended

(00:46):
up with Ross Thoughts My Ross padget tell us what's
happening with good Sauce and you heard it here first,
your calls, textan talkbacks all day long. Welcome to the show.
I'm Jim. To my left, my lovely very dangerous cos
was deb Roberts. Hello this tre broducer Jack Breshaw, Good afternoon,
or seven nine one text us seven seven zero three one.
Find is easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at d Jim
Colbert Show on x just at Jim Colbert Show All day,

(01:09):
every day, Jimcolberlive dot com. This is where you can
check us out on YouTube. If you want to send
a talk back, that's easy as well. Just grab the
iHeartRadio app, go straight to Real Radio and use that
mike to send your comment over to Jack and we
will get you on the air. Superstar. Cash is your
three o'clock Any words, C A S H. Go to
Real Radio dot fm and send that away for your
chance in one thousand bucks. Cash is the word. Guys,

(01:31):
go get that money. Win. We need we need somebody
to win. We need some money to win to be nice.
How are you guys doing today? Ducky, ducky, Hey, yeah, okay,
all right, Gassie, Gassinge, Gassie, I as well and Gassie
Jackson Oh nice? No oh yeah, I sit in the

(01:54):
room by myself. Yay. You do not hard talk goes
last night Extra Helopinos. How you doing? I'm Jim?

Speaker 5 (01:59):
Why didn't you tell tell me that before I bought
you lunch.

Speaker 4 (02:01):
I've been holding it into I had a symphony coming
your way soon, so just be careful right there. I
think I'm having an allergy a thing too. It's kind
of wild. You are kind of wild how it's happening
out there. I just come off that crazy thing that
I had for like three or four days, and then
this morning you're wheezing like.

Speaker 6 (02:18):
Your allergies called caused flatulence. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's exactly.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
What it is. Yet, yeah, yeah, help that at all
depends on where you put it. I have a non judge, right,
I have a non judgy question to ask you guys.
Oh are you sure?

Speaker 7 (02:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Yeah, yeah yeah. And this is gonna seem judging, but
I promise you it's not. I'm honestly asking the question
because I've not done this before, and I don't know
what the protocol is. I do, I do kind of
uh and I understand, but I'm trying to look for
some clarification here. All right, let's help. Last night it
was uh, you know, yesterday was uh syncro to my

(02:58):
own Yeah yeah, so see we'd plan none to go out,
but I was going to have a margarita anyway, But
I was short. I actually talked about this on the air.
Yeah you did. I was short. The sweet part of
the margarita, which is usually tequila, lime and a sweetener
triple sec I think is the that's for your well
or your basic margarita. Triple seck would Yeah, that's the

(03:19):
bar margarita, the bar mark, right. But if you're upgrading that,
you can go to Quantro or Gramaier, which are orange
flavored liqueurs, and they are Have you bought a bottle
of that so lately?

Speaker 6 (03:29):
It was expensive back when I was buying that, that
was thirty years ago.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
Let me ask you a question, how much do you
think the smallest bottle of Gradmaier is. I can't imagine
it's more than maybe sixteen ounces. It's like this ever
like that.

Speaker 6 (03:42):
Seven fift No, dude, giants like if I handle right now?

Speaker 4 (03:47):
A handle is a leader in a half seven? Yeah? Okay, no,
it's it was the smallest one they had. It wasn't
like the carry one that like you get for like
when you're traveling or whatever, like the little airplane bottles.

Speaker 6 (03:58):
It was going to say, twenty nine dollars. It was
exactly twenty nine dollars. Yeah, whoa, whoa, It couldn't have
been more than maybe it's no more than maybe eight shots,
eight to ten shots lay.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
The large one was like seventy and I'm like, what
the hell happened to Orange Liquire? And Quandra was more
Quandra was actually more so anyway, got a little bottle
of Grandmagnier and as I was actually going into the store,
I pulled up by part or excuse me, as I
was leaving the store correction, I looked up and I
noticed the guy walking into the store with his five

(04:29):
year old. Okay and okay, So I thought to myself, well,
that's odd. I would I would not take my kids
into the liquor store, you know. I would wait until
I had an opportunity to go by myself, that i'd
go by myself. I do understand, though, if you have
to stop and make a stop and you don't have
anybody to watch your kid, you can't leave your five
year old in the car, you know, I don't know,

(04:50):
I mean, can.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
You no, not even for a few minutes.

Speaker 4 (04:54):
It's against the law, right yeah, So I mean I
don't believe you can do that. So there they go.
Guys walking in, guy's daughter with him, and they walking
to the liquor store, and I just pulled away. I
didn't wait to see what they were getting or anything.
I wasn't like good, you know, you didn't stop to
give them a look. No, no, no, I didn't do any
of that. I just I just I just thought it
was odd because I've never taken my kid into a
liquor store. Big deal. It's a bunch of bottles, That's

(05:16):
what I want to know. I'm not you know what's interesting.

Speaker 3 (05:20):
You're being judged.

Speaker 4 (05:21):
I'm not judging at all.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
Have you done it?

Speaker 4 (05:24):
Brought my kid into the liquor store?

Speaker 8 (05:27):
No?

Speaker 4 (05:27):
Why not?

Speaker 6 (05:28):
Uh, it's just bottles because I haven't been in a
liquor store when I had small kids.

Speaker 5 (05:33):
Right, But I mean, what's so strange about this is
that we're we're like, oh my god, this guy brought
his five year old. Meanwhile, back when we were five,
our parents would hand us a note that said, please
sell Jimmy a pack of Virginia slims.

Speaker 4 (05:47):
Correct, you have no idea how often that happens.

Speaker 5 (05:50):
You know what I'm saying, How the generations have changed.
We used to be allowed to walk to the store
and buy and not we'd get their cigarettes and then
we'd go get a pack of candy cigarettes right right,
right right, And how the world has changed that now
we're like, oh my god.

Speaker 6 (06:03):
So what about bringing the five year old into a
medical marijuana dispenser?

Speaker 4 (06:08):
See, that's to me, I mean, is that even illegal?

Speaker 9 (06:12):
No?

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Here's the thing. The reason I.

Speaker 5 (06:13):
Don't know why that would be worse.

Speaker 4 (06:15):
The reason I didn't think anything of it at first
when I saw this is, well, that's no big deal
carrying your kid into a liquor store, because people bring
their kids to breweries all the time, right all the time.
Matter of fact, I know that breweries in some areas
like they're a couple over in Tampa where it is
like a very family feel. Like on Saturday afternoon, we
pulled up that thing in the height of the craft

(06:35):
brew movement, and there were more young families there with
their kids playing like you know, what's it corn hole
and all the games and kids are running around and
parents are having a beer, and nobody was getting sloppy
or doing shots or anything. But it did not look
uncommon or odd. But for some reason, yesterday when I
saw this dude rolling into ABC with his daughter, I

(06:57):
was like, what, that's unique. I haven't seen that one before,
but I think I was like, I've seen kids and
breweries where their kids are like their parents are drinking,
and I don't think anything about it.

Speaker 6 (07:05):
You bring your kids in the supermarket, they sell beer there,
they sell beer there, right, no different, I guess, Yeah,
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (07:13):
Interesting conundrum. Yeah, I don't think it is. I don't
think either.

Speaker 5 (07:18):
I think the more you make something seem like a
big deal, the more you're gonna peak their interest into
what it is.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
Yeah, I don't look, honey, don't look at the bottle.
It's like, what are you ashamed of?

Speaker 6 (07:27):
Are you ashamed of the fact that you're buying a
bottle of alcohol?

Speaker 4 (07:30):
No, I don't think it's a shame.

Speaker 5 (07:32):
You're worrying about introducing them to something that maybe you
don't want them to be introduced to it.

Speaker 4 (07:37):
First, or you introduce them.

Speaker 6 (07:38):
Five the idea that adults have different rights and opportunities
and kids. There are adult works. There's not bad words.
There's adult words, you know, the kind I use when
I'm talking to your mother. Yeah, yeah, let me ask you.
This wouldn't matter what time of day it is because
this was in the evening.

Speaker 4 (07:54):
Obviously, you could see a guy coming home picking up
a six pack or something like that on the way home,
maybe a bottle of Voker or something because he likes
to have rink after work. Or if he's doing that
at ten in the morning on a Tuesday, is that different? Yeah,
you know what.

Speaker 6 (08:05):
I've purchased liquor ten in the morning on a Tuesday
because it was part of someone's birthday gift that afternoon.
It doesn't mean he's a raging alcoholic. Did not say
this because he has his five year old in there. No,
but you're making judgments.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
I'm not judging. I'm just asking questions. I like to
know the protocols here because I've not run in these
situations before. Now, look, if you like, my kids have
been at house parties. My kids have been in a
house party.

Speaker 5 (08:30):
Your kids had house parties at your house. You and
your wife were out of town.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
Oh dad, Oh, that cost him a year of their
life too. By the way, understand the year their life,
or the fear of their life has a fear of
Jesus right in their face. That was the easy one.
Oh my god, my wife, Oh it was gnarly so bad.
Did you ever throw a rager at your house when
your parents are gone?

Speaker 9 (08:54):
Jack?

Speaker 6 (08:55):
No, I had a very small gift together. Next night,
my sister had the rager. My parents came home during
that and coming and coming down the block. My mom
said she she told my set that I think I'm
gonna have to have a talk with my son.

Speaker 4 (09:14):
Haha. I was working that night flipping piece. Yeah. When
my kids got busted doing that rage at my house,
next door neighbors one who called us. We were in
New Orleans and she called and she said, hey, did
you guys get the did you guys give the kids
permission of people over? And we're like, uh, no, one,
what's going on? She goes, well, the entire road and
the entire cul de sac is filled with cars. I said,

(09:35):
what she goes, there's got to be one hundred people
at your house right now, raising complete hell.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
My favorite was your response when you called your children
and what you had them do. It had to have
looked like animal or National Lampoon's vaca. I mean it
had to look like that.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
She told us.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
So we called that were actually we my wife called
the house and said, hey, what's going on. We heard,
you know, we heard through the grape vine. You guys
are having a little get together. No, no, no, okay,
we'll do me a favor. Put me on FaceTime and
goes and go, uh and go show me the front
yard and walk around the house for me. Then she
hung up, and then we heard from the neighbor that
instantly my son and daughter came out of the room yelling,
get the blank out of here, clear out, clear out,

(10:11):
clear out. Go go go go look a military action.

Speaker 10 (10:14):
Go go, go go.

Speaker 4 (10:16):
So we had a story yesterday.

Speaker 6 (10:19):
Yesterday there was a story that ties into this today.
Yesterday where the woman lost a driveway, a car pulls up,
and we had stories of other crimes like that being
thwarted because of neighbors who were friendly, Like you had
a neighbor who knew something was a little off and

(10:40):
had your phone number. I wonder how many people live
a neighborhood where the neighbor can get in touch with you,
or would get in touch with you if something seemed
a little off.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
That's actually a great question. Do you have that?

Speaker 6 (10:54):
I do you do? I? Actually do I have two
neighbors that would at me.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
Yeah, that's funny. I as you said that, I started
thinking about it. I think in every single place I've
lived in Orlando, except for the very first house I built,
I had that relationship like I had next four neighbors
in my first my first or my second house, third house,
fourth house, and this this one here, we do not.
We do not have neighbors that we know in the
house we're in now. Oh wow, but that's it. Like

(11:21):
I would not be able to say, hey, look, you know,
keep a peak. You know, I would not do that
because I wouldn't want to tell them I was leaving right. Yeah, yeah,
you don't trust them. Yeah, I don't trust them. I
don't know them. I don't trust them.

Speaker 5 (11:31):
Well, I mean, I don't know if you're if you
guys ever worried about this when you were growing up.
But we were assured that if our neighbors saw my
brother and I up to anything, we were gonna hear
that phone, that phone ring as soon as they saw
our parents pull up into the driveway.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
Oh yeah, it was a godsend, because here's the thing, like.

Speaker 5 (11:46):
I'm not a god sound they're diming you out and
getting you in trouble.

Speaker 4 (11:49):
Nobody would have known parent because as a kid, it's
not that thing could have gotten out of control. There
was some.

Speaker 5 (11:57):
Stuff in the house that yeah, that's different.

Speaker 4 (11:59):
Yeah, you know we never did that. I'm not gonna
say what I said. I said to my son, I said,
you know what could have happened here? You know, you
know what could you've told this straight before? Yeah? You
said it. You don't even have any idea. Bad news
for everybody involved. That was a sobering day for the kids.

Speaker 6 (12:15):
Text from someone you know that says they do it
all the time. They actually know his son at the
ABC and say hi to him and everything. And one
lady there would be disappointed if I came in alone.
I'm not going to out you and tell you it's celine.

Speaker 4 (12:34):
Alright, four A seven. I did not do that, Christopher.
You can just all those darts go elsewhere.

Speaker 6 (12:40):
His son Jackson. That's how we learned his ABC. All
right for A seven. See it's for Quantracarty A good
one there, d is for the Kuiper.

Speaker 4 (12:56):
They make all the all right, four A seven night
went six four one text seven seven zero three one.
Dep got some news for us.

Speaker 5 (13:02):
Yeah, we're gonna talk about Ted Turner has died closer
to home, lawmakers and animal rights groups calling for charges
in those sloths deaths, and where you can catch a
live concert series. Here's a hint. It comes with comfy
chairs and popcorn.

Speaker 4 (13:17):
Oh man, I love that.

Speaker 5 (13:18):
Yeah, no way, really, we'll talk about those snacks during
JCS news if I can actually speak.

Speaker 4 (13:23):
Seven to seven zero three one. Don't forget your three
o'clock cash. Our word is cash. C A s h.
Go to Real Radio Dot of him and send that
away for your chance at one thousand dollars back with
Dev's news and more than Jim Colberg show right in
front of shoot Jet between his eyes.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Real Radio was on Facebook at Real Radio one oh
four one, sponsored by the law officers of ener jarn
Levine Accident Attorneys.

Speaker 11 (13:45):
Hey it o'honnah rough Today, wife and I are feeling
tore up like an old parking ticket. Those motoritas are
going down. Good, Jimmy. You talk about parallels, because I
went into ABC yesterday just for Grammayer. Somebody was in
there with a five year old and I found the
cost staggering. Three point seventy five. The one you were

(14:06):
talking about was twenty six bucks. But I just needed
a little bit to compliment those markies.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
Aloha Aloha brun A.

Speaker 12 (14:17):
Hey, Jimmy, how do you feel about taking your kids
to the grocery store because my public's has a sipping stole.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
Baby.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
I don't look, I don't feel anything about it. I
just told you I saw it and it looked odd
in me, and I just asked the question. Yeah, nobody's judging. Yeah,
you cannot help judging. Nobody's judging you. You automatically, and
your default position is to judge. I didn't even call
the cops, but I have my phone in my hand. Yeah, right,
four oh seven's twenty nine one dial Tex seven seven

(14:46):
zero three one cash by the way, c ash, that
is your three click hey word slider over two real radio.
Dout of him and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars. Welcome back. I'm Jim Jacks Ryver there,
and deb has your news.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
It's taugh for JCS news. Wow, this guy got to
put his name on everything.

Speaker 4 (15:05):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim
Colberg Show.

Speaker 5 (15:09):
And JCS news is brought to you by that mortgage guy.
Don all Right, American entrepreneur and media mogul Ted Turner
has died at the age of eighty seven. A news
release from Turner Enterprises says the founder of CNN and
TBS passed away today. In the world of sports and entertainment,
Turner owned the Atlanta Braves, Atlanta Hawks, and pro wrestling

(15:31):
company WCW. He also gave one billion dollars to create
the United Nations Foundation. He dealt with the health issues
in recent years, including a progressive brain disorder and pneumonia.
Turner had five children and was once married to actress
Jane Fonda. For some reason, I was I kept wondering,
are they still married? No, that they had gotten divorced,
Like what fifteen twenty years ago?

Speaker 4 (15:53):
Did you remember? Did you guys realize he was alive still?
I did not know that.

Speaker 6 (15:58):
I did not, and not as an intul. I think
he just when he dropped out of the public scene. Yeah,
you shouldn't hear about him anymore.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
He stayed dropped out of it.

Speaker 6 (16:07):
So it wasn't a thing where you would be reminded
that Ted Turner was alive.

Speaker 4 (16:12):
And he was one of the most visible billionaires back
in the day. He was one of the one dudes
you remember of being super super rich that was sort
of out there and you knew it, you did.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
His death was announced today by Turner Enterprises. Closer to Home,
Florida lawmakers and conservationists are calling for accountability and reform
after dozens of sloths died while in the care of
the Orlando Sloth World attraction. State Representative Anna Escamani joined
doctor Rebecca Cliff, director of the Sloth Conservation Foundation, demanding

(16:40):
criminal animal abuse charges.

Speaker 13 (16:44):
The veternarian that was hired to watch these sloths did
not have any background in exotic wildlife.

Speaker 4 (16:49):
And she admitted herself, I'm a cat dog that and
the result was suffering and death.

Speaker 14 (16:54):
It happened again and again, and it was allowed to happen.

Speaker 5 (16:57):
Sloth World was formally planned for ey Drive, I've offerating
an upclose experience with the mammals. To date, fifty five
sloths imported from Central American tropical forests have died from
a combination of poor conditions, cold exposure, gastrointestinal issues, and
inadequate care. But still with that, the FWC denies this
is a case of animal abuse.

Speaker 4 (17:19):
Wow, well what is then? Does it just happened to happen?
To it? It has to happen to an animal that
we consider cuddly or not cuddly, but domestic.

Speaker 5 (17:27):
I would imagine like a cat, a dog, or something
that can be sold in a pet store. The only
thing I can think is that it's the classification of
the animal itself that has allowed this guy to walk
away from this without wearing silver bracelets. All right, Six
people are safe after a boat trip turned dangerous in
Ostiola County. This video is making the rounds everywhere on
the national news. The Sheriff's Office released video yesterday of

(17:51):
Saturday's rescue on East Lake Toho. Deputies got a call
that the boat was taking on water in dangerous conditions,
and the aviation unit was dispatched. The boat was found
and a swift water rescue took place. The OCSO says
the incident highlights the importance of monitoring weather conditions and
the value of rapid response and coordination. You can see

(18:11):
the rescue on the Facebook page of the Sheriff's Office
and Saint Cloud Police. I know, for me, that's one
of the scariest things about getting on a boat is
that you can get on the boat in clear weather
and it looks absolutely fabulous. And you're gonna have a
great day, and within twenty minutes it can change.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
That's how Gilligan and Frans ended up on that island.
And you think a great documentary, you think because you're
in a lake, you're safe because it's inland, right, you
don't have to worry about ocean currents, you have to
wear waves or anything like that. That's not the truth.
Because I've been out on Lake George before, which is
a very shallow lake. I think at its deepest maybe
eight nine twelve feet something like that, and the wind
can cause massive white caps and a lot of these

(18:46):
lakes around here aren't super deep, but they have a
lot of surface area and that can happen pretty quickly,
and it's horrifying. By the way, one of my biggest
fears is being on a boat that's sinking. Terrible. When
I was a kid and I found out that.

Speaker 6 (18:58):
Great Lakes shunk in the Great l Edmundzel, I was shocked.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
Yeah, yeah, I'm like, I'm a lake. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (19:04):
In a late they think there's like there could be thousands,
like up to ten thousand shipwrecks that are in the
Great Lakes that they haven't discovered, especially Lake superior crazy,
that's bad and razing.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
All right.

Speaker 5 (19:15):
I hate to bring this story, but there's a sad
update on a dog allegedly abused by a Hillsboro County woman.
Officials say the small Maltese mix died during surgery after
suffering severe injuries in the case, Hillsboro County Sheriff Chad
Cronister says thirty three year old Amania Davis is behind
bars on a seventy five thousand dollars bond wow and

(19:37):
is spacing six counts of animal cruelty.

Speaker 15 (19:40):
I truly feel that anyone who would harm and inflict
the type of pain she did to this little puppy
has a special place in hell one day when that
day comes for her.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
Cronister says. Davis has a violent history, including arrest for battery.
HCSO says the investigation still active, and the worst part
is after she abused the little dog, the little dog
kept running back to her.

Speaker 4 (20:05):
Damn all right.

Speaker 5 (20:07):
The open carry experiment seems to be over at publics.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
Florida.

Speaker 5 (20:12):
Shoppers report new signs at store entrances asking customers to
leave their firearms at home. The grocery Giant appears to
be reversing its controversial twenty twenty five policy. New guidance
now states that only law enforcement officers are permitted to
openly carry firearms inside their stores. No formal corporate statement yet,

(20:33):
but customer service reps have confirmed the change.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
Well, you said that Texas Herdthouse is the same thing.
I was surprised of all the restaurants.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
It's the first time that I've encountered any business where
there was a sign right there on the front door.
There was no misconstruing the message no open carry.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
Yeah, but so you get to publics and it says
leave it at home, but you're already there. Why can't
they just have like an umbrella rack inside the door?

Speaker 4 (20:57):
Agree, Jack, are just a random boxeryrore eighty? Yeah? Or
leave your assault rifle? You know?

Speaker 6 (21:03):
Yeah, and then and hopefully you remember it grab it
on the way out. Oh yeah, and let's put a
sticker with your name on it.

Speaker 5 (21:09):
And if not, you know, someone else is going to
get a nice, nice piece from the Lost and Found.

Speaker 4 (21:14):
I like it.

Speaker 5 (21:15):
Flight attendants that work for Spirit Airlines before the carrier
suddenly closed over the weekend are still reeling from the shutdown.
One now former employee, Marianna Kassar has launched to go
fundme to collect donations for her and her colleagues to
help with expenses until they can land new jobs.

Speaker 16 (21:31):
It will vote for everyone.

Speaker 17 (21:33):
It'll be split evenly, even if it's pennies or sens.

Speaker 5 (21:36):
Spirit Airlines has officially started its bankruptcy process after attending
court and White Planes New York on Tuesday. It could
take months to dismantle the airline, despite it already having
ceased operations after more than three decades in service. Last
I heard, the guy who had started the TikTok Instagram
social media campaign to buy Spirit Airlines had raised somewhere

(21:57):
over eighty million dollars.

Speaker 4 (21:59):
Eight million dollars in his first twenty or forty eight hours,
which is awesome. Hey, he took the money and left
the country. Oh my god, could you imagine? Could you?
And he bought a private jet to do it.

Speaker 5 (22:08):
Oh no, all right, Well he's not going to be
able to do much with it because gas prices are
up about fifty percent since the war in Iran began.

Speaker 4 (22:17):
Would you let me to check in.

Speaker 5 (22:18):
The current average in Florida. It can't be more than this, Jimmy,
because the current average in Florida four dollars and forty
six cents for a regular unleaded compared to about two
ninety in late February. According to Triple A Right, you
paid for forty six.

Speaker 4 (22:32):
Seven to eleven broke it off of my ass today.
Four dollars fifty nine cents cost me eighty six dollars
to fill up my truck today, eighty six bucks.

Speaker 6 (22:41):
Oh, I hatched the gas station left side. It was
four ninety nine a gallon. I paid four dollars and
ten cents. But that's because I have to be Jesus.

Speaker 4 (22:48):
Just go yeah. Hey.

Speaker 6 (22:50):
But just Sunday it was four dollars and the line
was too long. I'm like, I'll come back then. I
went back last night and I paid four ten. I'm like,
oh yeah, I know it costs me ninety six e
And I was telling Jimmy earlier I have to. Normally
it's between thirty and thirty five to fill up my car. Now,
what I have been doing is when I get to
half a tank, I'll fill it up because then I
know I can do it on thirty dollars. Oh yeah,

(23:12):
I'm almost done empty. I'm like a quarter of a tank.
So I'm like, here we go, let's see how much
this is gonna cost.

Speaker 4 (23:18):
Jack, Are you a I put a finite type of
like number of gas or you just fill up? I
fill up? Yeah? Oh always yeah yeah. And you the
same way, deb, You just fill up every time, you
like put thirty or thirty five, because that's the number
you've given yourself.

Speaker 5 (23:29):
Well, once I figured out what that base number is,
then I try to keep it at that base number.

Speaker 6 (23:34):
I will tell you though, And I don't know, I
know there's some theories out there about maybe them putting
more ethanol in the gas and watering it down, because yeah,
my gas mileage has I mean I track it right, right,
I used to get like forty four Now I'm at
forty three point two miles to the gass.

Speaker 5 (23:52):
The problem with the increase in the ethanol, right, it
will reduce the amount of money that you spend on
the gas, but you need to buy more gas because
it's burning up faster. And that added ethanol is not
good for is it? Two stroke engines?

Speaker 4 (24:05):
Like yeah, yeah, all of it. It's not good for
engines any good for enginese Yeah, because of the gas
also provides a little bit of Lubri camp. Look, I
want to get to the bottom of who costs check
point zero eight since per gallon.

Speaker 5 (24:16):
Well issues along the Straight of Horror moves have triggered
a supply disruption, leading oil tankers stranded and driving prices up.
Now at last words, and breaking news is that they're closed,
possibly to a memorandum between the US and Iran to
end the war. However, the Trump administration warned those talks
could fall apart at any time. But because of the
news of this possible memorandum, oil prices as we speak

(24:40):
are plummeting.

Speaker 4 (24:41):
And the market's going through the roof.

Speaker 6 (24:42):
And that eight tenths of the gallon per gallon that
I have less now will cause me to have to
get gas again in September instead of October.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
This guy, wait, yeah, I still don't care. Yeah, that
care all right.

Speaker 5 (24:57):
Orange County is lowering the heat threshold for cooling centers.
Centers will now open when feel like temperatures hit one
hundred and three degrees.

Speaker 4 (25:06):
Oh that's not that's good. That is good.

Speaker 5 (25:08):
Yeah, that's five degrees cooler than last year. Can you
imagine you had to wait for it to feel like
one hundred and eight before you could find relief. County
officials say their goal is to offer relief sooner to
help protect residents.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
Hey boss, I'd really like not to evaporate, could I
has the governor said we're not allowed to promote feel
like temperatures? Oh wait for that, Wait for that.

Speaker 5 (25:30):
All right, We're less than a month away from the
start of hurricane season and state officials think it's time
to be prepared. Florida CFO and State Fire Marshall Blaze
and Golia. You can't have a better name when you're
the State Fire Marshall Blaze. I bet he's fun at parties.
Shared hurricane prep tips yesterday and he wasn't just talking
about shutters, batteries and bottled water.

Speaker 18 (25:50):
You are going to see fraudsters come out in droves.
And I will tell you that there is tens, if
not hundreds of millions of dollars across the state during
hurricane season and where people wind up losing deposits or
they wind up getting scanned.

Speaker 5 (26:04):
He says, take videos of your property before the storm
to get full payouts from insurance companies after the storm.
Protect your important documents. Think a ziplock bag. Demand to
see a license from a contractor. That is not a
time to be nice and neighborly. Right, let me see
your license, even take a photo, he says, of the
people examining your claim or doing repair work. You can

(26:24):
get more tips at myfloridacfo dot com.

Speaker 4 (26:27):
Isn't this one of the reasons that Florida says we're
paying so much for Hometer's insurance is because of fraud
during hurricanes. Roof of fraud and stuff.

Speaker 5 (26:34):
Yeah that's what Yeah, that's what they're saying, all right
to Florida Space Coast is reporting a big boost and
tourism thanks to NASA's Artemis two moon mission. Local tourism
officials say a new visitor record was set last month.
How many people, over this many people helped generate over
forty million dollars in local spending the week of the launch.

Speaker 4 (26:55):
Did you hear what she said? The week of the launch.

Speaker 5 (26:59):
So this many people helped generate over forty million dollars
that week.

Speaker 4 (27:04):
That week, I'll go three hundred thousand people. That's a
really good guess. I'll go four ten.

Speaker 5 (27:11):
Three hundred and forty five thousand people.

Speaker 6 (27:13):
Oh wait, wait, wait wait, yeah that was for me.

Speaker 5 (27:19):
That's about two hundred thousand more visitors, yeah than Artemis
one four years ago. But of course the biggest difference
being there were astronauts on this launch, whereas the first
one was was a testy covid right. No, yeah, four
years ago, so that I've been twenty two.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
Twenty two, we were still dealing with at that point
a little bit. Yeah. Not in Florida, bro, No, what
did you forget already? Well, it's just people traveling here.
They're coming from areas that don't Yeah, no, I know,
all right.

Speaker 5 (27:46):
Social media influencer Clavicular is facing criminal charges in may
Dade Yeah, after a video appears to show an alligator
being shot at in the Everglades. His real name, Brayden Peters,
and two others are used to firing a gun from
an airboat at a wildlife management area back in March.
Covic Curvicular, Thank you, Jack, thank you. Clivicular has had

(28:10):
several brushes with the law as of late, including one
case in Osciola County where he was said to reportedly
start a fight at a Airbnb and then record some
women for social media hits.

Speaker 4 (28:20):
He sounds like the kind of guy you just can't
wait your daughter to bring home right completelysh.

Speaker 5 (28:24):
His arragement in this latest case is set for May twentieth. Meanwhile,
a former Miami Dolphin superstar is facing a Florida judge
and soon a jury, accused by a social media influencer
of battery, assault, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. In
her civil suit, Sophie Hall claims her leg was broken

(28:45):
when she was quote forcefully and purposefully end quote pushed
during football drills at Tyreek Hill's home back in twenty
twenty three.

Speaker 19 (28:54):
Tyreek Hill denies that he caused her injury.

Speaker 10 (28:57):
He also contends that Sophie Hall was herself.

Speaker 5 (29:01):
Just sounds like you just don't want to invite influencers
to your house, doesn't it.

Speaker 4 (29:05):
This guy's always in something.

Speaker 5 (29:07):
Marino Judge David Haynes tells potential jurors Hill believes Hall
assumed risks when she consented to participating in the drills
with the superstar.

Speaker 4 (29:17):
Right, she needed surgery, oh really.

Speaker 5 (29:20):
And now wants compensatory impunitive damages. Opening statements could begin tomorrow.
All right, it is time for Kila Fest in Pensacola.
The city is holding a parade today in honor of
American Idol Top three contestant Quila Richardson.

Speaker 4 (29:35):
Yeah, she's from the Panhandle. Never heard of her.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
The parade will start at four o'clock this afternoon at
South Paylock, Payfox and Cedar Street. There's then going to
be a ceremony which she gets a key to the city.
Nice and then later Richardson is going to perform a
free concert at six point thirty at the Hunter Amphitheater.
You can get details at City of Pensacola dot com.

Speaker 4 (29:55):
Is it bad that I do not know who that is?

Speaker 5 (29:57):
No, because unless you watch American Idol, I mean, we
haven't talked about it yet. Yea, for her to make
the top three, you know, it's kind of cool.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
The only thing I heard today about Reality TV is
I guess they made a big deal that right now
there are no Florida contestants on Survivor. I guess the
last wing up Reality that's a big deal season five hundred.
He's in fifty and they do two seasons a year. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (30:23):
Finally, AMC plans on bringing live concerts.

Speaker 4 (30:27):
That's crazy to the movie theaters. What a weird idea?
This is?

Speaker 5 (30:31):
The chain says it's launching Arena one at AMC, a
live concert series featuring performances from Baby Rexap, Paris Hilt
and Maren Morris and Moore. The news comes as cinemas
have leaned more into showing concert films such as I Think,
Taylor Swift and Beyonce's Tour films. Those brought in massive
amounts of money when the movies just weren't. This will

(30:53):
be interesting because tickets are going to range from forty
to seventy five dollars and will be one night only events.
Each show will be simulcast live and more than three
hundred AMC locations nationwide beginning on June seventeenth.

Speaker 4 (31:07):
Did they do didn't they do this for the World
Cup back in the day they opened up some of
those broadcast the theaters or no, wasn't there something they did?
Like they did something like this before?

Speaker 6 (31:17):
Already they did they they did it live for the
opera that I took my mom. That's right, that was
about seven years ago. Yeah, where it was live streamed
from New York through to theaters.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
You know, editionwise. And there was another one. Stupid me,
I actually thought they were opening up that space for
live bands, like you you'll see a live band in
a theater. That's what I thought it was. And then
you said the and then I felt dumb. Well you're right,
No they're not. No, you're dumb. No, no, no, no,
not dumb.

Speaker 5 (31:47):
All right, all right, all right, that concludes your JCS
news stupid.

Speaker 4 (31:54):
Four O seven nine textas seven seven zero three one
back in a second with more legitim Colbert Show, Who
do you hello?

Speaker 3 (32:09):
I can't yell it hurts you know who?

Speaker 4 (32:12):
Your favorite tea bag? And the villas to vall someone
got tore up last night and day we raised a
beer to Muscle Relaxers.

Speaker 3 (32:22):
I threw out my back the other day.

Speaker 18 (32:25):
And I have not been able to squat, bend down,
sweep or anything.

Speaker 4 (32:30):
Yeah, so thank you, Muscle Relaxeres. I love you.

Speaker 3 (32:33):
They have a good show.

Speaker 6 (32:35):
Not loudly get his injury, but definitely it explains his
demeanor right there, right, Yes, Tad Popper is still working here.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
Jake to the sea crew, what's up about it?

Speaker 19 (32:46):
Just rocke that Welcome to Rockville and Daytona and the
N's Speedway, where I'll be camping until Monday. I got
a core full of beer tequila, I got tons of
good food, raised some awesome bands. It's me a good time.
I will miss you, but I will catch up with
you on the pack.

Speaker 4 (33:02):
Okay, buddy, I love you. Yeah, I want a review
of the show. I don't know. Are you there all
four days? I guess? Yeah? The way man? What the
I mean? I looked at that line up again yesterday
or two days ago. Woof, so good. I decided to.

Speaker 6 (33:18):
Pass this year. I went the last two years. I
decided to pass this year.

Speaker 4 (33:21):
Yeah. Guns is the big show, right, that's tomorrow?

Speaker 5 (33:24):
Yeah, yeah, I would love to go, but I just
I can't do the heat and that sun I.

Speaker 4 (33:30):
And I just felt old last year. I'm tough man.

Speaker 6 (33:35):
Well it was also and it was the same night
a c DC was in Tampa, and I was just
thinking that's where I should be, Yeah, instead of walking
back and forth from one VIP section.

Speaker 4 (33:46):
What is me?

Speaker 20 (33:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (33:47):
Yeah? All right, seven seven zero three If you want
to text to us three o'clock. He were just cash
on about eight minutes or so to get over to
real radio out of him and send it away for
your chance on a thousand bucks. I'm Jim.

Speaker 5 (33:57):
There's deb that was such a Jim flex Jack.

Speaker 4 (33:59):
Yeah, thank you. Jack is here as well. What's the
gym flex.

Speaker 5 (34:01):
Learn you walk back and forth between VIP VI.

Speaker 4 (34:08):
You know what the worst part of it is is
the air conditioning. The VIPs are gold.

Speaker 6 (34:12):
Actually what they do have and if you're going you
can check it out. They have the iHeart Dive Bar
and cool. It's very cool. And what they set up.
They have a structure in there with bands and it
was packed and it's also air conditioned. Yeah, which Phil,
it's the it's the iHeartRadio dive bar and that was

(34:34):
set up you know on the grounds there.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
I could do without the AC. That doesn't bother me.
But I gotta tell you there's one when you when
you want to like kind of do something like that,
like a VIP scenario. For me, it has nothing to
do with any of the other stuff. It's bathrooms now
having access to bathrooms that other people don't have access to,
just because they stay cleaner and they're more accessible. That's
what it's all about me.

Speaker 5 (34:54):
It's bathrooms and chairs.

Speaker 6 (34:55):
So they in both VIP sections they did have they
had facility, and then they also had uh their porter lets.
I mean, I can't I don't know how many hundreds
of portal lets they have it this event, it's what
close to two hundred thousand people.

Speaker 4 (35:12):
Yeah, it's something ridiculous. But the other ones though, when
they do the VP or whatever, they pull up that
trailer looking thing that has the bathrooms built in where
it's like a ce sinks, you know, an attended that
takes care of the It doesn't feel like like a portlet,
but it's basically a portal. That kind of diah Oh.

Speaker 5 (35:29):
Yeah, there's nothing like opening the door to a portallet
that's been sitting and feels like temperatures of one hundred
and eight degrees for a few hours.

Speaker 4 (35:35):
That is a that is a yummy spell, by the way,
that sticks with you, that seeks and on you, that
seeks into your clothing and reminds you about everything down
to wipe your noses. And you're like, oh god, yeah,
that's right. A portal one hundred and five degrees not good.
I wanted to ask, when's the last time you guys
read a magazine? It's funny, right, No, I have.

Speaker 6 (36:00):
I put it out, you know, and I'm like, when
am I going to read this? And I'm like, you
know what, I brought it with me on my cruise
brought it back, didn't open it once. Finally I'm like,
you know what, I'll read it in the bathroom. I
put it in the bathroom, and today I looked at it.
I'm like, I still haven't read that damn thing. What
magazine is it? I don't want to say, you know what?

Speaker 9 (36:21):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (36:22):
Like good housekeeping? It's worse? Oh a modern woman, worse gaming,
no worse, older.

Speaker 6 (36:33):
COSMO, older, older than National Geographic, no older audience than that.

Speaker 4 (36:38):
It's not time AARP got on the cruise and brought it.
I probably kept forgetting about it. That's the most a
ARP thing of all time. I swear it's got even
Lungori on the cover. I know. I answer. The reason

(36:59):
I bringing this up is, do you guys remember Self magazine? Oh? Yeah, yeah,
by I think it was an offshoot of Conde Nast
or something like that. They went out of business today
or they shot they shut it down, and the whole
thing was like they stayed open this long. Like you know,
the magazine rack at the store or at a bookstore
used to be like where you would go in peruse

(37:21):
while your wife was shopping for other stuff. Popular mechanics,
car and driver, guns and Ammo, Southern Living all the
other stuff for me, and we have some really good
recipes skateboarding magazines and stuff. And I was like, man,
how did they even make it to twenty twenty six? Man,
I don't know anybody who buys or reads or has
a subscription to any magazine anymore. Like, I do not

(37:42):
understand that, Like newspapers are down to nothing, but there
are magazines still alive.

Speaker 5 (37:47):
I mean, yeah, there's still a lot of people that
like their readers. Digest right yeah.

Speaker 4 (37:51):
Time magazine was a big one, right, oh yeah, and
their website is still alive, but it doesn't it doesn't
really get into it. It's almost like they're building the
website just for the head lines, but they want you
to buy the magazine for the remainder of the content.
It is kind of crazy. But man, I don't know
anybody that gets a magazine or and that I used
to get four or five sitting my house a month.

(38:11):
Oh wow, Yeah, yeah, I used to get a like
I had a subscription. I would read them. I took
them everywhere I went. That's what I like to read. Fahm.
Remember that magazine I used to get that, Yeah, Fahm
And maximum because we got topics from that back in
the day, because I mean, we had no Internet, so
we would get a lot of magazines and read magazines
looking for like just human interest topics, stories that we
wouldn't usually see or you know, that was the originator

(38:35):
of what you see now as memes like this doctor says,
these are the top five things you should eat if
you're over forty five. Well before that, you got that
from magazines like Men's Health or magazines like that. So
we got like ten or twelve of them sitting in
the house between Russ and I to get topics for
the shows.

Speaker 6 (38:51):
AARP is giving you that information. They need a new name, AARP.

Speaker 4 (38:56):
He needs a name. It doesn't matter what it is.
It's always gonna be associated with.

Speaker 6 (39:00):
Old like they change like even the Senior's golf Tour,
they change your way to the champions.

Speaker 4 (39:08):
Yeah, the champion story. So it's not senior. Yeah exactly.
Come on.

Speaker 5 (39:12):
We needed to trying so hard, but it doesn't matter.
Every time that offer would arrive in the mail, I
would get so insulted.

Speaker 4 (39:19):
Oh yeah, yeah, sing here, I'm like shoving up here.
Oh my wife, Oh, that's the same thing for me.
Women when I qualified and they sent my very first
AA RP.

Speaker 5 (39:29):
Thing and your wife is like you you better not.

Speaker 4 (39:32):
She came running through the house and holding it up
to me like it was a knife, like look at this,
look at this.

Speaker 3 (39:38):
You're old.

Speaker 4 (39:40):
Get me free tickets all right? Seven seven zero three
one got a fresh keyword for you and animal house
on the other side of this break, stay put.

Speaker 6 (39:49):
So I've our westbound before, Lee wrote on our website
at real Radio dot fm, and answer your phone if
you get the call.

Speaker 3 (39:56):
Good luck.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
There's only one place to watch this nonsense at Jim
Kolber's show on YouTube.

Speaker 4 (40:09):
Hey guys every day.

Speaker 21 (40:10):
Uh, we'd love to give you guys the first win
for the thousand dollars. But even through the app of
the radio station's website, you get four hundred bad request message.
I've cleared my cookies, cleared my cash, everything done at
seventeen hundred times, and it still says four hundred bad requests.

Speaker 10 (40:29):
So we'd like to play the game with the camp listen.

Speaker 6 (40:32):
What you need to do is email help at iHeartRadio
dot com.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
Let them bastards know what's going on.

Speaker 5 (40:39):
You've been getting a lot of text messages about folks
getting that error message.

Speaker 4 (40:42):
Help at iHeartRadio dot com. I hate making it so difficult.
All right, Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show. Real
Radio one oh four point one. Win is your four luck.
You were feel weird giving it win wi in go
to real Radio dot FM and get that four hundred code.
Yeah so it's working some people. Yeah yeah this w
i in. Go to real Radio dot have him and

(41:03):
send it off for your chance in a thousand bugs.
Welcome back. I'm Jim. That is here, check is here.
Let's do Animal House. She likes them.

Speaker 3 (41:10):
Fussy, furry, feathery, tough and scaly.

Speaker 4 (41:15):
It's time for Animal House with Roberts.

Speaker 5 (41:18):
And as always, Animal House is generously brought to us
each and every week by personal injury attorney Glenn Klausman
over at Klasmon Law. Will tell you how you can
get in touch with Glenn at the end of Animal House.
Feels weird to be doing this, It's been a while,
but please join me in welcoming a regular guest. Kenny
and Joel from the Pedalias and Remy the big fluffy dog.

(41:39):
She is so sweet, she is sweet. She is sweet.
We'll get the critter cam on her maybe a little later,
or maybe we can get her to jump up on you, Kenny.

Speaker 12 (41:47):
Maybe we can't. I mean, she's a really well behaved dog.
She didn't even want to jump on the couch outside
your studio.

Speaker 4 (41:51):
Yeah. She doesn't hit me as a jumper, Glenn. I'm
gonna be honest with you. She hits me as an eater,
not a jumper. She likes her Scooby, Yeah, she.

Speaker 5 (42:02):
Likes her Scooby snacks. So is Remy available for adoption?

Speaker 16 (42:06):
She is at our Sandford location currently.

Speaker 5 (42:09):
So I know she's a mixed breed. Do we know
what breed? She's more predominant.

Speaker 12 (42:14):
You can see some Shepherd in her, but that brindle
coat kind of throws it off, that does brindle coat.

Speaker 4 (42:20):
Yeah, she is beautiful, but you know, seven.

Speaker 12 (42:22):
Years old, sixty one pounds, and she's just a perfect dog.

Speaker 4 (42:25):
She's got a little white shoes on, a little white
paws for dinner. She is ready for dinner. Brenda in
a beautiful smile and a good disposition, and she's soft.
My goodness, she's.

Speaker 5 (42:34):
So for people who you know, want a dog, but
you don't really think you want to go through the
puppy stage because Puppies are cute for a reason, and
it's because you want to keep them even though they're
eating your furniture and your shoes and they're peep peeing
and pooping everywhere. A seven year old dog like Remy
has already worked all of that through her system, right correct.

Speaker 16 (42:55):
Yep, She's just one of the great things about her.

Speaker 4 (42:58):
Look at that smile, smiles. She is so happy, dude.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
If you're watching us on our YouTube channel, Jim Colbert
Jim Colbert Live.

Speaker 4 (43:06):
She is a good girl.

Speaker 5 (43:07):
So along with Remy, you guys have had a lot
of stuff going on over at the ped Alliance. What's
what's been the latest? What's the latest? HAPs?

Speaker 12 (43:13):
So you know, we've moved into our new shelter. It's
just amazing. Can't wait to give you guys a tour
when you want to come by and visit. But then
Joel works at our Sanford location which we've started puppy
training there.

Speaker 5 (43:25):
So I wanted to talk to you about this, Joelle,
because when Kenny said one of the things to talk
about today was group training sessions as well as private training,
I thought, well, what a great idea. So what role
do you play at the PED alliance with your training.

Speaker 22 (43:42):
So we are in a lot of areas, so you know,
if there are shelter dogs that need some training, then
we help with those dogs becoming more adoptable or remaining adoptable.
But on top of that, we're now offering those group
classes as well as private training to people that adopt
from us, as well as those that haven't adopted from

(44:02):
us and just need help from a professional trainer.

Speaker 5 (44:05):
And what is the goal of the training.

Speaker 22 (44:08):
I you know, it can depend on on whatever is
going on with those owners and those dogs, But for
the most part, I would say our primary goal is
keeping dogs in their.

Speaker 5 (44:17):
Homes exactly, not having to surrender because of behavioral issues
you just think you can't get ahead.

Speaker 16 (44:23):
Of exactly Exactly.

Speaker 5 (44:25):
Plus training in the shelter. You know, it's not the
it's not the best environment for a cat or dog
to show off. It's it's better you know self, they're
stressed out, they're in an environment that they're not used to, Kenny.

Speaker 12 (44:36):
Right, and with them there, it's just really they get
to know the personalities, they get to learn about the dogs,
and then they know exactly what the most perfect home
is for them. So when people come in looking and
they explain, we want a nice soft dog. Well, hello,
Remy right here, they know who they are introduce them to.

Speaker 4 (44:53):
Have you guys noticed that the economy has slowed down
adoptions or have you guys seen any any difference in
behavior when it comes to people who adopt pets.

Speaker 12 (45:03):
I mean we are we're still doing really good with adoptions. Goodfully,
like we're really happy people still want those four legged
unconditional love in their heart. Ooh yeah, yeah, but we
are noticing, you know, there's more people asking about the
pet food pantry or oh you know that you're lucky
that you know they ask about low cost spaying and
neutering or vaccines, and luckily we have the clinics that
can help them out at pet Alliance, so we help

(45:24):
out that.

Speaker 4 (45:24):
That's awesome. That's awesome. By the way, you can go
to the website make a donation as well. They have
a list there, like a wish list there that you
can donate to.

Speaker 5 (45:32):
Yeah, and I was I was talking to Kenny Jowell
before we came on the air and talked about you know,
I've had to use your veterinary services before and it's
a great resource for a family who's wondering on top
of everything, how are we going to afford the vet
bills exactly? And then how does your pet food pantry work?

Speaker 12 (45:49):
So that's all run by donations, So back in with
the wish list and on our website, people will donate
food animal food to us. And then what we do
is month when we have enough to supply to give
out to the community, we set a distribution date, open
it up to the public and you know, come on
down to Sanford and get the food you need for
your dog so you don't have to surrender them.

Speaker 5 (46:09):
Well, speaking of your wish list, I know there's a
couple of items that we'd like to talk about above first,
but I know you guys wouldn't want to leave today
without giving some props to Shannon, Chad, Cheryl and some
other members of our team here at iHeartMedia who put
on quite a gorgeous display for the Pet Alliance in
four oh nine.

Speaker 12 (46:29):
Right, it is amazing. And now I walked in like
my mouth dropped. Remy started sniffing everything this She's like,
this is all for me, isn't it. But thank you
guys so much. I mean, you help us out throughout
the year. And then was really not expecting all of that.

Speaker 4 (46:41):
So thank you. Yeah, you're welcome.

Speaker 5 (46:43):
I mean, I don't know if you've had a chance
to see it, Jim, Hey, Remy, but it is a
great setup in Studio four oh nine. Just huge props
for the Peed Alliance.

Speaker 4 (46:52):
Yeah. Yeah, they did a cool thing this morning. Yeah
they did.

Speaker 5 (46:54):
They did so yeah, well you're a beloved organization to
Central Florida. Remy decided to go.

Speaker 12 (46:59):
With Jack's like, hey, open door, let's go.

Speaker 4 (47:03):
She adopted him.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
See the last time that happened, Jim opened the door
and oh.

Speaker 4 (47:07):
My gosh, yeah, don't do that again. The dog granted
a break round. It was smart. By the way, I'm
on the website pet Alliance Orlando dot Org. Man, you
guys have some really really adorable dogs out in Sandford
available right now. I mean one of these is like
a brindle, gray and black brindle puppy and named Boone.

(47:31):
That is so adorable. What are you laughing at? She
knows Boone? Yeah, yeah, man.

Speaker 5 (47:37):
She's like witch, don't you look at Boone.

Speaker 4 (47:39):
Here's Remy Osiris Tricksy. So many cool dogs, different personalities.
You can literally see it in the photograph. The personality,
and you have dogs like Remy's age, and you have
dogs that are puppies up here. Absolutely, I mean that's awesome.

Speaker 5 (47:55):
And by the way, if you're watching us on our
YouTube channel right now, Jack is in there showing the
love that the uh O iHeart location gave this morning.
But you know, I think the bigger news, Kenny, is
that Jimmy talked about the dogs and the puppies that
are available.

Speaker 4 (48:09):
Have you heard the news? Which news Jimmy is, stop it,
stop it? What news? He's a cat lover.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
Now, that's okay.

Speaker 12 (48:17):
We have cats a pet alliance too, and it's kitten
season and there are so.

Speaker 5 (48:22):
Many Jimmy, you could get a kitten.

Speaker 4 (48:27):
So my daughter had our first grandchild and we are
sitting her cat and the cat is just this tabby
kind of orange what a calico kind of cat. And
it's very cool. It's very cool. They're very cool cat. Yeah,
very very cool. She's kind of warming up to me.
She actually comes to me now when I call her

(48:48):
when I get up in the morning. She's right behind
me on the way to get coffee. So kind of
digging the cat thing a little bit.

Speaker 12 (48:53):
Well, that sounds a lot like a cat that's in
foster right now. But when Butters the kitten it becomes available,
I'll give you a call Butters, because name is Butter
and he's an orange tabby.

Speaker 5 (49:02):
Is really always going to have that orange tabby energy.
But you know, both Jack and myself we both have
adopted kittens from the Peed Alliance, so we're a ped
Alliance family are of course. So speaking of your wish list,
outside of what our great co workers were able to
donate today, what is on your wish list that you
want most.

Speaker 4 (49:23):
From the Central Florida community to help you out with.

Speaker 12 (49:25):
Well, since we're talking about our behaviors and our training,
let's talk about the enrichment wish list.

Speaker 22 (49:30):
Yeah, so, I mean we can always use any kind
of like puzzle toys. Treats are always great because we
can do all sorts of things with them. Anything, any
kind of toys, especially ones that are very durable for
some of our shelter dogs so.

Speaker 16 (49:47):
That they can get that good playtime.

Speaker 5 (49:50):
Now, do you give toys outside of the kennels, because
I know for some rescues, giving toys is a very
it can be a great thing, and it can lead
to fight between dogs. So is it's probably best to
check and make sure that you guys do take toys.

Speaker 12 (50:04):
We let them have the toys, but we don't leave
them like overnight in their kennel.

Speaker 5 (50:09):
Ah there I goes okay, good, so they can play,
but they don't get attached and then end up creating
issues with it right exactly.

Speaker 4 (50:16):
And the cool thing is the wish list takes you
right to Amazon, so if you have your account, you're
literally just click on the product and then send it
right to you guys. It's really click and play, very
easy and easy to navigate it on the website as well.
So when you go to the website pet Alliance Orlando
dot org, you will see the services. You can click
right down there and it goes right to the general
wish list. They have a pantry wish list, they have

(50:37):
a foster care wish list. So whatever you feel motivated
to give toward, whether it be cash, which you can
set up a thing where you can give monthly if
you'd like, and just look at that. Have that be
part of your charitable donations for the year. But they
really do offer so many opportunities for you to help out.
Everything from the general wishless I go saying all the
way up to enrichment, food, pantry and even foster care.

(50:58):
So tons and tons of availab abilities for you dot
help out if you'd like.

Speaker 5 (51:01):
Thank you, yes, please, And then back to the training Joel. So, folks,
can they sign up for training even if they didn't
adapt through the ped Alliance or is this mainly for
ped Alliance clients?

Speaker 22 (51:11):
No, even if you did not adopt from us, you
can absolutely sign up training classes. Yep.

Speaker 16 (51:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 22 (51:17):
So we'll be starting a drop in puppy socials and
then we'll have ongoing puppy classes private training you can
find on our website as well, and that's for anyone
from the public that would.

Speaker 4 (51:28):
Like to join us.

Speaker 2 (51:29):
Wow.

Speaker 12 (51:30):
The next round of classes are going to be starting Saturday,
May twenty third.

Speaker 5 (51:34):
And what kind of price point are we looking at?

Speaker 4 (51:37):
I believe it's one twenty five correct.

Speaker 16 (51:40):
Yeah, that is correct recession. So that's for a five
week round.

Speaker 4 (51:46):
Oh really yeah?

Speaker 10 (51:47):
Wow.

Speaker 22 (51:47):
So we do our best to also offer that at
a nice rate that people can afford, so we can
make sure again that those those.

Speaker 16 (51:55):
Dogs stay in their homes.

Speaker 22 (51:56):
We can prevent any behavior issues, especially for those puppies.

Speaker 4 (51:59):
Very nice.

Speaker 5 (51:59):
Absolute, So Kenny, please make sure that you let me
know what's going on with mister Butters. Oh, I will,
because I'm a little worried about Jim when he has
to give his cat back to his daughter. What's going
to happen. So we want to be able to meet
those emotional needs if that happens.

Speaker 4 (52:15):
Oh off the next two years.

Speaker 5 (52:23):
Well, Kenny, Joel and Remy, thank you guys so much.

Speaker 3 (52:25):
For seven.

Speaker 5 (52:28):
Is oh, and again she's available for adoption.

Speaker 4 (52:33):
Sixty Oh yeah, look at that face. That's a cuddle unk.

Speaker 5 (52:37):
Seriously, sixty one pounds, seven years old. She hasn't made
a peep, she hasn't looked for I mean, of course
we took the garbage can out, but she's been nothing.
But but she sweet and her coat is she's got
that brindle coat, but she's got a hilayer of fluff
to her. That's just well, thank you guys as always,
and I Kenny, you've always been really good keeping me

(52:59):
up to date. And the pups find their forever homes.
I hope to hear about you know about remedy. I'm
sure before the end of the week. Yeah, absolutely, So
put your hands together for joking, and you guys know
Animal House is brought to you each and every week
by personal injury attorney Glenn Clausman over at Klosmon Law.
Just a couple of reasons why you should call Glenn.

(53:19):
If you've been in any kind of an accident. He's
not going to pass your case off to a case worker.
Glenn is gonna can't handle your case so much.

Speaker 4 (53:26):
Show.

Speaker 5 (53:26):
He's going to give you his personal cell phone number
and then pick it up when you call. Just a
couple of reasons why year after year he's voted super
Lawyer and legal Elite. He truly is an animal lover
and a friend of the show. So if you've been
in any kind of an accident, give him a call
four oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen, or check
him out online at Klosmanlaw dot com. That's k l

(53:47):
a U s m an Law dot com. Someone adopted remy.

Speaker 4 (53:52):
Nine one Win is your fork like you were win
Go to Real Radio dot FM and send that off
for your chance at one thousand dollars back in a
second more or the Jim Colbert Show and our buddy
Scott Maxwell.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
Real Radio.

Speaker 13 (54:04):
It is the Monsters in the Morning because y'all said
I wasn't cool this week.

Speaker 9 (54:08):
Oh you.

Speaker 3 (54:11):
Could chew me and Ryan are the coolest he.

Speaker 4 (54:13):
Oh yeah, yeah, the Monster Store, Real Radio one four
point one from the ODU dot Com traffic center o
dou dot com the only business software you will need.

Speaker 17 (54:23):
Accident in Rushie County four fifteen southbound, all lanes are closed.

Speaker 4 (54:30):
Is your four o'clock you were wi in? Somebody said
they cleared some stuff in their computer and it started
working again, So give them another shot. Nice.

Speaker 6 (54:38):
And I also heard from our IT department nationwide. They're
aware of it, they're working on it. It's not just real Radio,
they're not targeting us.

Speaker 4 (54:46):
It's every station dealing wi in. That is your fourklock.
You weren't go to real radio dot FM and send
that away for your chance on one thousand bucks. Welcome
back on Jim. There's deb Jack is here as well. Yeah,
and in every single Wednesday around four twenty inte this
gentlem to drop by to talk about a few things.
He writes for The Orlando Sentinel. You can read his
columns Wednesday, Thursdays and Sundays. You guys, give it up
good loud for sweet Heat The Truth Dragon mister Scott

(55:09):
Maxwell day from the dining room, his booze, are you flexing?
Are you bourbon? Are you bourbon flexing today? So there's
the uh, oh you'll watch.

Speaker 23 (55:24):
Oh yeah, here's the one we had last weekend.

Speaker 4 (55:28):
Very nice.

Speaker 23 (55:29):
No, these are actually just the leftovers that don't fit
in the bourbon cabin.

Speaker 4 (55:34):
Double flex. That's a double flex in the business.

Speaker 10 (55:37):
This is a cask strength though. If you uh, that's
a good one.

Speaker 4 (55:41):
Where'd you get that one? Do you remember? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (55:46):
Is that you we that was a gift presented by
the Jim Colbert show.

Speaker 4 (55:50):
Uh, when he filled in when you were out? Oh nice?
I like that. Very good. You and I did not
talk this morning. Usually on the days that you are
going to be on the program, we have a little
chat about what you wrote about. I do not know
at all what the column is about today, so spring
on me, big boy.

Speaker 10 (56:06):
Yeah, well it was that exciting and I'll tell you too.

Speaker 23 (56:11):
There's the one I posted today, which is basically just
about it's another sad story about housing. And I know
every time we talk about this, your texting service usually
lights up because the cost of housing is something that
resonates with everybody.

Speaker 10 (56:26):
There's an.

Speaker 23 (56:27):
Every year there's a group called the National Affordable Housing
Coalition puts out a report about where the best and
least amount of affordable housing is. And affordable housing, by
the way, does not mean like low income housing.

Speaker 10 (56:40):
It just be like housing that people can afford.

Speaker 23 (56:44):
And once again Orlando was dead last and tied with
once again Las Vegas. And if you didn't read it,
I would like you to guess, for every one hundred
units of needed housing, of affordable housing, how many units
do you think Orlando, the metro Orlando Central Florida has

(57:05):
available for.

Speaker 4 (57:06):
Every house that's needed. How many do we have for every.

Speaker 10 (57:09):
One hundred houses needed? How many do you think her.

Speaker 4 (57:12):
I a three? Oh come on dude, wait, you made
that face when he said three.

Speaker 23 (57:19):
Well, I mean that's he's not He's not let anybody
go under him with that one.

Speaker 10 (57:23):
That's for sure.

Speaker 4 (57:24):
I love, I'll go, I'll go forty oh go seven.

Speaker 23 (57:30):
Dev wins it is thirteen and uh and and and
flip that around. That means for every eighty seven families
that are looking for a house, you know, in the
sort of the affordable range, or or an apartment or condo,
they cannot find it.

Speaker 10 (57:45):
And Uh. And there's two sides of this equation.

Speaker 20 (57:48):
You know.

Speaker 23 (57:48):
One of the things that we've talked over and over
about again is about wages. There's a reason Las Vegas
and Orlando are tied for dead laugh.

Speaker 10 (57:57):
It's because our wages here blow chunks.

Speaker 4 (57:59):
Uh.

Speaker 23 (58:00):
But the other side of it is just housing, and
we don't let enough housing be built. I should say,
let and encourage enough housing. And you know, this is
an issue I've kind of come around on zoning. It's
it's a little bit outdated in urban areas, and there's
government sometimes has all these rules about letting you know,

(58:20):
developers come in and build it.

Speaker 10 (58:21):
If somebody wants to build one hundred units.

Speaker 23 (58:24):
On a lot that normally has five units, that's good
for housing stock. And I think we have to allow
more of that in places like where it's urban, not
out you know, where Gym's living, because I know there's
a reason you moved out there so you.

Speaker 10 (58:39):
Don't have anybody around for forty five acres.

Speaker 4 (58:41):
Yeah, yeah, that's pretty much exactly what it is. I
bought a bunch of acreage and move right to the
dead center of it, and then just.

Speaker 23 (58:48):
But we got to do that, and then and frankly,
it's going to take some subsidized housing. And I think
there are some people go, oh, Maxwell, you're talking about subsidies.
We already subsidized housing. And I got to tell you
one project that you all may remember that just still
seems my clams from two years ago was when the
Orlando Magic came in and said they wanted to do
an entertainment district and this is supposed to have you
know's supposed to a convention center, it's supposed to have retail,

(59:11):
but it's also supposed to have a housing complex. And
the city of Orlando gave him, I can't remember it
was he had twenty forty million dollars worth of tax
brates and incentives and exchange. For all that money, they
promised to make ten of their three hundred plus units
affordable housing. Ten The number came out to I think
three point seven percent. So that's not the kind of

(59:33):
subsidies that I think helps folks around.

Speaker 4 (59:35):
And the other thing is I saw that project they
started on Paramore years and years ago. I want to
say it was two or four. They built a spec
house and that actually was in the paper today and
the overhead shot you can see where it was supposed
to be. And I think, is this the same house
you've been talking about them.

Speaker 5 (59:50):
R Yeah, the one that I think it's shan Rose
her district and they called it affordable housing where the
prices started at three hundred and eighty thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:00:00):
Yeah, that house has been sitting there, untouched, unlived in,
and on everything for like twenty years because they ran
into some they ran into some financing issues, then there
were some political issues, and then there was COVID. So
it's just been kicked down the road for a while.
But that's supposed to be happening down there, I think
in the Paramour area if I remember right, Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:00:19):
And I think what's needed is just everybody.

Speaker 23 (01:00:21):
Part of what got me thinking about this is there's
a church over in Pine Hills that recently made news
because they said they had a bunch of land and
they were trying to decide what to do with it,
and this church decided they wanted to build a three
hundred units.

Speaker 10 (01:00:33):
Of affordable housing.

Speaker 23 (01:00:35):
And this got a little bit of carping from some
neighbors and some other people said why does a church
want to get into the housing business?

Speaker 10 (01:00:41):
But my general thought is bring it on.

Speaker 23 (01:00:43):
The more the merrier, you know, if somebody wants to
do it, I don't care where it's a church, whether
it's another nonprofit, whether it's a for profit developer. We
need more housing. And there's a there's a book called
Homelessness as a Housing Problem, and it sounds like pretty obvious,
but there's a story this author shared with me a
group of Orlando folks fe years ago. It always stuck
with me. He said, imagine a game of musical chairs.

(01:01:06):
There's ten people roaming around ten chairs. I mean, excuse me,
ten people going around eight chairs and two people, one
who has let's say a disability and one who has
mental health problem.

Speaker 10 (01:01:17):
The music stops. Those two don't get their chairs. The
question he.

Speaker 23 (01:01:20):
Posted to the audience is why do you think those
two people didn't get there? It didn't get seats and people.
Most people would say, well, because they've got disabilities. He
would say no, the answer is because there weren't enough chairs.
And I actually thought it was a pretty good point
that we shouldn't have, you know, scrambling so that the
you know, the least fit are the ones that get
left out. There should just be enough houses, whether that's

(01:01:42):
government whether it's the private sector, and I think at
thirteen for every one hundred, it's pretty clear that we're
not doing it.

Speaker 4 (01:01:47):
Let me ask you a question, because I do not
know the answer to this, Scott, this Hope Florida thing
that Desanta's and his wife cooked up, is this? Is
that what that's supposed to do? Because is it wasn't
the entire idea of that is to get people off
of government as sense and get churches involved with providing
housing like that? And isn't that kind of what churches
are supposed to do is offer some type of solitude

(01:02:08):
to people who can't offer it to themselves. I've always
thought that's kind of what part of the mission for
churches was as community outreach.

Speaker 10 (01:02:17):
Yeah, I think that.

Speaker 23 (01:02:18):
I don't know that Hope Florida was necessarily housings first,
but yes, definitely it was about supposedly encouraging the notion
that private nonprofit groups could fill the gap that government
could not. As you may know, it didn't turn out
that Hope Florida did a whole lot.

Speaker 10 (01:02:35):
It looked like it was set up for other purposes.

Speaker 23 (01:02:37):
But yeah, and I got to tell you there are
a lot of nonprofit groups that really do a lot.
I think one you've heard of before, Shepherd's Hope. Yes,
here in Central Florida. A lot of people do not
realize that is the largest privately run medical clinic in
the entire state of Florida, and it's run by a
faith based nonprofit. All they do is bring in volunteer
doctors and nurses. And I'm not just talking about general

(01:03:00):
position they have on colleges to come in, you know,
like every two.

Speaker 10 (01:03:03):
Weeks and if you think you've got cancer.

Speaker 23 (01:03:05):
All they do is treat people who don't who can't
afford health insurance or don't have health insurance. So there
are a lot of faith based groups that are step
I'd say most of the groups I work with end
up being faith based for one reason or another. And
maybe not most, but a lot. But yeah, there is
a lot of that, but there needs to be more
because once upon a time, governments sort of served as
a safety net and we have very much gotten away

(01:03:26):
from it.

Speaker 4 (01:03:26):
Yeah, for sure, I just got a text in I
want you to, you know, just kind of excuse me.
Sure it says this blank hole is blanking delusional. They
are overbuilding in this state and not enough people to
buy or rent. Well, the math doesn't really add up
to that, does it. I mean that math is is
there are more people in the state the need housing,
and the housing unfortunately is not accessible to most people

(01:03:47):
because the starting price for a home in the state's
around four fifty is it not?

Speaker 23 (01:03:52):
Oh yeah, yeah, yes, And then I think the starting
rent is like nineteen hundred dollars for basic stuff. So
you've got the profanity down right, sir. Now maybe check
the facts. If we had too much house that takes
so much time, everybody would have a cheap house.

Speaker 10 (01:04:08):
Ye, that's the whole point. Housing has gone crazy.

Speaker 23 (01:04:11):
When I moved here and Jim and I lived in
a similar neighborhood back when we didn't know each other.
Twenty five years ago, I bought a four bedroom house
with a pool for one hundred and twenty five thousand
dollars in an unincorporated Maitland. Right now, that same house
is going to be selling for closer to four hundred
thousand to a million. That is not near downtown, that

(01:04:34):
is not near anything else, that's unincorporated Seminole County.

Speaker 10 (01:04:37):
We've written about this before.

Speaker 23 (01:04:39):
They're this uber driver I profiled a while ago who's
moved out to Polk County and this neighborhood they had
to pay three hundred and fifty to four hundred thousand
dollars for nothing houses out in Polk County. If we
had too much housing, they'd be giving it away and
stated to sky.

Speaker 4 (01:04:55):
High, Yeah, the fact is they're building the housing because
so many people are moving to this state. Matter of fact,
one of the reasons that Desanta City redistricted in the
middle of this in the middle of the decade is
because we've gotten two million more people in and that's
one of the reasons. So, yeah, your math doesn't add up, boss,
You got to look at your facts a little bit better.
That doesn't really work, Although it.

Speaker 10 (01:05:14):
Is interesting keep an eye on those stats. We have been.

Speaker 23 (01:05:17):
Florida has been one of the fastest growing states ever
since the invention.

Speaker 10 (01:05:21):
Of air conditioning. There's no doubt about that. Didn't have
anything to.

Speaker 23 (01:05:23):
Do with ron status anymore than had to do with
Charlie Chris or Rick Scott. People always wanted to go
to Florida, but for the first time in like a
half a century, that population growth has started to slow
over the past year, to the extent that even like
the Chamber of Commerce is sounding an alarm saying that people,
once again, to your callers point, can't afford to live here. Well,

(01:05:44):
this used to be the land of cheap and now
people are realizing, first of all, I can't get you,
I can't get a starter home for less than half
a million dollars, and don't get me started on property.

Speaker 10 (01:05:52):
Sure.

Speaker 4 (01:05:53):
And the other thing to do is scott, I mean
they're visiting, trust me. Did you see Disney's numbers the
revenue for ridiculous Right, They're definitely coming here, they're just
not staying that. The gentleman who wrote that text also
consider this a house is a house. That's a structure.
You gotta put it somewhere. Have you priced land in
this state? Dog, You should look around a little bit
before you send stupid text, because land in this state

(01:06:14):
is unbelievably expensive. Housing is just a structure. You got
to put it somewhere. And I don't care if you're
buying a mobile home. When land costs an average of
what one hundred and eighty thousand dollars for a quarter
acre or half an acre or whatever it is, it
doesn't matter what your structure is.

Speaker 23 (01:06:29):
Good luck, and another thing that drives up housing costs
more in tourism areas like Arizona and Nevada and Florida
is corporations that are buying these entire neighborhoods in some
cases of housing and basically turning them into airbnb money
making opportunities.

Speaker 10 (01:06:49):
It's America. If they want to do it, that's fine.

Speaker 23 (01:06:51):
But that's all houses that come off the market, right
that's what increases demand. And by the way, even if
you'd like think, I'm well, I've never want what you'd
call affordable housing. You want more affordable housing, because when
there's more of that on the market, everybody's housing prices
goes down. When the bar gets lowered at the bottom,
it gets lowered everywhere else. And right now, we've talked
about this time before. It's hard for me to see

(01:07:13):
my kids owning their own house, certainly not at age
twenty four, twenty five, or twenty.

Speaker 10 (01:07:19):
Six like we did.

Speaker 23 (01:07:20):
That is so far out of reach for people in
these you know, regular white collars starting jobs.

Speaker 10 (01:07:25):
They're just not able to do it.

Speaker 4 (01:07:26):
You know, the average age for the first first time
home buyer is right now, for the first time ever
in the US, I don't forty years old. That's the
forty years old Scottie. Forty years old in the United
States of America is the average age for the first
time home buyer, not in Florida or Alabama or Arkansas,
all around the nation. That is completely insane. It used

(01:07:47):
to be like late twenties, early thirties. It's a full
decade farther now. And I still think that number is
maybe a little skewed because I think even at forty,
maybe it's a little out of reach.

Speaker 10 (01:07:57):
And think about that.

Speaker 23 (01:07:58):
What you're talking about is what we dominantly. No, we
identify as the American dream, right, That's like what everybody says,
if you're living in America, you should be able to do.
And that keeps getting more and more delayed and deferred.
And we haven't even gotten into savings and retirement. I
am scared to death that our generation is going to
be eating cat food in about thirty years because the

(01:08:19):
amount of people who do not have any amount of
substantial money saved up. We're long past the days of
companies providing pensions and party investments into four to one case,
you're basically on your own. So we're headed for financial problems,
especially after the Boomer generation.

Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
Yeah, one hundred percent. Man, it is sketchy af out
there as I look around. Of Course, I've always been
really interested in real estate, So even though if I'm
not buying or selling anything, I'm always paying attention to
the market and what's going up and what's going down.
And I almost don't care where it is in central Florida,
even in Pine Hills, which was an area that almost
nobody wanted to live in. Now I just saw a

(01:08:57):
thing today where they're kind of revitalizing Pine Hills. But
they see a possibility with people moving in when no
other options, and opportunity to maybe gentrify part of that
city and kind of bring it back to life. Because
when they started, that city was basically for the people
who are you know, working in Martin Marietta and those
areas out there. They thought that was gonna be like
the newest, hottest neighborhood. Uh, and then you just time

(01:09:17):
does its thing and off we go. But I've even
heard they're doing that.

Speaker 24 (01:09:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (01:09:22):
I think, I think, and we need to do a
lot more building. That's the bottom line everywhere. And I
think in urban areas we have to go up and
I know sometimes people don't like the idea, but.

Speaker 10 (01:09:30):
Uh, if you can't keep going out and that's scrawl,
we don't have enough room for it.

Speaker 23 (01:09:34):
We don't have enough people can't afford to get to
and from work. Yeah, and before we go, Jim, I
got one other thing. I just want to throw you
at the column I just posted. Uh before I got
on here, at the term I have.

Speaker 9 (01:09:44):
Uh.

Speaker 23 (01:09:45):
I thought I coined it, but after I looked it up,
somebody else came up with it.

Speaker 4 (01:09:48):
You're already texting aout it.

Speaker 10 (01:09:51):
Have you ever heard the term broke like I saw
it today. I saw the I really thought I was
super keen.

Speaker 23 (01:09:59):
And then right before I posted the column, I looked
it up and saw some people have used it before.
But I was thinking about it's all these guys who
are so aggressive and you know, want to tell you
exactly what it is and basically often why they have
it so tough, particularly white guys have it so tough.

Speaker 10 (01:10:13):
But then as soon as you.

Speaker 23 (01:10:14):
Say anything back to them, they get so triggered and
they get so upset. And the reason I was writing
about this is I think Florida is sort of the
state of the rise of the broth Lake and one
of the I think James, I think DeSantis and Uthmeyer
sort of symbolized this. But the name I want to
put on your radar, and I think he's already on
your radar, Jim, is.

Speaker 10 (01:10:33):
This candidate named James Fishback.

Speaker 23 (01:10:35):
This guy, I mean looks like, i'll say, an extremists
by any by any definition. There's questions about whether he's
even a legal candidate here in the state, but he's
an absolute nobody, dropping anti Semitic talk about.

Speaker 10 (01:10:49):
You know, watch out for the Jews and all this stuff.
And yet this guy is starting to build more.

Speaker 23 (01:10:55):
Of a following, especially among young white men on college campuses,
to the extent that the most recent poll has him
ahead of, for instance, the lieutenant governor Ron just saying
this is his own lieutenant governor.

Speaker 10 (01:11:08):
This guy is now out poling.

Speaker 23 (01:11:09):
Now it's still way everybody's still way behind byra Donalds,
who's looking like forty percent, but this guy's now at
nine percent. And I think you never would have seen
this two or four years ago, maybe before Trump, but
certainly before the saying this and that's the broth play game.

Speaker 6 (01:11:23):
And he's the guy who was banned from waffle house, right, yea, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:11:26):
He's the guy who also joined tender to meet young ladies.

Speaker 4 (01:11:32):
Yeah, he's got to go.

Speaker 23 (01:11:33):
There is something else weird about like a college his
involvement with a college debate team. I mean, there's there's
nothing about this guy that seems normal.

Speaker 4 (01:11:41):
None and none of it, And none of that matters anymore.

Speaker 23 (01:11:44):
Because he's going out with this grievance tour. He's going
out and you know, telling young white guys, you are
being hosed, whether it's by dark skinned people, whether it's
by Jewish people, You're you're you're not getting everything you're doing.

Speaker 10 (01:11:56):
Life. White guys are the only guys.

Speaker 23 (01:11:58):
Who could be discriminated against in America anymore. And I'm
here to follow. What he actually says is the follow
the run to Stantus plan.

Speaker 10 (01:12:04):
Uh.

Speaker 23 (01:12:04):
And that's starting to resonate and uh suddenly you have
him out pulling the.

Speaker 4 (01:12:09):
Well that's Jay Collins.

Speaker 10 (01:12:11):
Yeah yeah, yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:12:12):
Now now it seems clear why they've for so many
years wanted to defund public education.

Speaker 4 (01:12:17):
Yeah, I mean, what do you mean for it wanted
to They have done it. Yea.

Speaker 23 (01:12:21):
It is currently happen Whitewashington history books and censoring uh,
you know, discussions because they don't want the facts that
contradict these narratives being out there and that that's a
grow flakery.

Speaker 4 (01:12:33):
Yeah, man, that's the word you should coin there, buddy.

Speaker 10 (01:12:39):
All right, I'll stick with it, all right.

Speaker 4 (01:12:41):
Good enow for Scott Maxwell. Guys, yayifteen you Budy as always,
We'll see you soon. Hit that bourbon call me all right.
Four seven nine one six one four one win. By
the way, is your four o'clock keyword? W I N
go to real Radio dot I fhim and send that
away for your chance in one thousand bucks back in
a second more than Jim Colbert show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
Our constant mispronunciations and poor grammar are clear indicators that
we are not AI Real Radio one oh four point
one guaranteed human.

Speaker 4 (01:13:11):
This weather report is brought to you by Mills Air.

Speaker 2 (01:13:16):
If its Central four to Fox Alreaty five Storm Team
urologist snow Bergen.

Speaker 4 (01:13:19):
Here.

Speaker 2 (01:13:19):
We're looking at a blend of clouds and son over
the next few days. Some record heat coming in for Thursday.
Temperatures are going to be in the upper hindies. Record
in Orlando for tomorrow is ninety.

Speaker 10 (01:13:34):
I love the Colbert show.

Speaker 25 (01:13:38):
People ask me why say, I don't know because he
can't pronounce names. Were the damn but he still tries.
Let me come on.

Speaker 3 (01:13:51):
The dev is the beauty of the show.

Speaker 10 (01:13:54):
And Jack, well, you know, Jack's Jack. That's all you got.

Speaker 4 (01:14:06):
Welcome back to the Jim Lubber Show, Little Radio one
ozer four point one. I've got don't there's some kind
of allergy thing or something. Really, it's so hard to talk.
My apologies, guys four to seven nine one six one
four one text us seven seven zero three one four o'clock.
Keyword is win wi n you go to real radio?
Done him? Send that away for your chance? Excuse me
at one thousand dollars. I'm Jim. There's deb Hello. Jack

(01:14:27):
is here as well.

Speaker 5 (01:14:28):
Yeah, you want me to find you like a piece
of gum or anything that will make sure you're here tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (01:14:32):
It's wild, it's o kidding. It's just sneezing and uh
like a scratchy throat. But it's not it is not sickness.
I don't feel sick at all. It's just it Obviously
allergies have hit me or something. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:14:43):
Oh yeah, you can hear it in the congestion in
your voice and your your voice is getting a little
reedy little.

Speaker 4 (01:14:48):
Yeah, we'll see how it goes. I'll take it easy tonight.

Speaker 6 (01:14:50):
Real Quick Text are reporting they successfully keywords are working.

Speaker 4 (01:14:54):
So when is the keyword?

Speaker 6 (01:14:56):
You have six minutes to get when on enter at
real Radio and let's grab the winner for this.

Speaker 4 (01:15:02):
Yeah, let's go for sure. So the Yachty Cruise is
coming up soon. It's about about a month away, the
thirteenth of June. And my wife and I have you
guys talked about what you're dressing up as what you're doing.
This is a themed cruise, got rock Cruise, and we
the people who have purchased tickets, we cannot wait to

(01:15:23):
see you. It's gonna be a good time. Lots of
stuff lined up to have some fun.

Speaker 5 (01:15:27):
I've dipped my toe in it, but you know I'm
I'm treating it gingerly. Husband isn't as much into dressing up.
That's as you and the messes are. That's usually where
I am.

Speaker 4 (01:15:40):
So that's the interesting part of this is because I
see my wife and I we like doing stuff like this.
We've done a bunch of we dressed up as the
Bundes once for a gig, so we don't mind doing this.
I love it. I actually think it's a lot of fun.
And I know that you don't have a problem with
it because we've done this before on the show.

Speaker 5 (01:15:55):
Oh my husband's a little bit more of a conservative
Republican than you are.

Speaker 4 (01:15:59):
But you're husband doesn't seem to be playful like that.

Speaker 5 (01:16:03):
I've been trying. I mean, he's the one who created
the Highland Festival in mountur right. I mean he's the
one who got their tartan registered in Edinburgh, Scotland. Do
you think that man has ever wore his kilt yet?

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:16:14):
No, no, actually he did.

Speaker 4 (01:16:16):
He wore it once. He wore it once. I don't
want to hear that story. Please just keep them yourself.
It was great. I was Merida from Brave. Okay, truck
stops are full. But your wife, I mean, your wife
is in a dressed up like Are you.

Speaker 6 (01:16:32):
The one that's having a problem dressing up or finding something?
I'm not having a problem. I typically loathed the idea
of the whole costume Halloween BSEs fun.

Speaker 4 (01:16:44):
Just love fun. You know, we get it. You smell
of it, so you smell somebody who hates fun. So
with that said, have you landed on anything are you doing?
Because I know you have to incorporate the captain's hat,
So if the captain's hat's on in there, it's almost
not even worth, don't I have an idea? My wife
is working on it.

Speaker 6 (01:16:59):
By working at it, I mean Dally, I think she's
wandering around at a thrift shop or a good will
or some looking for something store. So I did trust
she's going to come up with something.

Speaker 5 (01:17:10):
I did a preliminary search on both seventies and eighties costumes.

Speaker 4 (01:17:14):
Like duos and stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (01:17:16):
Yeah, and I was like, we might lean a little
bit more into the seventies.

Speaker 4 (01:17:20):
Well yeah, and I think that's where we may go
as well. But I mean you have your Sonny and
share right, you have Captain and Taneil. Yeah, I mean
you have Captain Stubing if you wanted to do that,
And we'd even thought doing the love boat thing, the
Captain Stubing thing, and Julie the cruise director. You're more
toward the missus roper? Are you really?

Speaker 5 (01:17:38):
From threes companies? Moo moo mooon a wig baby?

Speaker 4 (01:17:42):
So oddly enough, my wife the other day we're riding
around and I'm like, look, we got to come up
with something. We can't wait until last minute. I'm so
notoriously bad at doing that. I actually want to have
this ready to go and feel good about it before
we leave for this thing. Do you have any ideas?
She took two beats boom boom, and looked at me
and says, how about Hall and Oates. I would be

(01:18:03):
Daryl Hall, she would be John Oates.

Speaker 6 (01:18:06):
The only thing that would have made that better if
it was a surprise when we showed up.

Speaker 4 (01:18:11):
You have to I have to figure this uf out.
Do you like the idea of hallan Oas? I think
it's kind of funny, plastic. Yeah, yeah, but you should
be Oats. No, I can't be Oats. I'm too tall
and that's why it would be funny. And I'm a
natural blonde.

Speaker 6 (01:18:23):
I just I just watched a twenty minute YouTube video
about them, all about their why, the latest breakup and everything.

Speaker 4 (01:18:31):
I will tell you. My wife and I again talking
about this last night because we were talking about what
we're talking about, and she looks at me and she says,
do you remember that show we went to?

Speaker 20 (01:18:39):
So?

Speaker 9 (01:18:39):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:18:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:18:40):
Her dad is a real big Hall of Oats fan,
so I got his whold tickets to go to the
Hall and Oaks show when they came to Orlando, and
we had good tickets, you know. So we went in
there and I was like, this is gonna be great.
I mean, every one of these songs, you're gonna know
every single one of them. These guys wrote so many
good songs. They can play two hours and you'd probably
know every single syllable of every two of the gonna play, right,

(01:19:01):
And when they get out there, sure, up there they are.
Hall know, it's exactly what you'd think on two separate
sides of the stage right, And we noticed for about
the first twenty minutes, I'm like, these guys are not
interacting at all. And when I say not at all,
they're not even looking at each other. They're not acknowledging
the fact that the other one is on stage right.
So we were kind of well, we knew there were
some drama between these guys for years. We thought that

(01:19:24):
was all cleared up. But what got cleared up was
is the fact that they can make a whole bunch
of money touring together and maybe not as much touring apart. Right,
So they play a song right after we have that
little conversation. They play a song, and then when they
go back to play the next song, Darryl Hall steps
into the bike and goes off on a good ten

(01:19:45):
minute rant about Trump. Ten minute. I mean you can
ask my wife that's in it, dude. I mean he
is going off a long time, right, He's going off,
and it's so uncomfortable. It is getting so uncomfortable. The
entire audience is getting on comfortable. And then John Oates
is just back there in the background, like just kind
of stepped away from his mic. He had his hands

(01:20:06):
crossed in front of his guitar. And after Daryl Hall
gets going and going and going, there's a tiny pause
and Darryl John Oates slowly walks up to his mic
and goes, you feel better, Darryl, like really condescending like that,
and he looks over and he goes, you know, John,
I do. And then they played the rest of the tunes.
They left the stage in different directions and that was it.

(01:20:26):
All on Oates and you paid for that, and we
paid for that. Well you got the music. Yeah. Yeah.
If my wife said Sidney Lauper did the same thing,
she saw her at Heart Rock Live out there, like
a few years back, and she said she was really
excited to see her because there was also an opener
that was supposed to be a good show, and she said,
Cidey Laupper played her songs, but between every single song,

(01:20:47):
you got a two minute dissertation on how she hated
the administration or hated this politician or hated that politician.
And she said it just got tiresome after a while.
And even people who weren't like supporters of that administration
were like, okay, dude, move, we came here to see
his show, not to get preached at you know, let's
go so for the moment. Some people don't.

Speaker 6 (01:21:06):
You don't expect that from like I wouldn't expected that
Sidney Lauperkant concert.

Speaker 4 (01:21:11):
But you know that she has a right. She drew
a crowd.

Speaker 6 (01:21:14):
She you know, you're there for her art, and this
is something that's deeply personal her. She wants to share it.
You know, you gotta kind of balance how much of
that you want filtered into your show.

Speaker 4 (01:21:24):
Yeah, because I mean you came there for her art
into her opinion in eight days.

Speaker 6 (01:21:28):
I fully expect this because Springsteen's current tour is I
mean that's solely focused.

Speaker 4 (01:21:36):
On half the news on this half the news out
of that tour. Is that is the fact that he
spends so much time, yeah, you know, talking about the administration.

Speaker 6 (01:21:44):
So it's not like you're going there and you're surprised
by it. I mean because he did it and O
four with the Vote for Change tour where he you know,
it is political. So I mean his song selection is
specifically about current time and it's all that. And I
will be there in eight days.

Speaker 4 (01:22:02):
All right, four our seven nine four one text seven
seven zero three one. Got a fresh keyword for you now.

Speaker 3 (01:22:08):
De Orlando.

Speaker 1 (01:22:09):
Fringe starts May twelfth, and we want to give Fringe
performers the chase to promote their shows using the talkback
feature on the free iHeartRadio app during the Jim Colbert Show,
thirty seconds of radio time to tell the world why
they should come see your show. Get the details at
Real Radio dot FM. Slash fringe from.

Speaker 5 (01:22:25):
The Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash called Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw
dot com.

Speaker 17 (01:22:32):
Hello rid right now I for eastbound between four oh
eight and Robinson Streets.

Speaker 16 (01:22:36):
Also crash blocking the left Shoulder.

Speaker 17 (01:22:38):
Golden Rod Road southbound after Bates Road and top of
the breaks. I for eastbound between one ninety two and
five thirty five.

Speaker 6 (01:22:47):
So I at Real Radio dot FM and answer your
phone if you get in the call.

Speaker 4 (01:22:51):
Good luck.

Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
Proof that we have a face for radio. The Jim
Colbert Show on YouTube. Subscribe and watch.

Speaker 14 (01:23:02):
Dude every morning cole Bert Cabru. So, yeah, that last
segment really kind of hit the nail on the head.
I'm thirty six years old. I do pretty well for myself,
not slumming it by any means, and the thought of
you know, a house, pavement and all of the other
costs associate with it. We're just seeing a bit out
of reach right now. And you know, oton than that
last segment, Jimmy, you know, there's only one other thing

(01:23:23):
that makes me throw up.

Speaker 3 (01:23:25):
I mean, it's a dark board on a ceiling.

Speaker 4 (01:23:28):
Oh man, come on, Oh I actually had to think
about that.

Speaker 26 (01:23:32):
Oh I should Those AARP magazines I can't handle them,
especially after I saw Drew Barrymore on the cover of
What I Know just makes me feel too old.

Speaker 6 (01:23:44):
I mean when I got the one with Springsteen on it,
this was years ago, I was like, oh, No.

Speaker 4 (01:23:51):
The latest thing for that for me was seeing Madonna
with Sabrina Carpenter at the uh what show is that?
The big Yeah, Coachella or whatever, when she came out
and I'm like, oh my god, am mighty, what is that?
Oh that's Madonna? So yeah, yeah, I hope I hope
people have grace for you.

Speaker 3 (01:24:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:24:11):
Yeah, No, they don't look I like worse than her
now they can.

Speaker 5 (01:24:14):
No, No, she looks like a lizard woman. I'm sorry
she's destroyed herself.

Speaker 6 (01:24:18):
She haven't. Yeah, that's the plastic surgery.

Speaker 5 (01:24:24):
She's like that woman who kept trying to become a cat.

Speaker 4 (01:24:25):
She doesn't even look like herself. I mean if you
showed to me a picture of Madonna and she was
twenty five and a picture now, they would not know
who if it's the same person? You know? One more
or no? No, no, no, all right for the seven
nine one six four one, don't forget. Grand is your
five o'clock keyword. That's g R A N D. Go
to real radio dot of him and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. Guys, Grand that

(01:24:46):
is your five o'clock keyword. Good luck. We hope you win.
For sure, I'm Jim. There's deb Jimmy Jack is here
as well.

Speaker 6 (01:24:52):
And refresh your page. Any issues, refresh your page, try again.

Speaker 4 (01:24:55):
Let's go. Let's get a win on absolutely. Let me
ask you guys quick question. Do you guys ever travel
with groups of friends? I don't see you, but either
one of you don't strike me as people who do this. No,
you've never done that. You've never had a trip with
the other couples and stuff? I have?

Speaker 5 (01:25:10):
Yeah, for birthday parties and stuff. Did like a horseback
riding trip?

Speaker 27 (01:25:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:25:14):
Yeah, sure, Jack? You ever done this years ago? Years ago?
Get the crankier you get. Do you remember when it
was or what it was or anything?

Speaker 6 (01:25:21):
Like my twenties, A group of two four, five of
us we sailed, rented a sailboat and sail from Key
West to the dry Tartooga.

Speaker 4 (01:25:31):
Damn, that's fun. That sounds awesome. So I saw this
on Reddit today and I found this kind of interesting
because we've actually had a little bit of a scenario
like this a couple of times, and I want to
know what you guys think about this. So this was
a group of people's couples. I think there was four couples,
and they were going off on a trip, and the
wife of one of the couples is the one who
did all the booking for the trip, you know, the Airbnb,

(01:25:55):
all of the entertainment and stuff, because that's kind of
what she did. So she just kind of took it
upon herself off to make sure everything was going to
be buttoned up and done right. So she did it right.
So they all get to the facility or the area
and they say, well, we're going to draw straws for
who gets the best room in the house because the
aaron B and B you would have a master bedroom,
then you would have other bedrooms, right, And everybody wants

(01:26:17):
the master bedroom because it has the bathroom in the bedroom.
Blah blah blah blah, it's a bigger room, more you know,
more stuff in the room. And the girl who did
all the booking went, no, no, no, we're not drawing straws.
It took me hours to book this trip. My husband
and I get that room, and the other couples lost
their mind. The other couples, it actually caused a problem

(01:26:38):
where the trip almost ended right there. Oh wow, because
she said, look, I did all the work for this trip,
and I appreciate you guys. I mean, we're all paying
the same amount of money, but I mean you guys
just got to show up with your stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:26:51):
Yeah, but you offered because this was something that you
did on the regular, So therefore you create an equal.

Speaker 4 (01:26:59):
And I think that is kind of the argument, right,
Like do you believe that they should have drawn straws
or picked numbers out of a hat or whatever. And
the lucky person just up to fate is the one
that gets the bedroom or is the person that guaranteed
everything was gonna go smoothly? Does she get a little
bit more juice when it comes to picking the room.

Speaker 6 (01:27:17):
I think she deserves it. But I think you have
to set that expectation before you arrived, when it's in
the very beginning saying we're setting this up. I found this,
we're gonna have the master bath, but we have you know,
there's so many rooms, and the cost is this?

Speaker 4 (01:27:35):
Do you want in?

Speaker 11 (01:27:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:27:36):
And and that did not Okay, it took him the expectation.
It took him a while to figure that out. And
they did get it figured out. But when you read
the story your vacation, oh yeah, well, and it also
calls tension and you know they She even said, like,
you know, the entire trip was four days, like it
was a long weekend Thursday to Sunday. And she said
that even though they had a good time, there was
this weird tension because somebody said, well, you know, somebody like,

(01:28:00):
well we should rotate, and everybody's like, well, why do
we re rotate just to get a bedroom? I mean
it's four day's you know, who's freaking out? And the
reason I thought there's something similar to us is is
when we go do the Margaritaville thing right every year,
which we'll do this year in is this September October
this year usually the first Saturday in October that's exactly
October fourth or something I believe, and we get a

(01:28:22):
condo or whatever. And when I go in, I was like,
I go in to pick the first room. That we
don't really because if they're all like master rooms, but
we do go in and we pick the one we
want first, and everybody else can have whatever room's out.
We don't think of it as a we deserve it
more thing. It's just that we get there early, we
picked the room, and we go on, Well.

Speaker 5 (01:28:38):
Nobody would have a place to stay if it weren't
you guys inviting them, and it's because of us of
doing an event there. Yeah, that they have a reason
to join you at the condos. So that makes sense
that you would get to pick the first room in
the best room, right you're there working.

Speaker 4 (01:28:52):
Yeah, But and again, but what I'm saying is it's
not a flex thing. It's just that we get there
earlier and we just choose the room that we like
the most. Usually one has the better view or whatever
or has a little balcony will choose that, and then
you know, everybody else can get their room. But I mean,
we never had an argument about it. No one's ever said,
you know, I want this room or that room. We
just kind of go, okay, I'm just get a room
the same.

Speaker 5 (01:29:12):
Well, I mean the same or not. There was no
expectation that they were going to have equal rights to
the big room, whereas in this you know, four person trip,
the person volunteered to do the work and then claimed
the reward or something they volunteered.

Speaker 4 (01:29:26):
Dexter says, it's so funny.

Speaker 6 (01:29:28):
Just got back from a trip to Tennessee with my wife,
another couple and a single body.

Speaker 4 (01:29:34):
There's rules to this stuff.

Speaker 6 (01:29:36):
Even if you split everything, the person that books it
gets the master. Then it said, then it's in order
of arrival. Whoever gets there first gets the best choice.
My wife and I just slept on a double bunk
bed and we didn't blanking complain about it. That's just
how it goes.

Speaker 4 (01:29:54):
Baby. Yeah, I kind of agree with that. And one
of the reasons, like and he was the loser in
the l right exactly. I don't like traveling with a
bunch of people for this reason. We do have a
couple couples that we travel with, and the reason why
we travel with them is because there's never any of
this stuff. And and the other thing too, is is
when we travel with other people, we never pick up tabs.

(01:30:14):
We never ever, ever ever do that. I never buy drinks,
We never do any of that. And the reason why
is this some people think that's a culture of how
you roll, and it becomes one of those things. And
another thing, too is if I pick up around to
drinks for everybody one night and we go out and
nobody picks up rounds of drinks when you know nobody
else does it, I feel slighted. And even though I

(01:30:34):
know that's not right. I know it's not right. I
know you're giving me the look.

Speaker 5 (01:30:37):
Oh no, I was about to say, then you need
a new group of friends. No, seriously, I mean that's
that's not even.

Speaker 6 (01:30:44):
He did that night. Now I have to do it.
Oh but now, now look what they're drinking. All this
has got to cost more. Then it just becomes a
weird math problem.

Speaker 5 (01:30:53):
This is why I don't travel with other people.

Speaker 4 (01:30:56):
But I think Jack is like this, Like if we
were all out, just the three of us, awesome, we
were out with our group here whatever, and and let's
say Ross picked it because I got this round, I
would immediately say, awesome, I got the next one. Like
what I'm like, you guys are saying, you make that statement,
you set that tone. I got this next round, and
then we'll go from there.

Speaker 5 (01:31:16):
And then I'd say I got that next round. Jack,
don't worry.

Speaker 4 (01:31:19):
We know you won't.

Speaker 6 (01:31:20):
No, no, no, I will say, I think Jim should
have all of these rounds.

Speaker 4 (01:31:27):
It's a Jim Culbert show. And by the way, that's
the other thing sometimes that happens as well. It's like
if you travel with somebody and you you think that
person's done okay for themselves. There's there are some people.
Now this happened years ago, but we did do that.
One time. We traveled with a group I think it
was three couples, and one of the couples, you know,
I mean, we invited them on. They're awesome people. You know,

(01:31:47):
they had every day of regular jobs, we've done all right,
and and they kind of started assuming that we were
going to pay for stuff. Oh and that's a weird thing.
And I had that happen to myself because my first
girlfriend's dad was a doctor, and I remember the very
first time we went out with their parents to dinner.
We went to this steakhouse and I'm like, oh, man,

(01:32:08):
I am going to eat everything in sight because this
guy's gonna pick it up. He's loaded.

Speaker 3 (01:32:12):
Blah blah blah, bah blah.

Speaker 5 (01:32:13):
Yeah, but you're also dating his daughter, and there's no
way in a snowball's chance in hell he's going to
pay for your meal.

Speaker 4 (01:32:18):
That dude handed me by that that guy handed me
by bill faster than anything you can imagine. Yeah, I
had exactly enough money for the weekend to pay for
that one night. And then I had to call and
ask for some favors because he did not even come
close to offering here's your bill, and it was like
eighteen dollars, No big deal. But I think I had
twenty for the entire weekend. Of course, this is back

(01:32:39):
in the early eighties, right when twenty bucks actually meant something.
But I've had that happen. It was embarrassing as health like,
never doing that again, Yeah, never assuming that again.

Speaker 5 (01:32:48):
Yeah, because that is that kind of assumption gets made
all the time.

Speaker 4 (01:32:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:32:52):
Right, So if you have a friend who's become a celebrity,
you know that that person is always going to be
assumed that because they're quote unquote rich and famous, they
should be able to pay for everything, when all that
does is just change the paradigm of the friendship into
becoming like an ATM. I would feel used if my
friends all of a sudden expected me to pay for

(01:33:12):
anything just because now I might be doing better.

Speaker 6 (01:33:15):
Right, unless it's Jim and it's you, Me and Ross,
then well, you know, what.

Speaker 4 (01:33:23):
If Friendly is in there, that does that change things? Yeah?
You should buy his drink. What if Maxwell's in there,
does that change things? You should buy history? You're talking
about people who come on the show for free, Broye, No,
it ain't a never free you can't give him ain't
never freebody all right four oh seven nine one six

(01:33:43):
one four one Again, you can always text us at
seven seven zero three one.

Speaker 6 (01:33:47):
That's why I think we gave Maxwell up out of BURBA. Yeah,
he's good for the next ten years.

Speaker 4 (01:33:50):
I think. I think now I would have no problem
with it because I don't know. I just don't let
stuff like that bother me anymore. It used to really
get under my skin, but I just don't get it.
The master bedroom, yeah, well like I wouldn't. I don't
think we would care about I've maybe care more than
I did. I don't know if I would or not.
I don't know that she does either. To be honest
with you, we just take, you know, we take whatever.
We move on.

Speaker 5 (01:34:09):
I think it's beyond like who wants the bedroom or not.
I think the difficulty is that couple ended up creating
a weird vibe for the rest of the weekend for
simply not just being upfront. Right, Okay, I'm going to
do all this planning, but just so everyone understands, I'm
willing to do the work. But then my husband and
I would like to have the best room in the house. Yeah,
man in exchange, and if there's a problem, then you

(01:34:30):
work it out before everyone spent the money and taking
the time.

Speaker 6 (01:34:33):
We made it the poll of the day, the question
of the day. It's in our YouTube chat, Real Radio,
Dot FM, slash Watch, but on the texting service heavily
in favorite of you book it you get the best
for a really.

Speaker 4 (01:34:46):
Yeah, A lot of people are And it's interesting because,
and again I agree with what you guys are saying.
I do believe that if it's upfront, you should you know,
you maybe should say, hey, look, you know i'm booking this.
You know my husband and I are going to get
the master bedroom. But that's even weird to say. I
think it's even safer just to say that. I think
the other people should have realized, hey, look, this woman
worked her ass on to make sure that we're not

(01:35:07):
gonna have any problems with this trip. The least we
can do is let them have the nicest room. I mean,
I think that's what kind of should happen.

Speaker 5 (01:35:13):
Well, when did the drawing of the straws come in?
I mean, if this is has this been something they've
done before and this trip changed that?

Speaker 4 (01:35:19):
I think that was an assumed scenario from the other couples. Okay,
that's what I think is when they came in there,
I think one of the other couples basically said, hey, look,
you know, let's put some numbers in a hat, and
whoever gets this number gets the master bedroom. And then
the woman said, no, no, no, wait a minute. Now. I
spent like, you know, fifteen hours or so booking this trip,
making sure everything was gonna go fine, and I hooked
everything up. You know, I thought that, you know, we

(01:35:40):
were going to get the master bedroom.

Speaker 5 (01:35:41):
Well, and as you know how to spell the word assume,
whenever you assume, you make an ass out of you
and me.

Speaker 4 (01:35:48):
Thank you. Felix grand Is, You're five o'clock keyword g R,
A and D. Go to real Radio dot FM and
send that away for your chance at a thousand bucks
back in a second with more than Jim Colbert Joe.

Speaker 28 (01:36:00):
Radio is the News joking, he said, I had a
diet mountain dew yesterday. He drinks diet mountain dew as
an adult, and I'm so sorry. Some of you are
seven on it right now and you're gonna be so
pissed to me. But that's loser. Eight man, you gotta
grow up.

Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
The news choking weekdays. It eleven on Real Radio one
oh four point one.

Speaker 17 (01:36:19):
Cruise working on an accident blocking the right lane.

Speaker 16 (01:36:21):
Florida's turntied southbound after State.

Speaker 17 (01:36:23):
Route fifty tapping the brakes ie for eastbound between one
ninety two and five thirty five. It's also a slow
ride on I four westbound between sand Lake Road and
five thirty five. See traffic troubles called.

Speaker 16 (01:36:37):
The Valvelene Instant Oil Change.

Speaker 17 (01:36:39):
Traffic tipline at eight sixty six six seven six eight
four seven seven from the traffic Center.

Speaker 3 (01:36:45):
I'm Katie Wilkins.

Speaker 4 (01:36:47):
This report is sponsored by Fresh from Florida.

Speaker 20 (01:36:50):
Summer starts early in Florida, which means we get more
beach time, more sunshine, and more time to enjoy refreshing,
sweet and juicy Florida watermelon. The best part of summer
is already locally grown Fresh from Florida watermelon. There's sunshine
in every BikeE guy, you.

Speaker 1 (01:37:05):
Heard it talking about what's in the good sauce with
Ross Paget Today. It's six on the Jim Colbert Show,
Ay Colver Crew.

Speaker 13 (01:37:12):
It's Sarah, I have a friend, getting married in July
and her bachelorette party is in June. All of a sudden,
I get stuck into a group chat with twenty eight
other women. There are thirty women possibly going to this
bachelorette party, and they keep talking about doing like group
rates for hotels. So some of these girls, there's like
three or four girls in the one hotel room, and

(01:37:34):
I'm not about that, and I can't afford to stay
in a room by myself, so I simply am not going.

Speaker 16 (01:37:39):
Okay, goodbye.

Speaker 4 (01:37:40):
Oh wow. That's one way to do it. You know,
you gotta look at your options.

Speaker 6 (01:37:47):
Yeah, if you don't want to spend be in a
room with a bunch of people and it's too expensive
for you, sometimes you just have to pass.

Speaker 29 (01:37:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:37:55):
Yeah, Grand is your five o'clock keyword. That's g R
A N D. Slide over to real Radio dot him
and send that away for your chance in a thousand bucks.
Grand is the word, guys, good luck. I'm Jim, there's
deb and Jack as well. Just saw something really interesting online. Uh,
not the topic we're going to talk about this segment,
because I have something kind of fun, uh, but an

(01:38:16):
interesting topic.

Speaker 8 (01:38:17):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:38:17):
Spirit Airlines has been a gigantic story in America now
for about a week, is that right? Yeah? Bit a week,
you know, and still today dominating the dominating some of
the news cycle.

Speaker 20 (01:38:28):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (01:38:28):
Why it went out of business? What caused it? Of course,
there are certain groups of people saying it was because
the fuel costs went up. Some people saying that the
merger that they were denied back when Biden was president
is the reason why it didn't go through, because they
were supposed to merge with either Frontier or Jet Blue,
Jet Blue or something.

Speaker 6 (01:38:44):
We're saying if they did merge, it could have might
have taken Jet Blue down.

Speaker 4 (01:38:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:38:48):
Well now they're saying it was quote geopolitical situation.

Speaker 4 (01:38:52):
So a myriad reasons why you could say it happened.
But either way, it's happened and Spirit is no longer flying.
So I was just ripping through Instagram during the last
break and I hit this one as I rolled up.
It's this guy and he's on an airplane. He's wearing
a yellow T shirt and he leans into the camera
and he says, so I hear there's a bunch of

(01:39:13):
yellow airplanes for sale. It's the owner of the Savannah Bananas.
Oh oh, Wow, Like how cool is that? Like, I
don't know how much that thing is worth. But do
you know they have nine full time teams that travel
all over the US. Now it's not just one team, right,
So they've expanded and it's about to debut. I believe

(01:39:34):
it's on the CW locally. You can watch these games,
and they put together a little league. They put together
a smaller league half a dozen teams or so, and
that's the idea that they're going to play in different city.
And it's just banana ball, right, that's what they call it.
Banana ball, just fun baseball. That's kind of clown show.

(01:39:56):
Harlem Globe Roudder's kind of baseball. What do you think
the major leagues think of? So about that? When they
see these guys selling out football stadiums for like three
or four knights in a row. Do you think the
majors like look at that and go, man, we are
we are behind. And although it doesn't have the integrity
of real professional sports, you know, it's still fun, but
you know, the ticket still sells.

Speaker 6 (01:40:15):
It doesn't It's like the just to your point of that,
what the Harlem Globe Triders are to the NBA.

Speaker 4 (01:40:24):
Yeah, not a threat.

Speaker 6 (01:40:25):
It's a novelty, it's entertainment, it's fun, but it's no
threat to the base Major League base.

Speaker 4 (01:40:34):
I don't think it's a threat. What I'm saying is
I wonder if Major League Baseball looks at that and goes, wow,
you know, we have stadiums that don't have you know,
twenty thousand people at these games, and these guys are
selling out, you know, stadiums night after night after night.
Maybe they could start incorporating some of the things that
the bananas do not during the game itself to ruin
the integrity of the game. But maybe, like you know,
like the NBA doesn't have time, or like the football

(01:40:57):
doesn't have time, they have a time. Where are they
you know, during inning breaks, something happens that's kind of
fun while the teams are changing over during in.

Speaker 6 (01:41:05):
When's the last time you went to a Major League
Baseball game. It would have been over in Tampa two
years ago. Okay, Yeah, they do like in between innings,
whether it's trivia on the board, and they take advantage
of that. In between trivia time, they typically have a
stadium host, just like we do at the Orlando City matches,

(01:41:25):
and like you see at NBA games as well.

Speaker 4 (01:41:27):
What team has that guy that races that races people
and he gives them like one hundred yard head start.
He's called the Flash or the something like that, and
he wears a full body suit or whatever, and they
pull somebody of the stands and they give the guy
on the stands like one hundred yard head start to
race around the team around the outside of the stadium,
but you know inside the stadium, and the guy always

(01:41:49):
beats him. He's called either Speed or Flash that they
do that kind of gimmick, but nothing like the banana ball.
I mean this guys are playing on stilts.

Speaker 5 (01:41:55):
I remember the first time Chris and I went to Savannah.
We were walking around late at and stumbled upon the
Savannah Banana's tour bus and their driver was standing outside
and we're like, you know, who's who's on the bus
and he's like, Oh, it's the Savannah Bananas and we're like, yeah,
we'd love to get tickets to that, and he just
started laughing. Luck he was like, sure you are.

Speaker 4 (01:42:16):
My daughter dated one of those guys when they when
he he played baseball in college. They went to school
at the same school. She was a volleyball player. He
was a baseball player and he still plays for him.
Does he really still like one of their biggest hitters
the Atlanta Braves? Yeah, uh, you know, ri I p
Ted Turner.

Speaker 6 (01:42:30):
The Atlanta Braves had the runner popular in game entertainment
called beat the Freeze. He's the Freeze that's still sprinter
dressed in a bright blue, full body superhero suit known
as the Freeze. Yeah, U case as a randomly selected
fan along the outfield warning track, and you can't even
see his face, like it's completely covered up.

Speaker 4 (01:42:50):
I mean, he just looks like a you know, like
a like a you know, like a robot. Yeah, yeah,
that's kind of cool, right, all right? Four O seven
nine one one four one text us at seven seven
in zero three one. So have you guys seen Excuse me?
I'm so sorry for my voice, Guys, I really do apologize.

Speaker 5 (01:43:07):
Well, listen, if anybody has any like tips for someone,
I mean, because you've just been taken by these allergies
just within the last three hours.

Speaker 4 (01:43:15):
Brought honey or a cough. Well, I'm gonna get home
and take something I gotta, you know, just chill out
and try to stay inside. And I don't know, but
it's it's it's annoying as hell, and I can't imagine
how it sounds out there. But so when you guys
go to places and get food and it's a it's
a situation where you're watching, like a Chipotle scenario right

(01:43:36):
where you're watching, do you ever ask for extra protein? No,
you'd ever do.

Speaker 9 (01:43:43):
No.

Speaker 4 (01:43:43):
I can barely finish those bowls as it is already.

Speaker 6 (01:43:46):
Yeah, no, because to that's point, yeah, that's that's a
filling portion on that Is.

Speaker 5 (01:43:54):
That your way of saying it costs extra?

Speaker 4 (01:43:56):
No, it doesn't. That's the thing. It's so there's this
thing happened, and they mentioned Chipotle, but it's actually even
extended out to other stores, like people who make like
if you go to Jersey Mikes, right, and you go
and you get a cheese steak sub and while they're
making your sub, you're like, hey, don't feel you know,
don't be afraid to throw some makes your meat in
there for me, you know, and you're making So that's
become like a thing now where people are making these comments.

(01:44:18):
And now like with Chipotle specifically, you know, I guess
they're CEO kind of mentioned at one time that. You know,
if you would a little extra protein, just ask for it,
We'll give it to you. Oh what that backfire?

Speaker 6 (01:44:29):
Oh yes, it definitely back But that was a whole
social media thing where they they kind of went to
trap it. Then he got caught saying that. Then people
started doing it, and then it started costing them a
lot of problems.

Speaker 4 (01:44:41):
That's exactly right, man, it's not stopping. And I gotta
tell you, the thing that kills me about it is
like it takes that's balls, dude, Right yeah, yeah, Because
I mean if you go to sub shops or whatever
and you see those like with with publics and I
worked at a subshop and everything is pre measured, Like
when you ordered a cheese steak sub from like Gabriel Subs,
and I think there's only like one or two of
them left in a I think maybe even one. You

(01:45:01):
know when you ordered that sub, that wasn't just me
you know, just picking up as much meat as I
thought could fill that bun up. I mean that is measured.
You know, you pull it out of the cooler, it's
like six ounces of beef or whatever it is. You
chop it up, you could get you put your onions
in hair and have a price for extra meat, right, yeah,
and they even have a price with it your one
hundred percent right. But I guess now that. And I
gotta tell you, I caught myself doing this the other day,

(01:45:22):
and I did it, and I did it in a
way where I thought I was and I I didn't
even really mean it, to be honest with you, I
was just trying to make conversation with David wors I. So, dude,
it sucks, but I'm just trying to make conversation with
the guy that's making my thing. I'll tell you exactly
how it happened. You walk up to your bolt ley,
the guy goes, well, do you have it? I'm like,
I'll do a bowl with white rice, right, all right?

(01:45:43):
Do you want any beans there? Yeah? I do brown beans.
That's my order, right, white rice, bound brown beans? Anything else? Yeah?
I like the fieta edge. Just put that on there. Okay,
what protein do you want? I said, I eat carnitas
and don't be afraid, ha ha ha. I worked hard today, right,
just making a joke, right, and dude puts a little
extra on there. And I didn't say anything to him

(01:46:05):
because I was hungry. But I should have said something
to him. I should have been like, no, dude, I
was just joking. You should have said thank you. Yeah,
you're right. I didn't do that either. I actually didn't
do that, but I didn't even mean that. And when
I said when I said, when I said it, I
actually stopped myself and went, oh, dude, what are you doing.
You're being that guy. And I was just trying to
make general conversation.

Speaker 5 (01:46:26):
Not realizing he was gonna take you heart.

Speaker 4 (01:46:28):
Realizing or completely forgetting that this thing had already hit Chipotle.
I'm not a complete dick.

Speaker 5 (01:46:33):
So when Chipotle fails.

Speaker 4 (01:46:35):
No, and oh yeah, it's not because they gave me
one ounce extra carnadis one time in my life. Yea
jet fuel prices. But I gotta tell you, I gotta
tell you. I you know, if you're having a pizza, man,
I don't be afraid to throw some pepperoni on that bitch.
Don't get ready, you know you know what, You're not
counting that pepperoni, so you're just reaching into that thing
and you're just putting pepperoni on there. I don't want
to see any cheese player. I want all pepperoni with

(01:46:59):
Chippole different than like with the subplaces. You're right, it
is measured, I mean everything is measured. Yet they pull
it out.

Speaker 6 (01:47:05):
It's you know in between, you know a paper that
it's already boom, that's what you're getting. Extra meat is more.
But with Chipotle it's a spoonful. It's like, well, did
they get a heaping spoonful or was that like a level?

Speaker 4 (01:47:18):
You know how I how I do it is is
when they're putting the carneitis and they spread it out,
I can tell how thick it is, how thick the
carnaitis is much. Yeah, And if you're spread it out
and it's super tent on time and like, no, come on,
look at me, Look at me. I'm gonna need that
extra tongueful reach in there.

Speaker 6 (01:47:36):
Maybe he is looking at you and deciding this is
what you need, not what you want, probably what you need.

Speaker 4 (01:47:42):
Oh have a cough drop? Would you know?

Speaker 5 (01:47:44):
Someone is saying hybrid see our rapid immune defense system.
You can get it off Amazon. Best supplement by.

Speaker 4 (01:47:51):
Far two dates. It'll be great for the week.

Speaker 5 (01:47:54):
I know, family owned and operated, great company. Highly recommend them.
Made by a pharmacist from the mail clinic. Let's see
clariton and zyrtech. I've offered you a zyrtech, but he
said you can't take it now. I don't like like
the benadryls because those give you medicine.

Speaker 4 (01:48:09):
Head. No, I don't like medicine.

Speaker 6 (01:48:12):
You have a tickle and you keep coughing, and that's
why you keep clearing your phone.

Speaker 4 (01:48:15):
I didn't tickle him easy.

Speaker 6 (01:48:17):
The cough drop will at least soothe that for a
while so you can get through the show. I have
one of my desk because I had this a week ago.

Speaker 4 (01:48:25):
I'll take it all right, because the thing is is,
every time I open my mouth and go to make
make a sound, I get that weird coffee thing in
the back of my throat and I feel like an
ass trying to talk. And I know it again, it
has to sound awful. It doesn't. But you can hear.

Speaker 5 (01:48:39):
You can hear your congestion level getting worse and worse
as the show goes on.

Speaker 6 (01:48:43):
It's the worst, and it's really hard to keep my
head off, all right, four o seven.

Speaker 4 (01:48:51):
That's not what that mouth is.

Speaker 5 (01:48:53):
Their allergies, Jack, It's not always going to give you anything.

Speaker 4 (01:48:56):
We always say it's allergies, don't we Yeah, well, yeah,
hundred and one point two thousand comments on this story
about this Chipotle thing, and there are a lot of
people are like, you know what, there's nothing wrong with
asking a little if they if they don't want to
put it on there, they don't have to put it
on there. But I can ask them. Maybe I'll get
an Employeeho'll thro a little bit on there for me,
have a little freak waw. And by the way, they
don't mention like any other stuff that you ask for,

(01:49:18):
because I've asked for extra feeata edgies all the time,
and I ask for their their pico de gayo, I'll
get something to go with me I want, and they
have no problem with that. Extra rice, no problem with that.
But the proteins, you know, they're keeping an eye.

Speaker 5 (01:49:29):
On well, of course, I mean again going to the
grocery store and look at it, specifically the price of beef.
Oh god, you know it could be in the future
they're gonna lay one faheta stripped across your rice and
be like, enjoy sir.

Speaker 4 (01:49:40):
They're just gonna wave it over the top of it.
I guess meat juice to smell exactly.

Speaker 5 (01:49:45):
Maybe a couple drops of meat juice on your rice,
and then they're gonna put that Heata strip back in
the pan with everything else.

Speaker 4 (01:49:52):
I still liked. I still am a big fan of Chipotle.
I still like them away. Oh yeah, without a doubt.
I haven't been there in years. Oh dude, you should go,
are you kid? Did you want to go to a
mom and pop place or a Madre Padre place? But
the problem is it's hard to find mom and pop
places that do what they do. They do the fast
casual thing where you build it right there in front
of you like that. There's like nobody out there. There

(01:50:12):
was a Greek place that Dev and I absolutely loved
around the corner that did the same theory, and it
was the absolute best. Why can't you support family restaurants
instead of having to go to a fast some family
owned Chipotle. See I support them? Oh body, yeah, I
don't know where any of them that does that. I
don't know any family restaurant that does that.

Speaker 5 (01:50:31):
You want to do taco time up in our neck
of the woods.

Speaker 4 (01:50:34):
You know what the funny thing is, we were mentioning yesterday,
there's not another good Takorea in that area. Taco time.
Is it really worse? I love of old nineteen.

Speaker 6 (01:50:42):
Hello yesterday started selling tacos.

Speaker 5 (01:50:48):
Thank you, thank you, Jimmy, give me some knuck on
that the real mom and pop. Yeah, exactly tacos. Nothing
says Taco Tuesday like I'm going to wah wah hey
destination die. Yeah right, you should write a cookbook, Jack.

Speaker 4 (01:51:04):
You know what's sad?

Speaker 6 (01:51:05):
I realized not only did I have dinner there last night,
it was my lunch today.

Speaker 5 (01:51:08):
Is really Hey, everyone's looking to save money right now
anyway they can.

Speaker 4 (01:51:13):
I had a dollar off a wrap, we want a
tea one of Flats yesterday, and let's just say this,
they were not prepared for the crowd for sinking to
my own surprising. They were not repared at all. I
mean not even close into forty forty four forty five
minutes to wait for a taco plate at Tijuana Flats.
We went to order my daughter or something because she
was at the house to take with us, and the

(01:51:34):
girl looks at me and I said, hey, I need
to order takeout, and she looks at me straight up
before she even punches one button, says it's gonna be
an hour before you get any food, So we actually
had to go somewhere else to get her food because
we couldn't even order it from there. WHOA, have you
been to Big Taco yet?

Speaker 27 (01:51:48):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:51:48):
I haven't. I don't even know what it is, so
Big Taco is? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:51:53):
Or the sons of the same guy who was the
originator of Tijuana Flats, Yeah, who then he went to
Tibby's and his son's up Big Taco, which is like
what ta Wana Flats was when they first opened.

Speaker 4 (01:52:04):
Is it? How a boy ucf? I assume I have
to look where the locations are. I know they've brought
us food before, you know. And the funny thing is
te want of Flats does hold a really unique spot
because it is you know, it's it's a step above
Taco Bell. But it's not like going to a Mexican
restaurant per se. Yeah, it is a fast, casual place.
And I mean, I'll tell you, our food was good.
I mean, even though we waited for it for a while.
The beef was hot, it was all good that the

(01:52:25):
shells were nice and crispy, the veggies were fresh, and
it was good.

Speaker 5 (01:52:29):
So our the best listening audience ever is weighing in
at seven seven zero three one Jim, just a little
dab of heroin between the cheek and gums will fix
you up. But really, someone has just the perfect recipe
of what you're going to do tonight. Hot toddy yea
and lemon juice, hot water and a shot or.

Speaker 4 (01:52:45):
Two yeah of bourbon.

Speaker 6 (01:52:47):
Yeah yeah, I got that big taco Castleberry on Semaran
on Semaran right in the Castleberry Commons that's not too
far from me, and also the ol Vito on Mitchell
Hamick group.

Speaker 4 (01:52:57):
I'll be damn dude, I don't know there even I
didn't think there's more than one. Wow, all right four
our seven nine one six one o four one text
us seven seven zero three one grand is your five
o'clock key word. That's g R, A and D. Just
slide over to Real Radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Look him up, guys,
as time for trivia. We'll do that next.

Speaker 3 (01:53:15):
Robots.

Speaker 1 (01:53:16):
Don't get sarcast I'm rebaiting it Real Radio one oh
four point one guaranteed human.

Speaker 4 (01:53:24):
This is Doug Gottlieb. Here's what's trending from the Iheartsports Network.

Speaker 5 (01:53:27):
Presented by iHeart Advertising dot Com, the.

Speaker 4 (01:53:30):
NFL and the Referezian you know both tomorrow to okay,
a new collective.

Speaker 24 (01:53:33):
Party, Jimmy Ginger Brandy in honor of Bath.

Speaker 4 (01:53:39):
That will help.

Speaker 6 (01:53:40):
Here's the ghost of Christmas Future or the ghost of
Jim's future voice.

Speaker 4 (01:53:46):
Okay, mister Jim, Oh god.

Speaker 24 (01:53:49):
That'd be very kind.

Speaker 4 (01:53:51):
You hear this voice. You don't want it to get
that back? This start in January. I can't shake it,
so take.

Speaker 3 (01:54:00):
Care of it.

Speaker 9 (01:54:01):
I have no idea what I got.

Speaker 3 (01:54:03):
It doesn't hurt and I can breathe.

Speaker 9 (01:54:06):
Okay, but I lost my normal Michael voice.

Speaker 24 (01:54:10):
This is crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:54:12):
Don't get that bad. Okay, you hear that. Gimme don't
get that bad. I promise I'll try, all right, Glad,
we solve that. Grand is your five a cluck key
word g R A n D. Go to real Radio
dot FM and send that away for your chance that
one thousand dollars. Grand guys, that is your five o'clock

(01:54:34):
key word. Good luck, Welcome back on, Jim. There's dead. Hello,
Jack is here as well. Hello, Hello, there you go,
and he has the old Jackie sach. Let's get it.
Let's do sorry, give him time. Okay, from here we go,

(01:54:54):
all aboard, chug at chugacho, Look at a black look
at a clack. All right, here we go. I have
a couple of prizes for you, and the winner gets
the pick.

Speaker 10 (01:55:01):
It's a lovely.

Speaker 6 (01:55:03):
Little system we have. We offer prizes, we give them
away for free. It's just a way of thank you
for playing along with our little show here.

Speaker 4 (01:55:10):
We love you.

Speaker 6 (01:55:11):
It's a pair of tickets to see Orlando City take
on Atlanta United FC at Interncoast Stadium. This is happening
May sixteenth. That's a week from Saturday. You can be there.

Speaker 4 (01:55:21):
Orlando City. They just experienced a big high.

Speaker 6 (01:55:24):
Let's see if they can keep that going as they
take on our foes from Atlanta. Also in the Jackie Pack,
pair of tickets to see The Strokes. The band is
playing at the Benchmark International Arena. That's in Tampa, y'all.
And this is happening September twelfth, So you have time
to pick out what you're gonna wear if that's what

(01:55:45):
you choose. If you are a winner of JCS Trivia,
like it was the first caller every day.

Speaker 4 (01:55:52):
Again, not today, not today, will it be? Will it won't?

Speaker 21 (01:55:56):
Be.

Speaker 6 (01:55:56):
That is what's in the Jackie sat So back to you,
clickety class.

Speaker 4 (01:56:00):
Thank you, deb Bro. One, two, three, or four.

Speaker 5 (01:56:03):
We're going to the back of the line today. We're
going number five.

Speaker 4 (01:56:05):
Oh no, that's four. We'll go for oh four, Sorry, Shelley.
How you doing?

Speaker 3 (01:56:11):
Oh I'm great.

Speaker 21 (01:56:12):
How are you doing?

Speaker 27 (01:56:12):
Good?

Speaker 4 (01:56:13):
Shelley. Want to play a little game with us, Let's
do it. No, we're not all right, Shelley. This is
a real easy game. You got a question here for
you have four answers. One of these answers is not true, Shelley.
If you can find it, I will send you over
to see jack with a Jackie sack and you can
pick out something nice for yourself. Are you ready?

Speaker 21 (01:56:34):
I'm ready.

Speaker 4 (01:56:35):
Here we go on this day in eighteen fifty six.
That's one eight five six. Controversial scientist, neurologist, father of psychoanalysis. Oh,
Sigmund Freud. That's right. He wants you to know. He
wants to know how you thought about your mother. Uh,
that's right.

Speaker 5 (01:56:51):
It's the whole penis envy things.

Speaker 1 (01:56:52):
He likes me.

Speaker 4 (01:56:53):
That's right. Sigmund Freud was born on this day. Here
in three fun facts about Sigmund and one Freudian line, Oh,
I see what you did? Alright, here we go, we're
talking about Sigmund Freud. Uh, tell me which one of
these is not true? Number one Sigmund Freud smoked up
to fifteen cigars a day. Number two Sigmund Freud died
by assisted suicide. Number three Sigmund Freud was addicted to

(01:57:14):
cocaine for two years. Or lastly, Sigmund Freud was nominated
for the Nobel Prize thirteen times. But number one, oh,
the Susan Lucief signed. Which of those is a lie?
Number three? No, that's absolutely true. Sigmund Freud was an
addict for two years. As a matter of fact, he
wrote in his journal that he actually went to other

(01:57:37):
doctors and said that he thought it was a miracle
drug and actually told people and pushed it as a
as a as a cure for a number of things.
The cocaine, right, and then he found out two years
later he goes, he literally made the he goes, hey,
wait a minute, this is ruining my life, like and
then he stopped. I mean, that's exactly what happened, and
he stopped talking about it all together because he realized

(01:57:58):
he was wrong, and he was embarrassed, so we never
mentioned it again.

Speaker 5 (01:58:00):
Well, those are the early days where heroin and cocaine
were treated as Analygjesus.

Speaker 4 (01:58:04):
That's right. One, two or three? Deb We're gonna go three.
Three is Paul, Paul? How you doing, buddy?

Speaker 3 (01:58:12):
Doing good?

Speaker 4 (01:58:12):
Boss? We're talking about Sigmund Freud here, Which one of
these is not true? Number one Sigmund Freud smoked up
to fifteen cigars a day. Number two Sigmund Freud died
by assisted suicide. Or lastly, Sigmund Freud was nominated for
the Nobel Prize thirteen times but never won. Number two. No,
that's absolutely true. Sigmund Freud died by assisted suicide. His

(01:58:32):
cancer had become so painful. He had a doctor friend
of his and he begged him, said could you please
you know in this for me, and he basically injected
him with a bunch of drugs and killed him. Wow.
I did not know that until today. And I actually
knew a little bit about Sigmund Freud because in college
I was a little fascinated by him and never heard
that fact and read it a couple of times today.

Speaker 5 (01:58:51):
Wow, the first assisted suicide.

Speaker 4 (01:58:53):
Yeah, yeah, one or two One one is Dano or
Dano how you doing. Hey, I'm good, Thank you good.
But you get a fifty to fifty shot here at
going to the old Jackie sack. We're talking about Sigmund Freud.
Which of these is not true? Sigmund Freud smoked up
to fifteen cigars a day, or Sigmund Freud was nominated
for the Nobel Prize thirteen times but never won. Let's

(01:59:14):
go number one. That's the one monay out of curiosity.
Do you think he smoked more or less than fifteen
cigars a day? I'm gonna say more if he was
doing all that cocaine. Yeah, dude, he was smoking in
anywhere from twenty to twenty five cigars every day of
his life and he got mouth cancer from it. So

(01:59:36):
you're a winner, Bud. He'm gonna put you on hold.
He was nominated for the Nobel Prize thirteen times, but
he never won. Here's something else I found out today
that I did not know about Sigmund Freud. Do you
think scientists of the day respected him. No, they did
not at all. As a matter of fact, during one
of the Nobel Prize things, they they asked Albert Einstein

(01:59:59):
or they were excuse me, I'm sorry. Albert Einstein was
asked to endorse his pitch for the Nobel Prize, to
like co sign off on it, like as if to say,
I'm his mentor and sponsor. I believe that he should
win this because of this, and he would not even
come close to it because he thought it was pseudo science.
He thought it was all fake, all trash, and a
lot of scientists of that day did not give it

(02:00:21):
any credit whatsoever, which I find interesting because when I
got into school and started talking about Sigmund Freud, it
was kind of like he set the standard. It was him.
And who did the Pavlovian thing? Pavlov's dog. Pavlov's dog. Yeah,
that's how he got the name right. There was another
one too, though, There was another very famous Carl Jung.

Speaker 5 (02:00:43):
Yeah yeah, with synchronicity.

Speaker 4 (02:00:45):
Yeah, yeah, exactly. He was one of eight siblings. He
spoke how many languages, seven languages. Did he like the
US or did he hate the US? He did. He
hated the United States of America, really he did. He
had a he had a complete disdain for this country.

(02:01:07):
And it was a number of things. It was the
politics but he also said that everyone was oafish, Oh wow,
and under educated.

Speaker 5 (02:01:15):
No, that can't possibly be sure.

Speaker 4 (02:01:17):
And then lastly here, yeah, but what was this what
probably the nineteen twenties. Yeah, he was born in fifty
six and died in the early or thirties I believe. Wow, yeah,
thirty six or something like that. And then lastly, here
Hollywood mogul Samuel Samuel Goldwyn, you know Goldwyn Mayor right,
offered Freud one hundred thousand dollars to write a script

(02:01:39):
that incorporated his science into the greatest love stories of
our time. Right, he wanted basically a scientific explanation of
why these stories were such great love stories. He thought
that would be a wonderful movie. Uh, Freud turned that down.
How much do you think one hundred thousand dollars was
in today's money back then seven million, a billion now

(02:02:00):
one point nine million dollars. But he said no to it,
and he wasn't like a wealthy, wealthy guy. He said
no that He actually said no to twenty five thousand
dollars the year before for something similar. So this guy
turned down like a couple million dollars of his life
just because he didn't want to do it because he
didn't think that it was valuable enough for his work.
And then lastly four of his sisters died Nazi concentration camps.

(02:02:20):
Oh oh wow, he's Austrian. Yeah yeah, crazy right all
right four seven nine one six one four one textus
seven seven zero three one. Got a fresh keyword for
you in a few minutes, and Ross Paget on the
other side of.

Speaker 3 (02:02:30):
This break, It's time to show you're weird.

Speaker 1 (02:02:33):
The twenty twenty six Orlando International Pringe Theater Festival celebrates
thirty five years of Weird May twelve through the twenty
fifth in lockhav In Park. Tickets available now at Orlando Fringe.

Speaker 5 (02:02:43):
Dot RG from the Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash
called Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw dot Com.

Speaker 17 (02:02:51):
Just ends up traveling in downtown or Orlando. Orange Avenue
southbound is closed between Conquered Street and Livingston Street due
to an event taking place there.

Speaker 4 (02:03:02):
Accident blocking the right deposit. Enter it now on our
website Real Radio dot FM.

Speaker 1 (02:03:07):
Good luck, we return, We return to the Jim Colbert Show,
already in progress.

Speaker 4 (02:03:17):
Another talk back of Jim's future voice.

Speaker 29 (02:03:26):
All Right, Colbert crew, Hey, that guy sounded like me,
I don't know what in the world happened to my voice,
but it's the same thing about six months ago, it
just quit. I don't know what happened wilding different. But

(02:03:48):
now I can't talk and it don't hurt. I don't
know either.

Speaker 4 (02:03:52):
I wish he would tell me what's.

Speaker 5 (02:03:53):
Wrong, Dan, that's wild That is two phone calls one afternoon,
same symptoms.

Speaker 4 (02:03:59):
Jim has it now. I know the guy that Mike,
the guy who calls before he works keeping up a
piece of property, a big piece of property. Say he's
out there on a farm. He's always out around, you know,
the trees and grass and stuff like that, so it
makes sense for him to have allergy. Stuff. I live
on a piece of property with a bunch of that
around as well, so I but I don't know that that.
I don't know that it even matters, right, I mean,

(02:04:20):
you can have the same allergy like at Jack's house
or your house is I mean, I don't know that
the surroundings really matter, right. If it's till pollin, then
you have a live oak, you're gonna get it. Yeah,
I mean, I would think it doesn't need to even
be in your yard. I think you could just be
out and around. That stuff is microscopic and it's floating
around everywhere, and I only get hit by certain stuff,
and oak is one of those things that hits me.

(02:04:41):
And I don't know what happened, dude. I actually didn't
have this until this afternoon, and it just started going crazy.

Speaker 5 (02:04:47):
It started about the time that I got in at
one point thirty. That was when you just kept coughing
and coughing. But your congestion has increased over the last
few whiles.

Speaker 4 (02:04:55):
And again, it's not sick. I don't know. I do
not feel sick at all. There's no aches, no nothing
like that. I know that because I do. You guys
know your body relatively well when it comes to that,
Like you can have a little something happen and all
of a sudden you're like, oh, man, I know that's
gonna be bad.

Speaker 5 (02:05:08):
I know my body well enough to know that it
will be outside your front door at twelve o'clock noon tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (02:05:12):
Afternoons you're coming Okay, you're coming in. You're coming in right,
You're gonna be in right, yeah, yeah, we're waiting on
your answer the door. Please, Jimmy, answer the door. You're
six o'clock. Keyword is deposit the E P O s
I T go to real radio dot FM and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Deposit
is the word. Guys, go get that money. Jim, answer
that door. You're waiting on Ross to give us a call.

(02:05:34):
We're supposed to be talking to us now about good
Sauce in the episode coming up tonight. And you forgot
it's Wednesday. Maybe it does, I mean I did. I
did that with Jim when I was calling to promote
the show when when we were first starting, and I
would forget occasionally. I mean, and it's not that big
of adea. It would be the first one that he
ever did it, right. I don't think he's ever missed one.
I don't think he's ever forgotten. Yeah, so we'll talk

(02:05:55):
about this a little bit before or as Ross was calling.
Have you guys been reading anything about what's happening to
Mexico City? No? No, have you no? What do you
think is happened to Mexico City? Now?

Speaker 6 (02:06:10):
We're guessing, okay, drug lords running crazy arms of chimbo.
Mexico City is sinking at such an alarming ring that
it's visible from space.

Speaker 10 (02:06:21):
WHOA.

Speaker 4 (02:06:23):
Imagery from a powerful NASA radar system is revealing rates
of more than one half inches a month. WHOA, making
the city one of the planet's fastest sinking capitals. They
can take you, this is a CNN story if you
want to check it out, and you can go and
they have some photographs that are available here, and you
can look and see applazas that have sunk and to

(02:06:45):
the point where there are sideways or you know, you
could see a visible change in their makeup. It says,
over the years, the aquafer underneath Mexico City has been
pumped so over pumped that it's caused the land above
it to subside. Over extraction has also contributed to a
chronic water crisis that have left the city of or
Mexico City facing a potential day zero where the taps

(02:07:07):
run completely dry.

Speaker 5 (02:07:09):
Oh, the images are insane.

Speaker 4 (02:07:12):
How many people do you think live there in Mexico
City in general? Yeah? Eleven million? Ooh, that's a good gas.

Speaker 6 (02:07:21):
If you double it, I'm gonna go, like twenty twenty
two million people live in Mexico City.

Speaker 4 (02:07:27):
Got it? Jet How about that? It says, the sprawling
yellow is also one of the world's biggest city, stretching
out a high altitude like I think it's like three
thousand miles. Let me see, they have three hundred three
thousand miles or something. It covers some crazy number. But
they're basically saying that it sits atop an ancient aquifer,
which provides around sixty percent of the drinking water for

(02:07:48):
the city's twenty two million residents. Well there he is.

Speaker 3 (02:07:55):
Well, this is embarrassing, you guys.

Speaker 4 (02:07:58):
Give it up a rock.

Speaker 8 (02:08:04):
This is awkward and uncomfortable, but let's dive right into it.

Speaker 3 (02:08:08):
I was just playing Mario Kart.

Speaker 4 (02:08:13):
Oh you shouldn't have done that, So you're you're late
to work because of a video game. Oh you couldn't
have said you're sorry. You And by the way, I
love this about you. I do. I cannot begin to
tell you how proud I am of you right now
that you didn't because you can easily do that. For
the record, when I had kids, I did it all

(02:08:33):
the time. So good on, good on, yelp, you're fired
this one. Lady's heard that already again.

Speaker 9 (02:08:43):
Time.

Speaker 8 (02:08:44):
I'm playing Mario Kart with my brother on my brother's birthday,
and if I'm being more. Listen, I'm already in the
honest canoe, right, Let's keep paddling in this truth ocean.
He was right about to leave, and I was like, dude,
it's your birthday, and.

Speaker 3 (02:09:00):
I hope he hears me. Uh.

Speaker 8 (02:09:03):
He was about to leave, and I was like, let's go,
let's call Mario Kart, just like the old days.

Speaker 3 (02:09:08):
Not knowing that I said that at five point fifty nine.

Speaker 4 (02:09:11):
Oh, did you freak out pretty hard when you look
up and realize you're supposed to be on the phone
with us at that time?

Speaker 8 (02:09:16):
Or well, if I know one thing about my brother,
I paused the game when I was in third place.

Speaker 3 (02:09:24):
I am dead last now.

Speaker 4 (02:09:26):
Still, he's gonna take the dubs when he can. Man,
he's got listen.

Speaker 3 (02:09:31):
These fingers are these fingers are hot. Though.

Speaker 8 (02:09:33):
Man, I know how to play some Mario Kart, so
this is more than that. But I genuinely apologize. This
is super embarrassing. My tail is in my proverbial legs,
No problem.

Speaker 3 (02:09:44):
Due.

Speaker 4 (02:09:45):
How's your week been?

Speaker 3 (02:09:47):
Week's been good. Honestly, it's been fine. It's been great.

Speaker 8 (02:09:51):
I'm getting I have a lot more dad time right now,
and I'm learning more and more about the smells of fatherhood.

Speaker 3 (02:09:59):
Dude.

Speaker 4 (02:09:59):
I I saw a video today and it was a baby, like,
you know, like a probably a three or four month
old baby, and the baby had a onesie on that
had a zipper that went right down the middle, right,
and the mom says the thing says, I thought I
heard a fart, and then she unzips this baby's onesie.
And I'm telling you, dude, it's like they filled the
thing up with doodoo and then put the baby in it. Ah,

(02:10:23):
So I get you.

Speaker 8 (02:10:24):
Look, there's uh, I mean, I don't want to get
too gross, but every parent knows exactly what I'm about
to bring up, and it's that diaper genie, Right, Jim,
you're actually the first person I ever heard say diaper
genie or this new method of throwing away the trash
of how it's kind of like one of those snakes

(02:10:45):
in the movie Dune.

Speaker 3 (02:10:47):
Yeah, if you know what I'm talking about, then you know.

Speaker 8 (02:10:50):
If you don't, it's just a fantasy unicorn of a
trash can. But when you close off that trash bag
as it's time for it to go, wow, there's like
one blast plume of just smell that escapes that bag

(02:11:10):
and uh, I have cried one from my ears and
eyes of how gnarly that is.

Speaker 4 (02:11:19):
There's so much because it holds like fifty diapers. So
what you realize is when you've twisted, you know, and
for people who don't know what a diaper genie is,
put the damn thing in there and you twist it,
and it seals the diaper up in the bag, like
in a long plastic bag. So they're all sealed up individually.

Speaker 6 (02:11:33):
It's a snake but made out of plastic bag material
and it's coiled and spune in between each one.

Speaker 4 (02:11:38):
But what happens is when you get you know, thirty
forty fifty diapers in that damn thing, you pull it open,
like he says, when you get that little blast of
air when you're sealing it up that last time, that's
fifty diapers have been sitting there a couple of days,
and it is boah.

Speaker 8 (02:11:52):
Yeah, there's there's so many smells in parenthood that I
had no idea that was going to happen.

Speaker 4 (02:11:58):
And there's no how about the.

Speaker 8 (02:12:01):
Smell of apple sauce that's on your left and or
right shoulder as they maybe like just you know, eat
apple sauce and then you hold them because you want
to be cute and a good parent, and then it
just has this weird crustacean that you can't get out
of any of your shirts, and it just that's the
sign I think of parenting.

Speaker 4 (02:12:19):
Yeah, yeah, hey, can I ask you a question about
your your work? Can you talk to us? Can you
talk about what just happened this past weekend at all?
I mean, are you are you okay to talk about
that or no?

Speaker 21 (02:12:30):
Ah?

Speaker 3 (02:12:30):
I don't really know. Yeah, I don't really know.

Speaker 4 (02:12:34):
I will Yeah, let's just keep it.

Speaker 3 (02:12:38):
Yeah, well, we'll keep it there.

Speaker 8 (02:12:40):
But it I have to find out exactly what I
can and cannot say.

Speaker 3 (02:12:44):
But let's just say this. I shaved my chin.

Speaker 4 (02:12:50):
I know, and you look younger. Yeah, yeah, you look good.
All right, So what's coming up on sauce?

Speaker 3 (02:12:56):
All right? Good sauce tonight? Throwing this out here, hot take.

Speaker 8 (02:13:00):
I know this is going to piss off a lot
of people, and I've already kind of brought it up
to you guys on Monday, that Orlando City match. We
need to just go back, beat beat beat, bring it
on bank. That might be the greatest sports at the
very least minimum regular season competition in the town's history.

Speaker 3 (02:13:22):
That's the greatest result. That's it. That's number one.

Speaker 4 (02:13:26):
Really, you know what the NBA Finals wife.

Speaker 8 (02:13:32):
There's that, But there's then there's the record, which is
that and.

Speaker 3 (02:13:38):
I you're right.

Speaker 4 (02:13:39):
I mean we're home of the Orlando.

Speaker 8 (02:13:40):
Storm going down three goals on the road. Yeah, yeah,
three goals on the road. First MLS team to come
back down three goals on the road.

Speaker 4 (02:13:56):
Not bad.

Speaker 3 (02:13:58):
That's in the That's an entire lead history.

Speaker 6 (02:14:00):
Against the defending champions, who also just happened to have
the greatest soccer player ever on their team.

Speaker 8 (02:14:08):
And if you want to know my honest opinion about
what Jack has said, he's right. That is, in my opinion,
the greatest soccer player to ever live.

Speaker 3 (02:14:17):
So I try.

Speaker 8 (02:14:18):
Let me give the respect where respectors do. But if
you have any bit of Orlando pride, see what I
did there. If you have any bit of heart and
love for your local community, whether it be from Altamont
to Maitland to Mount Dora to downtown Orlando, cassime everything

(02:14:41):
everyone in Central Florida. I don't want to just cut
a commercial for Orlando City, but I will let everyone
know I'm too passionate of a fan to not let
people know. I think this is the biggest result Hattrid
are number ten, who's also Argentinian.

Speaker 3 (02:14:59):
There was so so much drama in this match.

Speaker 8 (02:15:02):
One of my favorite fans, Jim, is that the first
that they have a new stadium and it's literally called
Get this News.

Speaker 3 (02:15:10):
Stadium, which is.

Speaker 4 (02:15:13):
Thoughtless.

Speaker 8 (02:15:15):
Yeah, yeah, that's like naming a company. Guess ooh sorry,
guess you caught a stray right there. Where I'm going
with this is that they had four matches. This is
this is their fourth match in MLS this season. They
had draws the first three. We are the first team

(02:15:37):
to win in that stadium and they are the first
team to lose in that stadium.

Speaker 4 (02:15:43):
Yeah. Brought that up with Brandon the other today. Remember
what we were talking about that. I was like, that's
kind of crazy too.

Speaker 8 (02:15:48):
I'm just I have to put in the work to
let people know how I'm call me crazy, but that's
my at least personally, it's my favorite Orlando sports result
of all time.

Speaker 4 (02:16:00):
Very nice is that what's on sauce to night? Is
that what we got?

Speaker 3 (02:16:02):
That's yeah, that's just a small portion.

Speaker 8 (02:16:05):
A huge other thing is is that we kind of
get into the fact that I'm pretty sure that there
is a sacrifice or something with the Orlando Magic.

Speaker 3 (02:16:13):
Still Orlando City could do that. There might be something
in the air.

Speaker 8 (02:16:17):
Another thing that we bring up Joel has his friend
show and it's dance back, It's Dad Bod dance Off.
We kind of get into a deep dive and how
us all coming to grips with how old we're getting. Jim,
is there anything that you would recommend if you could
go back in time? What would you tell your thirty
six year old self to do more so you wouldn't

(02:16:39):
feel blank at your age? Now?

Speaker 3 (02:16:43):
What is it?

Speaker 9 (02:16:43):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (02:16:43):
My god? I would probably invest more money. Uh, and
I don't know the blank feeling thing. I'd probably just
invest more. What what what do I say the wrong?

Speaker 8 (02:16:51):
No, I'm yes, I'm speaking solely physical with your body.

Speaker 4 (02:16:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 14 (02:16:57):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (02:16:58):
Probably, Oh god, dude, drink more. Yeah, work out more.
I would do a sit up. Yeah, it would work
out more. I would probably have taken a little bit
better care of myself. I'm probably gonna die at like
sixty one. It's fine. I've had a good life, but
I there's a do you remember the how old were
you when the first time that you felt like, oh,

(02:17:21):
that left leg isn't the same. So after I popped
my ACL, after that, everything kind of like you just
got you You just chilled out like after that, that's
when I realized, like and I just planted my foot
to throw a football and my ACL snapped. So that
was about Also when I couldn't skateboard anymore, that was
another indicator like that, you know if you when you
have times out. Yeah, when you took a spill on
a skateboard, you just didn't bounce back. You just didn't

(02:17:42):
hop right back up. You just go you know. Okay,
that's a good session today. Let's call that good.

Speaker 8 (02:17:47):
Because I remember back in the day, a pickup basketball
game was fun. And now at this age, a pickup
basketball game I am done?

Speaker 3 (02:17:57):
All right? Care is it is? It is not good?

Speaker 8 (02:18:00):
I need to light a prayer or light of candles,
say a prayer after a game of basketball these days.
But we're just coming to grip Smith. If you're in
your mid to late thirties, uh just throw this out here.
This episode's for you, because you're not alone. Things are hurting.
I went down when you hurt yourself via sneeze. Yeah,
it's fined.

Speaker 4 (02:18:20):
All right, good sauce the night eight o'clock and of
course Ross will be with us tomorrow right on Thursday.
Good little for mister Ross page check it a little
Higheart radio app or go to Rosscomedy dot Com. That's
also for all stand up you have there. Good job, buddy,
good seeing you, so we'll see you tomorrow. I don't
deserve you all right by alright four oh seven nine
one text seven seven zero three one. Don't forget your

(02:18:42):
six o'clock keyword is deposit the E P O S.
I T go to Real Radio Dot of him and
send that away for your chance in one thousand bucks.
Back in a second with more of the Jim Goldberg Show.

Speaker 1 (02:18:52):
Coming up tonight on Real Radio at seven, It's a
Corporate Time with Tom and Dan, brought to you by
My Eternal Vitality dot.

Speaker 3 (02:18:58):
Com and Modern Plumbing Edition.

Speaker 1 (02:19:00):
At nine pm, It's Real Left with comedians James McGill
and Ken and Real Music starts tonight at ten on
Real Radio one on four point one.

Speaker 3 (02:19:09):
Pretty busy out there this evening. There's a crash.

Speaker 17 (02:19:12):
Blocking the right shoulder I for westbound before the Beachline
stop and go on I for westbound between San Lake
and five thirty five.

Speaker 16 (02:19:19):
Another accident causing some.

Speaker 17 (02:19:21):
Slowdowns on Florida's Turnpike southbound just after State Route fifty
right lane is blocked. See traffic troubles called the Bevelene
instant oil chains Traffic tipline at eight six six six
seven six eight four seven seven from the traffic Center.
I'm Katie Wilkins.

Speaker 10 (02:19:37):
This report days sponsored by blindster dot com. Hi, I'm
Kyle at Blindster. Buying custom blinds shouldn't be complicated or stressful.
That's why we make it simple and affordable. You measure,
you install, and you say big on custom blinds.

Speaker 27 (02:19:51):
Or there are all these stories of men losing their
voices and thought I'd call in with a public service announcement.
There is a BA house just off of Cimmarron. It's
called the Bald and the Beautiful b A L L E.
D Uh.

Speaker 4 (02:20:10):
There's a big outbreak of DLV.

Speaker 10 (02:20:12):
The down low virus. Owner says, blame it on your oar.
What blame it out of your what?

Speaker 4 (02:20:20):
You don't want to know.

Speaker 6 (02:20:22):
Jim James, there was a guitar on there and I
figured I'd do a little, did you as well?

Speaker 10 (02:20:28):
Let's go.

Speaker 3 (02:20:41):
My back hurts. Okay, that's all I got.

Speaker 4 (02:20:45):
Good job, buddy, good job. Deposit d E P O
S I T. That is your keyword for the six
o'clock hour. Get over to real radio down at pimensend
that away for your chance in one thousand bucks. Deposit, guys,
that is your word. Go get it, get it. Jim,
there's dead. Hello. Jack is here as well.

Speaker 10 (02:21:02):
Hello.

Speaker 4 (02:21:05):
So looking at this last story of the day, I
kind of found this interesting because, you know, the tipping
culture has always been one of those things that is
very I don't know, it's it's polarizing to a lot
of people. Right, oh, very this is a Newsweek story today.
I saw and there is a certain group of people
and here's what they do. A thing called the omni calculator,

(02:21:26):
and the omni calculator calculates how much how much money
each group of people, like you know, generational group spends
on tipping per month. Right, So they just kind of
do this calculator. They figure it out what generation do
you believe skips tipping all together? The most?

Speaker 5 (02:21:44):
Oh, I'm gonna millennials, I'm I'm gonna go zoomers.

Speaker 4 (02:21:50):
Millennials is the answer. Really, Millennials are more likely than
any other generation does skip tipping all together. What generation
tips the most consistently.

Speaker 5 (02:22:00):
I'm gonna go with the greatest generation generation X.

Speaker 4 (02:22:03):
Boomers is the answer. Damn it, Boomers is the number.
And by the way, the Boomer thing is ingrained simply
because of how people were brought up. They feel like,
if you don't tip, it's rude. Millennials do not look
at it like that. And it is a really interesting
story because it does show a clear And this is
based on a five hundred US adults millennials with the

(02:22:24):
generation most likely to spend nothing on tips in a
typical month, with six percent saying they live zero in gratuities.

Speaker 6 (02:22:33):
All right, that's I've seen in some instances. But I
believe this could also be a product of over tipping.
Whereas we used to do it would be you know,
for service industry restaurants and stuff, you would normally tip, right, so,
but then it became where everyone was had a hand

(02:22:54):
out for a tip, tip chards, and then since it
became everywhere that people found it easier to just tune
it out totally. So it might have been where tipping
was now expected every time they flip that iPad around
or whatever counter service you're getting, and there where people
are just now saying, okay, it's too much, I'm not tipping.

Speaker 4 (02:23:18):
Any It's actually different than that. You're ready, I mean no, no,
you're a hundred percent right. All that is true. Millennials
are so against this culture of tipping that they actually
avoid places that have those screens that ask you to
tip before you close out your tab, like your Starbucks.
Like when you go to Starbucks and Starbucks, if you're
out there, that thing sucks, It sucks, and you know,

(02:23:41):
love your products, that that thing sucks when you shove
that thing in your face, in somebody's face and your
and your worker says, this has got a question to
ask you, you know, before you pay or whatever. I
mean that is that is a very uncomfortable scenario for
everyone involved. How about this? And I know that a
lot of people pay, and the problem is is ever
nobody pays with cash anymore? Right, right, so you don't

(02:24:03):
you don't have the ability to slide in a dollar
or the change left over from a purchase, like if
it's you know, if it's eight dollars and eighty cents
and you give them a ten, you know, just keep
the change dollar twenty, whatever the case may be. You
hit them me some coffee, off we go. But when
with credit cards, they have to put that thing out there. Well,
they found that millennials just don't go to those places anymore,
and they don't care how much they like them, they

(02:24:23):
will avoid them. Sixty six percent of those people polled say,
I simply don't even go to those places that ask
me to do that anymore.

Speaker 5 (02:24:31):
I mean, I know that most people don't like on confrontation,
but come on.

Speaker 4 (02:24:35):
Yeah, yeah, and look, that's a lot when you consider
it's the entire culture. They hate Jack nailed it. They
hate everything about it because they think that the companies
should pay their employees enough to get by. They shouldn't
have to ask the customers for money on top of
the products or services they're already paying for. So when
a server.

Speaker 6 (02:24:54):
You know, in a restaurant, you know it's a tip
that they're hourly wage is a tip? Server is usually
half of minimum wage? Yeah, exactly, Starbucks, they're making sixteen
to fifty plus an hour.

Speaker 4 (02:25:07):
Yeah, yeah, which is crazy, right, I mean it says
here that despite spending less in certain situations, millennials do
tip when they go to sit down restaurants because they're
getting a service, the person is taking care of them,
and they feel like they deserve the tip. But millennials
are looking at this more black and white than any
generation before them. Like any generation, they're just simply like

(02:25:28):
they're like, give you an idea, it says three. When
they go to restaurants, they ninety three percent of the
respondents say they almost always tip there because they can
see the service being provided. It isn't just like pouring
coffee into a cup and then handing you the cup
and expecting a dollar and a half or that when
you're already making sixteen to fifteen hour to serve coffee.

Speaker 6 (02:25:49):
You tip on the cruise ship, no, because they put
it in like so on cruise ships, what they do
is they factor in a certain amount for or the
cabin crew and also your restaurant staff, and they charge
you by the day and that's added on your bill.
But every time you get a drink, they always give

(02:26:10):
you an option to sign more.

Speaker 4 (02:26:13):
Yeah. The funny thing is we actually talked about this
before and the ship I went on does not do
that with the package that I buy. They do not
even can I tell you. Most of the time they
just see the color of the card that I have
and they just go, Okay, you're good. Now. What we
did do is is because again this package I have,
we have like our own restaurant. So we tip the
We tip the servers in the restaurant for their entire week,
and we tip the wine the samolier for the entire week,

(02:26:37):
and we give them like you know, I think we
gave one of them one hundred and fifty bucks and
the other one hundred, you know, for the week of service.
But you gotta remember, we're just one couple. That restaurant's
full every night from that entire service. But other than that,
we don't tip anybody else on the boat, nobody else, No,
no bartenders or anything like that, because it doesn't ask
us to do it. We just figured it's kind of
piped into the to the package. I'd said.

Speaker 6 (02:26:58):
The cruise and I went on, every came with a
form where you could sign it. Everyone got wrung up,
every drink was wrung off.

Speaker 4 (02:27:05):
Yeah, and that's exactly the experience I had before I
started cruising. Celebrity, you know, and how we do that
even on Royal or Carnival. The ones I went before,
it was the same exact way. You got a receipt
every single time and you signed it. You're able to
throw a dollar on there, whatever the case may be.
But a lot of them now have mandatory gratitudes anyway,
or gratuities anyway. Like I think that's the deal with
this thing, is they're hitting you for like eighteen sixteen. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:27:28):
On the one I was on, it was everything you
get was eighteen percent. Gratuity was already added on the Now.

Speaker 4 (02:27:33):
Did you have a drink package? I did? You did,
and it still did that to you. Well, no, when
I got the so I didn't have alcohol.

Speaker 6 (02:27:42):
It was yeah, all non alcoholic drinks and coffee drinks
with part of the package I had, right, So when
you get that the there's a number on it, but
that was already included. But that included the gratuity, So
I assume that came out of that. The package price
was that was part of that.

Speaker 4 (02:28:01):
So I think that's why the deal is, Like when
we buy the package that we buy, we both get
a drink package and it's the premium drink package, we
can get whatever the hell we want. And I think
because of that, they already add their gratuity onto the
drink price, so you don't have to worry about doing that.
That's what I think happens with that, because I think
if I was just to not get a drink package
and pay for everyone all a cart, I would do that.

(02:28:22):
I would get the same thing. Because I saw that
happening on the boat. They just weren't doing it us.
I don't know millennial's. Millennials reluctant reluctance to tip also
reflects growing frustration across all age groups. It says here
sixty two percent of Americans say they're asked to tip
in more situations than just two years ago, and forty
percent say they actively avoid certain businesses to escape tip prompts.

Speaker 5 (02:28:46):
Well, you know what, hopefully for those businesses that rely
on that, like a Starbucks and every place else right
where you're getting counter service but you're expected to tip, ye,
maybe the millennials will help reset the industry into that
tipping expectation to go back to you've got to get
something to get something, or give something to get something. Again,
you've got to give me a service in order for

(02:29:08):
me to want to tip you, and that service shouldn't
just be swinging the iPad around.

Speaker 4 (02:29:12):
I gotta tell you you're one thousand percent right, because we
just talked about Chipotle earlier today. The Chipotle that's out
here near my place is you know, it's always very
busy because it's the only one within like four or
five miles. So I'm not joking. I mean, you know
it's exactly what I'm talking about. Right, Well, they do
it the right way. They put a tip jar at
the end of the line, right there by the register.

(02:29:32):
And what that does is if you've gotten great service
going up to then and the service from the register,
you could throw a couple bucks in there, right If
you have some cash on, you can do that. Just
the other day, I went in and I got a
dinner for my wife and I and everything went perfectly.
They did everything perfectly. Everything was fresh on the line,
it looked great, and I threw five dollars into that

(02:29:53):
jug and those people lost their mind. I'm like, well,
you gave us perfect service. I mean, you did a
great job. Everything that happened today was awesome. That's why
I like tipping I've tipped public's bag boys before because
they were courteous and nice. You're not supposed to. I
know you're not supposed to, but look, when you get
great service, Oh I agree, you can show your appreciation
for you know, with a couple bucks. And to be

(02:30:13):
honest with you, I think the person would have just
enjoyed me saying, hey man, great job today. I mean,
this was this was a really good experience that probably
would have been as much.

Speaker 5 (02:30:21):
I always have believed that everyone should have to work
a service industry job at least one point in their lives,
either retail or restaurant, something where you have to deal
with the general public, just to remind you what you
want to look and act like when you're on the
other side of that transaction. That's the best life lesson.

Speaker 6 (02:30:38):
Like at South Korea or Israel has mandatory at military service, yeah,
a couple a year or two, like you have standard
you have to work out you know.

Speaker 5 (02:30:48):
Oh yeah, exactly exactly. You have to know what it
means to serve the public. That's very cool because think
about it, how much how many attitudes would that change
with people who've never worked though those jobs before.

Speaker 6 (02:31:01):
And you can't buy your way out of it, rich people, exactly,
you got to actually do the gig.

Speaker 4 (02:31:05):
It's as fifty percent of the respondent's view pre selected
tip options on digital payment screens negatively, and sixty six
percent say they feel pressure to tip when payment screens
are visible to employees. And that's the number one thing
for me too, is with the Starbucks one And I
just stay on the Starbucks one because the guy's watching you,
Like the person's watching you do that. They're watching you
go no tip and it just feels weird. Dude, I

(02:31:27):
don't know what it is. You up, No, I man
it up. It just feels odd.

Speaker 5 (02:31:31):
Well, plus you've mentioned before how when you hit that
no tip, they're like, oh thanks, Yeah, that's the whole thing.
And then you know what, you're getting a little sneeze muffin.

Speaker 4 (02:31:40):
This is the real headline here. That isn't that millennials
are cheap, uh, this is a financial expert. He says,
it's that they're most ideologically opposed to tipping as a system.
Whereas boomers tip reflexively out of social conditioning, millennials who
do tip so consciously and millennials who don't who don't
are making an intentional statement about labor economics. In other words,

(02:32:02):
they're making a statement by not tipping, basically saying you
don't deserve it.

Speaker 6 (02:32:06):
Yeah, like and again it's for okay, you handed me
something over the counter. Is that the same as the
server who waits on you for dinner?

Speaker 4 (02:32:16):
Right? Exactly one thousand percent, it says. From an economic standpoint,
the frustration runs even deeper. Wealth concentration is tilted toward
older generations, while younger cohorts deal with higher cost of living,
housing constraints and wage pressure. And when you combine all
that together and then people are asking you for another
dollar for handing you a coffee, people just get pissed off.
They just don't want to deal with.

Speaker 5 (02:32:37):
It anymore, understandably.

Speaker 4 (02:32:38):
So yeah, I mean I agree as well. I mean
I love tipping for great service. I love making people
feel good when they do a great job.

Speaker 5 (02:32:44):
That's for service, Yes, that's for service, right.

Speaker 4 (02:32:47):
But I don't tip you if you don't give me
good service. I mean, if I go to a restaurant
and the restaurant's nice and you give me bad service,
I will tip you the bare minimum. But if you
give me great service, I don't tip you twenty five
thirty percent. Got no problem doing that.

Speaker 6 (02:32:57):
Now, if you get bad service, you could put your
hand in a tipyard some out you should be able to.

Speaker 11 (02:33:01):
Right.

Speaker 4 (02:33:01):
I think that's all all right. Deposit is your six
o'clock key order. That's the ep O s I T
slide over to Real Radio Dot of him and send
that away for your chance in one thousand bugs, take
a little break, will come back. What do you get for?

Speaker 5 (02:33:12):
You heard it here first, We've got confirmed haunt of
virus cases rise on a luxury cruise ship.

Speaker 4 (02:33:16):
Believe it or not.

Speaker 5 (02:33:18):
The tropics are already heating up, and the world's oldest
manateee try not to be shocked, lives here in Florida.
We'll talk about that next during you heard it here first,
all would.

Speaker 4 (02:33:28):
Think we'll right come back and NEPST news and get
the hell out of here. On a Wednesday, Real.

Speaker 1 (02:33:31):
Radio is on Facebook at Real Radio one oh four one,
sponsored by the law Offices of Enerjar and Levine. Accident
attorneys called the Law Offices of ana Jar and Levin
at one eight hundred seven four seven free.

Speaker 5 (02:33:42):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven three seven
three three from the.

Speaker 4 (02:33:46):
ODO Dot com Weather Center od dot com the only
business software you will need.

Speaker 2 (02:33:53):
Hey, the Central Florida Fox thirty five Storm team uterologist
snow Bergen Here we're looking at a blend of clouds
and son over the next few days.

Speaker 3 (02:34:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:34:01):
As a kid, my dad always took me in the
liquor stores, and one time, driving across the country, was
stopped in I think it was Indiana, or maybe as Illinois,
doesn't matter, they're both kind of the same and boring. Uh,
But yeah, they have laws there where a child can
not enter at all, even with a parent.

Speaker 3 (02:34:19):
And I had to sit.

Speaker 7 (02:34:20):
Outside of the liquor store while he bought some stuff.
And I think I took every single one of my
kids in a liquor store. I mean they get free.

Speaker 2 (02:34:29):
Sampled.

Speaker 24 (02:34:30):
Ah to that guy that was making fun of us
other two with the voice and making fun of bath houses.

Speaker 9 (02:34:42):
Neither one of us know what a bath house is.
But Barry Manilow and Bette Midler sang in bath houses
and they both still have beautiful voices. And don't go
making those kind of jokes on this radio station, because
I'll come and get you.

Speaker 4 (02:35:02):
You ain't coming and get nobody. I don't think he
has a car. I'm gonna be honest, we're gonna hear
you coming on the right and lawnmowert.

Speaker 6 (02:35:10):
Malone and Bette Midler singing in bath houses. That's true though,
that is true, But I'm not sure what.

Speaker 4 (02:35:17):
Yeah, I don't know where you're gonna do? All right,
seven seven zero three one. Welcome back to the Jim
Colbert Show for AL Radio one to four point one
of Jim. There's debe Hello. Jack is here as well.
I think deposit is your six o'clock You are os
I t just get over to real Radio dot FM
and send that away for your chance on one thousand bucks. Unbelievably,
we have yet to have a winner this run two

(02:35:37):
and a half weeks now in so hopefully wait we're
halfway down. Hopefully this will charge up and we'll get
some winners soon and then they'll just come pouring in.
That'd be great. Doesn't mean we can't have a we
can't have a comeback. I mean the city had to
come back. We can have a comeback. Absolutely.

Speaker 5 (02:35:51):
Hey, listen, just remember do not sleep on those later keywords.

Speaker 4 (02:35:56):
You've been saying that, and last time it was quite
a professed actually because I mean we had a number
of winners from the tom and Dan hour, so yeah,
that definitely is good. Yeah, don't forget.

Speaker 5 (02:36:06):
I mean we've got keywords starting at nine in the
morning all the way up until nine o'clock at night.

Speaker 4 (02:36:10):
You want to give to you, Yeah, very sure. And
we have we had a winner in the cluster a
j rr.

Speaker 6 (02:36:15):
Yeah, we've had two here in Orlando, okay, seven in Jacksonville,
seven in Tampa, one in Miami two and whatspond?

Speaker 4 (02:36:23):
No, who's complaining? That's funny, right, Also coming up tomorrow,
we're gonna have Glenn Closman in for culpur Court. Will
also have Ross. Ross will be in with us tomorrow
as well, if he's not playing video games. By the way,
talk to Emily today. Are Emily the movie girl who
was in on Monday, And if you didn't get to
hear her segment, go back and check out the podcast.

(02:36:44):
She was really good. Talk to her today. She's gonna
start coming in on Mondays when she can, which is awesome.
And we have another surprise I'm working on. I'm talking
to her on tomorrow to find out exactly what her
schedule can be. But there's a possibility we'll have some
money in to talk about things happening in Orlando the
way that Danny did for us for a while. All
that's cool. So some new blood coming in on the
program hopefully, and we'll get to share more of that

(02:37:06):
with you as we get going. That sounds like a
plan mine. Let me still. You heard it here first, I.

Speaker 1 (02:37:11):
Guess good time for you heard it here first on
the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 5 (02:37:16):
The total number of confirmed hantavirus cases linked to a
luxury cruise ship has risen to five. Those newly confirmed
cases are among people who are medically evacuated from the
MVY Hondius earlier today to receive treatment in the Netherlands.
The Director General of the WHO, the World Health Organization, said,
quote monitoring and follow up for passengers on board and

(02:37:37):
for those who have already disembarked has been initiated in
collaboration with the ship's operators and national health authorities end quote.
So far, three deaths have been recorded in connection at
the suspected outbreak aboard the cruise ship. And apparently there's
just heartbreaking video of one of the seventeen Americans who's
on that cruise ship on his balcony, just hysterically crying,

(02:37:59):
saying I'm healthy, get me off of this shit.

Speaker 4 (02:38:01):
That's right. Yeah, I saw that crazy video.

Speaker 5 (02:38:04):
I haven't seen it yet, but yeah. It kind of
brings you back to the early days of COVID because
if you guys remember that was when we first started
hearing about this new virus that you know, cruise ships
were left in dock in Japan. People couldn't get off,
people couldn't go on. So this kind of has some
real kind of COVID memories to it.

Speaker 6 (02:38:22):
What would you do if you're stuck in your room
but you have to eat, so they're bringing you food.

Speaker 5 (02:38:27):
I would not leave my room and I would wipe
down everything that was dropped off, just because in this
case there's no treatment, there's no cure, and it looks
like it's one of two variants in the world where
it can be transmitted to person to person.

Speaker 4 (02:38:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:38:39):
Yeah, so that's where my concern is. Just like coronavirus,
there was no treatment, there was no cure. Don't even
know what the hell they were fighting.

Speaker 4 (02:38:47):
I'd be like, send me a case of bleached cliff
barsase exactly, and then I'll see you when we could deport.

Speaker 5 (02:38:53):
Believe it or not, we're already starting to see some
of the first signs that the tropics are heating up
as hurricane season quickly closes in. Like just in about
two and a half weeks, the first two tropical waves
of the year have rolled off the coast of Africa,
the first on the first on May first, and the
second on May fourth. Now, the good news is they're
not expected to develop, but they do mark one of

(02:39:14):
the earliest signs that the Atlantic tropics are beginning to
wake up and heat up. So, guys, on average, how
many tropical waves develop across cross the Atlantic basin each year?

Speaker 4 (02:39:26):
Oh goodness, Oh, these.

Speaker 5 (02:39:27):
Are tropical waves. So they're not storms, they're not hurricanes. Five,
these are the beginnings. That's yeah, points Jimmy sixty. On average,
about sixty tropical waves develop across the Atlantic basin each year.
The good news is only a small percentage ever ever
become more organized. For those who are new to Florida
girder Loins, boys and girls, hurricane season officially begins June first.

Speaker 4 (02:39:50):
Yeah. When I saw that report, they're already there were
two systems for me, I'm like, go, oh my god, Oh, Mike,
here we go and then real quick.

Speaker 5 (02:39:56):
Florida's Fort Walton Beach is home to the world's oldest
manateee Romeo. What age is he?

Speaker 4 (02:40:01):
One hundred and thirty.

Speaker 5 (02:40:03):
Two sixty points Jack, He's in his seventies.

Speaker 4 (02:40:07):
Okay, very good.

Speaker 5 (02:40:07):
Recently said againness world record. He lives in a three
hundred thousand dollars gallon habitat at Gulfarium Marine Adventure Park
and appears to be thriving. Hanates typically live into their
thirties and forties in the wild. And you heard it
here first, I'm The Jim Culbert Show.

Speaker 4 (02:40:21):
You deb who do we have to think today?

Speaker 5 (02:40:22):
Speaking of animals, we want to thank Kenny, Joel and
Remy from the Pet Alliance, Scott Maxwell, the Orlando Sentinel
columnist and the truth Dragon of Central Florida, Ross Paget
from Good Sauce with Ross and Joel. Just in case
you missed Animal House, Scott Maxwell's topics, or Ross sharing
what to expect Tonight. All of their podcasts have been
posted to The Jim Culbert Show and then last but

(02:40:43):
never leased, Sam Bowen, Candice Rich and Alicia Bullwear for
running our YouTube check.

Speaker 4 (02:40:48):
Thanks guys, appreciate that, as we do every day. Jack.
Question of the day.

Speaker 6 (02:40:51):
If you book a friend's trip, should you get the
master bedroom? Yes, I would say that. Eighty two percent
say you should. Seventy five percent say wow, that's good.

Speaker 3 (02:41:02):
All right.

Speaker 4 (02:41:03):
Coming up to our likes, you said, we'll have our
buddy Glenn Klausman in for Colver. Court Ross will be here,
so we'll have some Ross thoughts and all kinds of
fun stuff as well. Mite, will your voice be he yeah, yeah,
let me have a death Devin Jack On Jim, we
follow the New Junkie. They follow the monsters of the Morning.
After us, it's Tom and name of the Corporate Time
and our friends from Real Laughs. We'll see tomorrow three
for more of the Jim Colbert Show. Until then, have

(02:41:23):
yourself a fantastic Wednesday evening and go put some hump
in your day. Back out.

Speaker 1 (02:41:32):
If you missed any part of today's show, check out
The Jim Colbert Show on demand, and for highlighted feature segments,
listen to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are
available for free on the iHeartRadio w app A.

Speaker 3 (02:41:44):
Corporate Time with Tom and Dan is coming up next
on Real Radio.

Speaker 4 (02:41:47):
One oh four point.

Speaker 5 (02:41:47):
One from the Klosmon Law Traffic Center. Car crash called
Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 16 (02:41:58):
This sends up if you're trying to downtown.

Speaker 17 (02:42:00):
Orange Avenue southbound between Conqueror Street and Livingston is closed
due to an event that's going on there.

Speaker 16 (02:42:06):
Bit of a slow ride Stale Life, or eastbound between
one
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Bleep! with Ana Navarro

Bleep! with Ana Navarro

Fear thrives in silence and confusion. Ana Navarro rejects both. Her voice is an antidote to today’s chaos. Her new podcast, Bleep! with Ana Navarro, takes on today’s most pressing issues with the voices most connected to it: decision-makers, political leaders, cultural shapers, and people on the frontlines of the story. The conversations acknowledge the emotions we all feel—despair, sadness, fear— but emerge with knowledge, perspective, and hope. The belief is simple: fearless dialogue can transform fear into courage, and courage into change. When fear dominates the headlines, this show digs deeper. Because information, debate, and conversation don’t just ease fear, they give us power to shape the future.

Hey Jonas!

Hey Jonas!

Hey Jonas! The official Jonas Brothers podcast. Hosted by Kevin, Joe, and Nick Jonas. It’s the Jonas Brothers you know... musicians, actors, and well, yes, brothers. Now, they’re sharing another side of themselves in the playful, intimate, and irreverent way only they can. Spend time with the Jonas Brothers here and stay a little bit longer for deep conversations like never before.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices