Episode Transcript
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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 1 (00:06):
The opinions that you hear are those of the host
and callers and not those of iHeart Media, It's management
or advertisers.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
You are now listening to the Jim Colbert Show on
Real Radio one four point One's.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Right, guys, here we go on 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 are stacked up this afternoon for you. We will
get you caught up on what's happening the world. That
will do that around three twenty with JCS News Darryl
Payne and Today for Animal House will bring Daryl in
the early segment. We'll get all the calls set up
and then you can ask Darryl how to keep your
(00:48):
dog from humping or scratching or pooping or being or
running or scratching or whatever. Let's call it unwanted behavior.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
There you gotta work out.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Scott Maxwell calls today from The Orlando Sentinel as well.
POPU Black Hour will do some trade. We'll ended up
with ross thoughts. That's a little peek into what's happening
for good Sauce. Tonight we'll ended up with you heard
it here first, your calls, text and talkbacks all day long,
plus four opportunities for you to win one thousand dollars.
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim. To my left, my
lovely very dangerous co hosting is Deb Roberts. Hello there,
straight Out producer Jack Brad Joe Afternoon four O seven
(01:18):
nine one six one O four one. You can always
text us at seven seven zero three one. Find us
easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at the Jim Colbert Show
on x just at Jim Colbert Show, and of course
all day every day Jim Cooperlive dot com. This where
you could check us out on YouTube watch us do
this show live. It's fun. Daryl's in here. You can
see how frustrated he gets when we talk about Docson's
(01:40):
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M O N E Y. Slide over to you real
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We'll get you on the ear superstar. Ma G it's
your number one pre set on the.
Speaker 4 (01:59):
iHeart Ready out helps us and you all right?
Speaker 3 (02:02):
There's my plug and I'm done?
Speaker 4 (02:04):
What do you going home? Now?
Speaker 3 (02:05):
I'm exhausted now the intro to the show is so exhausting.
I'm ready to go. Have you guys been sleeping okay?
With this cold weather? Usually I sleep like a baby
during this cold weather. But having a hard time for
some reason. It's the heat for me, Is it really?
I turned my heater on yesterday.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
See, I like a you know you like it warm.
But when it gets too warm, I don't know about you, guys.
I will have nightmares if I'm overheating in my sleep.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
Oh really, we never get there, because I'm telling you,
we do not when it comes to our quality of sleep.
We do not sacrifice. The air will go down to
you know, seventy seventy one, whatever the fans are on.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
When I go down to sixties eight sixty seven, were talking,
We're not that deep.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
We spend good money on our sheets and stuff too.
You know, we want the best possible scenario for sleep.
You people are fragile.
Speaker 4 (02:50):
Yeah, yeah, no, he shakes for himself.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Actually it's on a bed of nails, face down.
Speaker 5 (02:54):
But when the heat is on and it blows on you,
it's it's hard to get your it's hard to get
your body temperature right elated overnight because you like to
be a little cooler overnight to help you sleep better.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
But then it gets to be too cold.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Yeah. This goes back to the argument we had the
other day about is it is it is the heat
bringing a temperature up different than the air bringing it
down to the same number. We're gonna get yelled at it.
You know what I'm saying is that's exactly what she's saying,
because this everything about that artificial heat is whack. Yeah,
it smells bad. But I turned my system on this
morning for the first time because inside my house is
(03:27):
like sixty one degrees, So I turned it on just
get the chill out of the air. I got addicted
to it. Do you have a roof? Yeah, I was cold, dude,
because it was forty one degrees outside last night, and
it eventually gets in the house. We had no system
on or nothing, and no insulation.
Speaker 6 (03:44):
Fat.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
No, it was I think it was like it was
in the sixties. Up it's like sixty four, I think
is what it was cold enough.
Speaker 7 (03:49):
Though, yeah, but and to that point, and I think
the point last time we brought this up that a
texture was trying to make. We talked about if you
if you cool it down, the seventy two is at
the same is heating it up to seventy two, right,
But it's because to heat up to seventy two, the
air has to come out warmer. So that's really what
you were experiencing, that air movement, that warmer air movement, right,
(04:11):
I suppose it's chilling. When it's chilling, obviously it has
to be cooler.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
I don't like it, my face. Yeah, I don't like
the hot ass air my face. I don't care for it.
I don't care for the smell of it. When you're
fired up, baby, it's time, it's like burning plastic.
Speaker 7 (04:29):
I missed it last night because last night was the
first time I put the heat on. But this morning
it was running and I'm like, oh, I missed that,
that new heat.
Speaker 4 (04:36):
So yeah, we didn't get it either.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Apparently all our houses all ganged up on yours. By
the way, someone just texted us seven seven zero three one,
my husband turned the heat on when it was seventy.
Speaker 4 (04:47):
Three in our house.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
Well, come on, dude, I said, I'm texting the Jim
Colbert Show because they would all find that absolutely ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
It is ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
It on some socks, man, and a sweatshirt, not the heat.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Yeah, man, it was completely and utterly ridiculous. Yeah, what
do you think I'm the electric company here. Wait, that's
that's his life.
Speaker 4 (05:07):
You're raising a barn.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
Yeah, man, I do not care for it. I don't
like that artificial heat. I'd rather be freezing cold. I
walked around my pajamas and socks this morning like some
old man. Have you seen a mirror, sir, like some
some shuffling old homeless person.
Speaker 7 (05:25):
You didn't like. Just stumble by any reflecting glass.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Then no, no, never to know, all right, seven seven
zero three one. That's how you text us again. If
you don't leave a talk back, that's easy. Just grab
the iHeartRadio app, go to real radio. There's a mic
there you can use to send it on down the line.
Today is a solemn day in America. Guys, I don't
know if you know that today is a solemn day.
We're making a change in this country that hasn't happened
for two hundred and fifty years. Yeah, McRib is back. No,
(05:53):
it is back, right, yeah, limited time, limited spots one. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
This this made me sad. Man. I've got a jar
at home and I'm hanging on to it.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
Yeaheah. What do you think Jack, America changes today? A
job for the first time since seventeen ninety or so.
Speaker 7 (06:11):
Oh, my goodness, pickle, something that would do with pickle
jar pickle, mayonnaise Helman's.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
Today, the United States plans to strike its last penny
for circulation Today. The very last penny will be struck
by the US Mint in Philadelphia, and that will be it.
There are gonna be no more pennies now. The ones
that we have will still be in circulation. There's like
billions of them in circulation, but three hundred billions, all right, right,
But that will be the last of them, and eventually,
(06:37):
I guess when those cycle out or once we learn
how to make change without it. Gotta tell you, I'm
on board with it. I here's the thing. I don't
know how to feel about it. I'm gonna be that
honest with you. I'm indifferent because because I'm not a guy,
I'm not a big I don't like change a whole
bunch when it comes to my establishment, literally figuratively on
(06:58):
the change or both. I don't like establishment changes as
a rule. I don't. I don't care for that. And
maybe coming with my older age, or I'm just kind
of set of my ways, I can see where somebody
like Russ has been saying this for years. He's been
saying that they we don't need the penny for a
long time. They've talked about eradicating the penny for decades,
and every time it comes up, he's like, get it
(07:18):
out of there. And I just simply don't understand how
retailers deal with it, because here's the thing, it doesn't.
I mean, most people aren't paying with cash anyway. Can
you even remember the last time you dug into your
pocket to make exact change? No, Apparently it's cringe. Yeah, well,
oh really all the younger generations because.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
They can't make change, so they call it cringe.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
They call using cash cringe.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Okay, that's kind of like an analogy, is it.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
Basically he'll turn into one of those situations where we're
always rounding up for some charity. Is that what it is?
I mean, because that's what you get now.
Speaker 7 (07:54):
Right, So I think, yeah, it's and companies like I
don't know if it's you uniform or if it's just
specific certain ones that like two cents over they round down,
you know, if it's three four, three or four, they
round up.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
And the reason they're doing this, and you know, when
you look at our federal budget, it seems silly that
this munch money would come into play. But the reason
they're doing it is it costs about three and a
half cents or so to make every penny, so obviously
we're losing money by printing them or stamping them. Did
you see how much a year or how much of
it is that we spend on pennies to make pennies
a year? And it doesn't as like fifty million, fifty
(08:31):
or fifty three million dollars or something to make these pennies. Wow,
but you know, you hear that number, and all we
hear now is billions and trillions. Million million seems like
a million. It sounds like where you're complaining about something
so stupid. But I wonder if the ones that are
coined are minted today will have any special significance when
it comes to collecting, because there's gonna be one hundred.
(08:54):
I mean, there's gonna be so many of them. There
are some pennies that are still worth money because they're
unique or where they came from, or the mint, or
they have double stamps. Usually it's error coins that have
the most value. There are some rare ones that are
only printed for our stamp for a short period of time,
but for the most part, it's only error ones that
I know of.
Speaker 5 (09:14):
Are you looking for a future market to save kind
of like the old BB eights?
Speaker 3 (09:18):
No? Yeah, yeah, no stopping.
Speaker 7 (09:19):
Hi there you if you want to buy some coins.
I've got two folders of all the state quarters.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
Oh god, cool, I remember when that came through. I
let that go for a good price. I just keep
face value.
Speaker 7 (09:34):
Yeah, I keep just like like and you know what
you go to all the It's like my wife's like,
I'm going aldi you have a quarter.
Speaker 3 (09:40):
I'm like, I got fifty of them. I'm made exact
change at a at a fast food restaurant, just the
other day because I had cash on me and it
like I just didn't want to put it on a car.
I got tired of charging something something. I'm gonna pay
cash today. You guys ever do that? Like you just
feel it feels more American to pay cash? Did it night?
Did you really I paid cash at the Twisty Tree?
(10:03):
Did you really? I paid cash?
Speaker 4 (10:05):
A minute the ice cream sat he went for ice
cream when it was.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
The coldest night of the year.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
Hello, there's the vampire and you just breezed right past that.
Speaker 5 (10:16):
Yeah, you went to Twisty Tree paid in cash on
the coldest night of the year.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
Yeah, last night, And at that time when he was
holding it, that was the warmest thing in his body.
That ice cream he was holding was the warmest thing.
Speaker 7 (10:28):
And went home ate it. You know what I found
at the bottom of the cup so much regret.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
Oh yeah, we went to Jeremiah's the d N. I
haven't been to Jeremiah's Itellian ice in a while, and
I get that mango Jelatti. So it's got the vanilla
ice cream and then the main going between it goes
up and it I mean, it's that's serving as like
you know a scoop and you still feel like a
complete a hole eating It's so good though, all right,
seven seven zero three one. That's how you text us.
(10:56):
Your three o'clock keyword is money m O N E Y.
So I over to roll radio out of him and
send that away for your chance in a thousand bucks.
Speaker 5 (11:02):
And uh, because we love our listeners. I did go
to mcriblocator dot com.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Did you really?
Speaker 5 (11:08):
And I have found several in the Longwood, Orlando, Deltona, Lake, Buenavista.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
And Maniola areas. So if you're anchoring for a McRib, it's.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Only gonna be around for like eight weeks or something.
Didn't I tell you? I already filled with regret? Question
of today penny? Should we?
Speaker 8 (11:27):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (11:28):
Shouldn't? I mean it's it's a done deal. Yeah, it's
a done deal. What are your thoughts though? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (11:34):
Sure.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
It says here that since the penny's retirement was announced
months ago, some retailers said there's already a shortage of
pennies complicating their cash based transactions. Kroger Home Depot, Walmart,
McDonald's and others are among the businesses reporting problems.
Speaker 5 (11:48):
Yeah, we've talked about that, and during JCS news at
these establishments saying you got a round up or round
down because we can't make change.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
That's crazy though, man, just the just the Nixon and
not have a plan to have anybody deal with It's like,
we're not doing this anymore. We don't know what we're
to do after this. We know we're not doing this.
Figure it out for yourselves, you guys, build a plan
and you tell us. What's what's interesting is the estimated
losses of revenue due to this. Yeah, because I mean,
if it's a penny a day for some people that
(12:15):
are doing a lot of transaction. That's why I asked
earlier how many people are actually paying in cash as
opposed to you know, putting in on their card or
Apple pay or something. I'm guessing the Apple pay a percentage.
That's really the question there. How many people pay you?
I mean, was that somebody paid for something in cash?
I mean, when is the last time you think our
audience actually dug into their pocket pay for something in cash?
Speaker 4 (12:33):
A lot of people texting saying they do it all
the time, Do they really?
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Yeah? Was it just like their food orders and stuff?
Or it can't be you're not paying, You're not ripping
out a couple hundred bucks at the grocery store, right,
I mean, are you are you paying cash at like
a restaurant? You do you keep a lot on you?
What do you think the most people keep? Bottom is
like twenty thirty bucks? Max? Is that the question of
the day. We put some backs. I've just kind of
(12:56):
you people who only have cash, Like my wife has
a friend and her father does not have a bank account,
has never had a bank account. He just keeps it
like cash. He doesn't and he pays for everything cash.
He buys money orders or do. He doesn't do anything
no digital transactions. That seems impossible to do today, Like
(13:20):
that seems virtual and it seems like so much work
to have to do your transactions that way these days.
Speaker 9 (13:26):
All right?
Speaker 3 (13:26):
Seven seven zero three, one doub What do you have
for news?
Speaker 5 (13:28):
Government funding bill is headed for a House vote. Really,
the story is how House members are getting back to
DC that it's tasty, how much Disney is losing during
its YouTube TV dispute. Small change to worry about it,
it's not about it, and cross your fingers for another
(13:49):
celestial show tonight. We'll talk about that and more coming
up next During JCS news.
Speaker 3 (13:53):
You got it your three click Heyward is money mony Y.
You know what to do. Go to Real Radio dot
if him and send that on for your chance at
one thousand dollars. Back with Dev's news and more than
JCS right after this, Welcome back to the Jim Ober Show,
Real Radio one A four point one. Thanks for tuning in.
We appreciate that, as we do every single day. Guys,
(14:16):
a lot of choices out there. I can see some
big eyes.
Speaker 5 (14:18):
Would you learn that somebody always carries one thousand dollars
in cash on them?
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Okay, let's listen to the station. Must have won.
Speaker 10 (14:26):
That going.
Speaker 4 (14:27):
Money's the keyword for three o'clock.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
It is mond Y. I got a real radio out
of him, and send that away for your chance at
one one thousand dollars. Welcome back. I'm Jim Jack. Sits
right over there, straight across from me, about twenty feet.
I get hit him with the paper water if I
tried hard, throw pretty hard through three pains in cloud. Yeah, exactly,
dep has your news. Let's get it.
Speaker 11 (14:48):
It's time for JCS news. Wow, this guy gotta put
his name on everything.
Speaker 12 (14:54):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim
Colber Show.
Speaker 5 (14:59):
And as always, JCS News is brought to you by
that mortgage guy, Don all Right. The House is expected
to vote tonight to end the government shut down. Overnight,
the House Rules Committee voted along party lines to advance
the government funding deal that's already passed in the Senate.
The majority GOP committee did not adopt any amendments to
the bill that would extend federal healthcare subsidies. A final
(15:19):
vote is set for after seven pm Eastern. And if
you've watched any of the news, a lot of lawmakers
are rushing to get back to DC and have decided
one is driving as Harley from like somewhere out in
the Midwest all the way to DC because what do they.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
Want to deal with? Airport delay? Yeah, yeah, a little
cold exactly.
Speaker 5 (15:41):
A lot of lawmakers doing the road trip thing because
they just don't want to take the chance they're not
going to be in DC tonight for that vote. And
speaking of those airplane delays, the effects of the government
shut down continue to be felt at Orlando International Airport.
Over one hundred delays and cancellations were reported yesterday. A
Pennsylvania man says he and about already. Others from his
cruise ship had to book hotel rooms for two extra
(16:04):
days while waiting for flights home. News that the shutdown
may end soon could bring relief, but FAA officials are saying, listen,
give it at least another two to three weeks, basically
bumping you right up into the Thanksgiving travel period before
we may see some really measurable relief.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
That's exactly what Sean Murphy said. He said, Look, man,
this is going to be a matter of fact. One
of the big headlines today was don't let the shutdown
ending fool you. Yeah, traffic is going to be gnarly
for at least another two weeks.
Speaker 5 (16:31):
The good thing is is that at least that means
TSA workers and air traffic controllers will start getting a
paycheck again. And speaking of the paycheck aspect, this Thanksgiving
could put a stress on local food banks, and that's
an understatement. United Against Poverty Orlando executive director on Jolly
Vaya says they're serving twice as many people a day
(16:54):
as they used to, and she expects that to continue
through the holidays.
Speaker 3 (16:57):
I got an email from Carly yesterday about this very thing,
about how we may be able to help. So I've
got to get back with her probably tomorrow and try
to figure it out. But yeah, they are doing a lot.
Speaker 5 (17:06):
I think this is single handedly the biggest issue we
could help right now because to meet that demand, United
Against Poverty Orlando is holding a five K fundraiser Saturday
at Baldwin Park.
Speaker 4 (17:17):
Hey, you should go run in that, Jimmy.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
You being run for mayor because I'm not running.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Via Tels Channel nine. They are absolutely in a crisis,
all right.
Speaker 5 (17:30):
New court filings claim plans to build hotels and golf
courses in nine Florida state parks came directly from the
governor's office. The lawsuit was filed by former state employee
James Gaddis, who says he was fired after leaking the proposals.
Remember this was supposed to be an FWC IDEA. Hey
look over here, a right. Gaddis is suing for a
(17:52):
whistleblower retaliation, alleging the state punished him for exposing what
he called quote gross mismanagement end quote. According to the
Tampa Bay Times, the amended complaint adds details tying Governor
Ronda Santis's office to the controversial plans, which were later
scrapped due to public backlash. If you remember, the governor
had said, fine, if you don't want pick a ball
(18:13):
courts in your state parks, then.
Speaker 3 (18:14):
Find it was kind of like that too.
Speaker 4 (18:17):
It was like, why are you taking this personal?
Speaker 3 (18:19):
It was like, wait, this person, he went like my
bad dog exactly, just an idea. He's like, I f
around you know that idea?
Speaker 5 (18:30):
Well, speaking of the governor, Ronda Santis has some ground
to make up if he wants to be president. Overton
Insights released a poll yesterday on the twenty twenty eight
Republican presidential primary. It shows DeSantis in third place with
twelve percent support.
Speaker 4 (18:45):
Who do you think is first?
Speaker 9 (18:47):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Probably JD Yeah.
Speaker 5 (18:49):
Vice President JD. Vance came at first at thirty four percent.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
Come on, Rudy Giuliani and Donald.
Speaker 5 (18:54):
Trump Junior is second at twenty two percent. Oh my god, ahhs.
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior came in fourth, and Secretary
of State and former Florida Senator Marco Rubio came in fifth.
Speaker 13 (19:08):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
Yeah, Wow, that's a hell of a quiver. He's getting
better and better. That's a lot of interesting arrows.
Speaker 5 (19:16):
Quiver is the interesting word you use there both noun
and verb. Ye, all right, Sombervar County residents can claim
victory against a developer. The Titusville City Council yesterday rejected
plans to build over sixty town home units at State
Roade four or five and South Singleton Avenue. Neighbors opposed
the project over concerns it would cause even more flooding
(19:39):
and harm wetlands. One man tells WESH two they know
first hand what fifteen inches of rainfall and eighteen hours
can do. Yeah, And of course I've been trying to
look for the story, but I heard that the folks
and the spring run estates and Eustas may possibly be
able to get home by five o'clock today.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Really, it's a one syllable about that in the news
to the where.
Speaker 5 (20:00):
I saw it on a couple of local stations. However,
I haven't been able to find it on their websites.
But I'm going to be checking on that because that's
good news. Originally, the city officials had said they'd wanted
to get residents back in their home and time for Thanksgiving.
This is well ahead of that time frame that that's
able to happen, So good news for those folks, this is.
Speaker 7 (20:17):
A community at twenty homes where the heavy rain washed
out the only bridge that went to the area where
their homes are in the case.
Speaker 3 (20:24):
Exactly kind of had to step up and give a
loan to the home owners association so they could fix it,
so that the people in the neighborhood could pay it
back later on the road t fix or what did
they know it was, Yeah, bringing the Army Corps of engineers.
Speaker 5 (20:36):
I don't think they brought in the Army Corps, but
that looks like they brought in a whole lot of concrete.
And I believe it was the city of Eustace that
decided to give the ho Way the.
Speaker 4 (20:44):
Loan versus the county.
Speaker 9 (20:46):
It was the city.
Speaker 5 (20:47):
So but I mean, you've got another home in mountdra
that's teetering on the verge of collapse after all of
that rain.
Speaker 4 (20:52):
But kudos to those folks in Titusville for Yeah.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
For sure, let's get someone on the horn. They give
us the nine to one one.
Speaker 5 (20:58):
Yeah, exactly, text us at seven seven zero three one,
because we've received text before from residents over at Spring Runs,
so let us know, yeah, is give us the t
that's so?
Speaker 4 (21:10):
Is it s us or cringe.
Speaker 3 (21:13):
It's too hard to keep up ringe.
Speaker 4 (21:15):
It's too hard to keep up with Now.
Speaker 5 (21:16):
The only thing I'm wondering is if the state is
going to come in heavy hand Titusville because there is
that state law that says local municipalities cannot say no
to developers.
Speaker 3 (21:27):
Oh, I did not know that.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
Yeah, because there are several municipalities in the state of
Florida that are taking the state to court saying you can't.
This law hampers our ability to manage our own Why
have the municipality That's the whole question. Yeah, that's interesting.
Speaker 9 (21:42):
I did not know that.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
I knew they had a pretty stronghold, but I didn't
know it was like that.
Speaker 5 (21:46):
Look into that state law that says local governments cannot
say no to developers, because while the residents may be celebrating,
the state may come in and undo all of that
good work.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
All right.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
After record breaking cold on Tuesday, spring light conditions returning
to Central Florida, Temperatures warming up on Thursday afternoon to
the mid seventies. Even warmer conditions on the way. Look
for low eighties by this weekend. Early next week, we'll
see temperatures again near eighty degrees. Forecasters are calling though
for limited rainfall, and November is Manatee Awareness Month. Florida
(22:18):
Wildlife officials urging boaters slow down watch out for these
sea cows because as water temperatures drop, its cuddle season.
Manatees are moving to warm water sites like springs and
power plant discharge areas.
Speaker 3 (22:31):
Cuddling. Oh my good geez, well, cuffing means the same kind.
Just makes it.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Really I've never heard that before.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
I'll just go back to my skateboarding video.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
It's like their size, they're hard to spot, so boaters
are advised to wear polarized sunglasses and follow posted speed zones.
Speaker 4 (22:48):
Boat strikes are a major threat.
Speaker 5 (22:49):
In fact, that's how most manatees in the state of
Florida are identified by the scars on their bodies, by
what propeller hit them wear. Anyone who season injured manatee
should call the FWC hotline, a Wildlife Alert hotline which
is eight eight eight four oh four three nine two
to two. And I have to say one of the
best things is going by boat with someone who's a
real Floridian and will be the first one to say no, no, no,
(23:11):
don't behave like that there's manatees right over there.
Speaker 4 (23:14):
Don't be a debay.
Speaker 5 (23:17):
Disney is reportedly losing a few pennies per day as
it's ongoing carrier dispute with YouTube TV continues. According to
reports from The Rap, Disney could be out this much
money and lost revenue if the stalemate reaches fourteen days
and there is currently no end to the standoff in sight.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
Yeah, because I read a piece about that today right
before we came on the air, about what YouTube wants.
They want Disney to reduce the cost of their programming
for their platform, and Disney's like, I can't do that. Actually,
they're bound by law. There's this weird law where they
can't discount it for just one So Disney's like, look,
I can't do it because if I discounted to you,
I have to discount it to all the other carriers
(23:56):
or platforms. It's going to cost it a bunch more
than it's even costing them now, which has got to
be a absolute train full of money.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
Well, what do you think so they could be day
are total? This would be total. I guess in the
fourteen days if there's no end in sight to the stalemat.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
I'll keep it. I won't even go crazy. Don't go
Craig Cray, I'll go sixty five million. Ooh, I'll go
my original thought thirty million.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
Sixty million. Wow.
Speaker 14 (24:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (24:21):
So, Disney owned channels like ABC, ESPN and others have
been in the dark on the Google Base subscription streamers
since Halloween. That is prompted the service to offer a
twenty dollars rebate for customers to compensate them for the disruption.
Disney is facing increasing pressure to promote its direct to
consumer streaming service as more consumers opt out of traditional
(24:43):
cable bundles. While YouTube tv has previously said it is
quote working to negotiate a deal with Disney that pays
them fairly for their content end quote.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
I'll tell you man, these streaming platforms may be about
to faffo a little bit. There is a bit of
a streaming war going on. I'm interested to see how
this is gonna kind of wind up hitting the hitting
the ground, because it is. It is really weird. They're
forcing people into some really interesting decisions. Yeah, and I've
given up some and now, and their prices are just
going on.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
Thus and Armount Plus just announced another price increase.
Speaker 7 (25:16):
Which I don't have, and then I look at Apple
TV and I'm like, do I need to? Every time
that bill? I get a push notification every time it
bills my Apple TV. And so when I see every.
Speaker 3 (25:26):
Time, I'm like, oh, yeah, I hate it. I watch it. Yeah,
it's just a reminder. Am I watching this? Exactly?
Speaker 4 (25:32):
Is this worth it?
Speaker 3 (25:32):
We literally watch Apple TV once every two months, and
it's usually to do with the show HBO. It's a
little more expensive, but I get more use that Netflix.
Speaker 4 (25:41):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 9 (25:42):
All right.
Speaker 5 (25:43):
Former NFL player Antonio Brown is getting somewhat of a
pass from a Miami Dade County judge. Well, he defends
himself against an attempted second degree murder charge. The wide
receiver will be allowed to work as long as he
wears an ankle monitor.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
Twenty five thousand dollars ball one plus house arrest level three.
Speaker 12 (26:02):
That's GPS roaming.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
Brown's attorney claims his client was defending himself.
Speaker 3 (26:06):
It's like a cell phone plan. I know back in May, Oh,
you've got GPS roaming level three. I want to see
this guy running routes with an ankle monitor. That's all
I want to see.
Speaker 5 (26:16):
Well, he claims he was defending himself back in May
when he fired his gun to get away from someone
who was previously accused of robbing him. He's already turned
in his passport. He was extradited from Dubai, where he
had spent about five months.
Speaker 15 (26:28):
Now.
Speaker 5 (26:28):
Prosecutors argue he was trying to avoid arrest, but Brown's
attorney says he's had business there since twenty twenty two
and always always intended to face the charges.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
Yeah, so what is his job now that you know?
What does he do?
Speaker 4 (26:45):
He's footloose and fancy free.
Speaker 7 (26:46):
He could be over there just doing an endorsement deal
with somebody. Yeah, but just in general, I mean business dealings.
I mean it's not in anything related to the NFL
to my knowledge. Yeah, I don't know with any team.
I think he had a Twitter account for a while. Yeah, yeah,
I think you get a fire. I think get a
legit fire too.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (27:06):
It would be interesting to find out what he is
doing though, right, I mean a lot of business going
over there. Big changes are coming to Camping World Stadium.
The Orlando City Council voted Monday to spend four hundred
million dollars on renovations the money will come from the
city's tourism tax revenue.
Speaker 4 (27:21):
Oh, I think we're gonna be talking to Scott Maxwell moment.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
The renovations include about two thousand more seats and modernized amenities.
Work is expected to start by the end of the
year and be done by summer twenty twenty seven. City
officials hope the upgrades will attract major events, including NFL games,
with the Jacksonville Jaguars right yep having the place to
play their home games in twenty twenty seven. Well, their
regular stadium undergoes renovation.
Speaker 3 (27:45):
Which did an upgrade on this joint? Didn't we?
Speaker 4 (27:48):
It feels like it, doesn't it.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
It might have been like fifteen years ago, like.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
A real deja boom moment, may have last year.
Speaker 3 (27:54):
Anthonio Brown followed for Chapter eleven bankrupt So he's saying
he owed about three million dollars to eight creditors, including
one point two million debt stemming from a January twenty
twenty assault lawsuit. His estimated assets are fifty thousand dollars
or less. Oh okay, solar activity ten dollars a day.
Speaker 5 (28:15):
As we learned from Robin Severan's Locos, solar activity is
forcing NASA to delay today's launch of Blue Origins new rocket.
The new Glen rocket was supposed to blast off this
afternoon with two Mars orbiters. However, intense solar storms are
causing a second delay this week. NASA also scrubs Sunday's
planned launch due to bad weather that was more rain
(28:35):
in Cape Canaveral. The launch has been delayed indefinitely while
officials assess the next available window, and speaking of that,
skygazers may be in for more northern lights and the
night skies. The Sun has emitted five X class solar
flares in the past several days, but a CME or
coronal mass ejection associated with its strongest flare has yet
(28:59):
to hit Earth. Data suggests that impact will arrive today now.
Speaker 3 (29:03):
Timing dialogue from Ghostbusters it does.
Speaker 5 (29:06):
Timing is uncertain, but strong levels are forecast to continue
into the night, offering a window of opportunity for skywatchers
across the United States, Canada, and most of Europe and
even parts of the Southern Hemisphere. I don't know if
you guys have seen the pictures new six HASM Fox
thirty five has them. Last night's light show reached unusually
southern locations such as Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina, Texas, New Mexico, California,
(29:32):
and right here in Florida, including some photos taken as
far south as Sink Cloud.
Speaker 3 (29:37):
I didn't see those. I saw some out of Pensacola.
Speaker 14 (29:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
We have a listener in Colorado who sent me some pictures.
Speaker 7 (29:43):
And it looks like something you stream saver or something
you now create, you know, artificially, like a movie scene,
but it's really neat that it's genuine.
Speaker 4 (29:54):
Have you ever seen them?
Speaker 8 (29:55):
I have not.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
I'm not either.
Speaker 5 (29:56):
I saw them once in my life Green Bay backyard,
and it literally looks like God threw open his windows
on a spring day and you're watching his curtains billow
in the breeze.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
And laws went on an Alaskan cruise and saw him
up there, and they said it was surreal. It is surreal,
just completely surreal. You don't even it feels like you
don't know what's happening. They said. You just feel like
something's happening to you that you can't stop. And it
feels a little sketch because it's so crazy. You don't
just because you don't experience.
Speaker 14 (30:24):
Anything like that.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
You don't.
Speaker 5 (30:25):
But if you ever have the chance to see the
Northern Lights or even the Australian Borealist, definitely put it
on your bucket list.
Speaker 4 (30:31):
It's something worth seeing.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
Yeah, there's a cool map. I believe it was on
CNN today where they showed a map of the US
and with the aura, they showed how far it reached
down and where it was the most magnificent. And it
actually came very south and even today is going to
be you know, in the Mid States. I hope you know.
Speaker 4 (30:47):
I was telling you earlier.
Speaker 5 (30:48):
I wanted to do that story last night, but I
didn't think it would reach as far south as Florida,
only to be so disappointed this morning to wake up
and realize that people were actually able to see the
Northern Lights from here in central Florida.
Speaker 4 (31:00):
And hopefully good luck tonight. That concludes your JCS news.
Speaker 3 (31:05):
The lights all right for seven nine one six one
o four one text us seven seven zero three one. Hey,
money is your three it's like keyword that's m N
E Y. Slide over to real radio data of him
and send. Then I'll offer your chance of a thousand bucks.
We'll have Daryl pain in here next to prime it
up for animal house, and that's of course where you
can call and talk about your dog's terrible behavioral problems
and maybe we can get an answer for you. Who knows.
Speaker 4 (31:26):
If anyone can get it, it'd be Darrel.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
We'll do that next.
Speaker 13 (31:43):
So the people and are complaining about how we are
complaining on the temperature and how cohol it is. Listen,
Florida is like taking a super hot shower and living
in that bathroom with whatever you set the thermost statue.
If you send it to sixty eight, you're gonna run
out coming for a coward because you're cold. If you
said it at eighty six, you're gonna sweat and immediately
(32:05):
need another bat. That's just how it works here. Leave
us alone, don't move down here.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
Damn I make him in a hot.
Speaker 4 (32:15):
Kind of a great.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
I'm glad we have this eighties soundtrack movie music in
the background because it sounds like this sounds like if
two guys are walking through a mall and there's no
dialogue during the scene, they're just like getting some new clothes.
This is the music that play well is going on
it outside that eighties video game Vie. Hell yeah, all right,
welcome back. To the Jim Colbert Show Real Radio one
oh four point one. You're free click heyward his money.
(32:39):
Got about five minutes to get over to Real Radio
dot FM and send that away for your chance of
one thousand bucks. I'm Jim. There's deb Hello. Jay's here
as well. Our buddy Darryl Payne pau Effect Dog Training
drops by about once a month here to talk about
your dog's behavior. It's a very popular segment. We usually
get a ton of phone calls and we do.
Speaker 4 (32:58):
Mean canine, not your dog.
Speaker 3 (32:59):
Yeah, yeah, ca nine what it's your dog, right, Bob?
Speaker 14 (33:04):
A question first, which is really important. Do we have
to get rid of all of that pennies because I've
got one at home that's gonna cost me.
Speaker 3 (33:10):
A fortune together it called no fortune to keep her.
Speaker 16 (33:15):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (33:18):
Darryl Payne and his wife Penny do own paw Effection
Dog Training. You can find them Pawfaction Dog Training dot
Com and comes in to talk to you guys about
behaviors that your dog may have that you want to
either train out of them. We get a lot of
the same stuff to eat, the poop, the humping, the
uh don't get along with other pets stuff as well.
So if you have an issue, you're welcome to call
now it would be the time to do that. We'll
(33:39):
put you on hold the next segment. We'll take all
these calls, by the way. First things, how you doing, buddy, Yeah?
Speaker 14 (33:43):
Good, really good. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (33:44):
We get into a conversation. I know that you trained
drug dogs for Scotland Yard for how long?
Speaker 14 (33:49):
Oh star? That years ago?
Speaker 3 (33:54):
So twenty five years ago, right, so you you've we've
talked about this before. You actually showed us a video
of how you know dogs do react to certain drugs
or input, and it's pretty amazing how accurate they are.
I was telling a story about being on one of
our cruises early in my career, and it just so
happened that my room was next to a guy who
was a former DEA agent who did the same exact thing.
(34:14):
He trained dogs, and we got into the conversation about
how sensitive their noses were and because there are a
bunch of people sneaking weed onto the boat, of course no,
and he goes, he goes, well, from my experience, if
I put one germinated seed in the dead center of
a large suitcase, my dog would definitely alert on that
suitcase with just one germinated seed.
Speaker 14 (34:34):
It's it's difficult because there's a lot of factors in that.
I mean, you can put cocaine inside coffee. So if
I put a bag of cocaine inside, you know, coffee granules,
a dog will be able to get rid of the
coffee smell and just detect the cocaine in there.
Speaker 3 (34:53):
It literally puts it into two different compartments in its brain. Yeah,
it'll smell and it says, look, that's coffee. But there's
also some code in there, so we got to pull
that off to the side and just can't go.
Speaker 9 (35:02):
The way I.
Speaker 14 (35:03):
Describe it is that you know, we would smell pizza,
Hawaiian pizza. You and I would smell Hawaiian pizza. A
dog would smell every single individual ingredient in that pizza
separate from each other.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
And be able to identify it. That's the thing. Whether
you can smell it is one thing, but whether you
can identify it, that's what makes like someone is very
interesting because you could take a sip of wine and
they could say, well, what are you tasting there? You're like, okay,
well it tastes fruity and a little sweet, and then
they go off on like you know, all kinds of
different tangents on what they taste because they're they're trained
to do.
Speaker 4 (35:32):
So.
Speaker 14 (35:32):
Yeah, and that's the thing. I mean, my my bomb dog,
my labrador hit on a wooden bench in the synagogue once.
And now this was just a wooden bench, solid wooden bench,
nothing in it, no compartments, nothing, and he hit on that.
So we run another dog on it and he did
the same thing. We put a scanner on it, like
(35:53):
electronic scanner, just out of interest because there was no
bomb in it, because you couldn't get a bomb in there.
And it was measuring you know, the average indication might
have been one hundred and twenty. It was measuring two.
And it turned out that there's an element of explosive
chemical in furniture polish, a little bit of TNT in
(36:16):
furniture polish, a trace amount, and where it had been
so highly polished over the years, it had built up
and built up now only just registered on the electronic indicator,
like the sort of thing they have in the airports.
Speaker 3 (36:28):
So the darg but the dog was hitting on that.
Speaker 14 (36:30):
So you know, one germinated seed, depending on how good
the dog was, you know, could be detected whether it
could be detective inside a suitcase with you know, there's
not a lot of scent coming out. It depends how
much scent can come out.
Speaker 17 (36:44):
You know.
Speaker 14 (36:45):
There's there's a thing called TN five hundred. It's TNT
inside a hemetically sealed plastic container which the Czechoslovakians produced
back in the eighties and then the Irish using that.
The dogs couldn't detect that because it could there.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
Was no scent coming out, right, it was medically sealed,
it was vacuum sealed. The line yards. Yeah.
Speaker 14 (37:09):
Once, I mean once they put a designator into the top.
It's a bit like putting a straw into a McDonald's cup, right,
you know, it broke the seal. Then they could smell it.
But it's semetically so that we had to train the
dogs on the plastic.
Speaker 3 (37:22):
Yeah, and that's kind of you know, as we were
talking about this, people are like, well, you know, they
don't run the drug dogs through airports anymore, trying to
sniff to find out if you're bringing like a small
bag of weed or cocaine somewhere. What they're really looking
for is explosives. Is that the number one thing in
airports now that you're able to break out about the drugs,
but really you know that they don't really care as
much an you're you're not gonna be able to carry
enough coke to really affect the big the larger picture.
(37:44):
But if you have even you know, a half an
ounce or two pounds or pound or I guess a
handful of C four, it would be bad news.
Speaker 14 (37:51):
Well, yeah, I mean to be honest with you, going
onto a plane, they are really interested more in the
explosives obviously coming off the airplane and you know you
come to oh, they're looking for fruit and vegetables, Yeah,
drugs in order honesty, most of the drug busts and
things like that are intelligent based. You know, they know
that something's coming through before it happens. They'll use the
(38:13):
dogs to indicate, you know, to you know, make sure
it's not a dry run something like that.
Speaker 3 (38:17):
But the informants are really what given that area because
they're more interested, and rightly so, because I'm getting on
plane very surely more interesting explosives as I am, I
we have the same interest, that's right, all right. So
four oh seven ninety one six one four one. That
is our phone number. If you're out there you have
a dog that has a behavioral issue. It doesn't matter
(38:38):
what the breed is, with the sizes, none of that matter, ages, male, female, age,
none of that matters. If the dog has a behavioral
issue and you are fed up with it, it's driving
you crazy. You love the animal, but the behavior is
just really making it difficult. Give us a call because
Daryl can actually kind of give you an idea of
what you could start doing here, and then of course
he can tell you how they can help you as well.
Speaker 14 (38:59):
Yeah, I mean in all those problems, then get rid
of that tection.
Speaker 3 (39:02):
Yeah right, exactly. Four oh seven nine one one four
one lines are open. Pick one now and we'll do
your calls. Next, Bank is your fourth like you word?
That's B eight n K. Slide over to real radio
dot FM and send that away for your chance in
one thousand bucks. Bank, guys, is your fourth like you word?
(39:25):
Good luck? I'm Jim. There's deb Hello. Jack is here
as well. Yep, let's do Animal House.
Speaker 11 (39:31):
She likes them fuzzy, free, feathery, tough, scaly. It's time
for Animal House with Roberts.
Speaker 5 (39:40):
And Animal House is generously brought to us each and
every week by personal injury attorney Glenn Klausman over at
Klosmon Law. We'll tell you how you can get in
touch with Glenn at the end of the segment. But
now please join me in officially welcoming our guest today,
Darryl Payne from Perfection Dog Training.
Speaker 3 (39:57):
Good, all right, we have some calls here for you, Darrel.
You d get at it. Yeah, of course, Daryl, like
Deb said, runs paw Afection Dog Training. That's Pawfection Dog
Training dot Com. We'll also tell you about the Facebook
page a little bit later if you need to make
an appointment right off for it. Let's go, And I
have to tell you I love Dan's question because I
had the same problem with my little dog as well. Dan.
How you doing, buddy, You're home with Darryl from Pawfection
Dog Training. What's your question?
Speaker 8 (40:19):
Coon one? Guys, Hey, Darryl. We have an eight month
old female German Shepherd Great Pyrenees mix. She is very energetic,
but no matter how many times we take her outside,
we'll walk her up and down the street, We'll just
make sure she goes. Within five minutes of her coming
back inside, she's squatting, going to the bathroom in the house.
Speaker 14 (40:41):
Yeah, she's got she's in the habit of going to
the bostroom in the house as well as normally. She's
probably gone there at some point. And you know what,
we let you talk out in the back garden for
tipee and they look around for the perfect spot. It's like,
come on it and they have to find the spot.
What they're looking for is where they went before. So
if they have an accident in the house, no matter
(41:04):
how much you clean that, then that smell is going
to be there. So quite often they'll come in and
they'll smell that. It triggers them to peer again. It's
more of a marking kind of behavior as well. And
eight months she is starting to push the boundaries. She's
a teenager. She's starting to push the boundaries. Females will
push you more than males. Range. It's only in the
(41:27):
dog world though, honestly, so you've got to You've got
a couple of things going on there altogether. What I
would suggest you do is when you come in from
a walk, instead of coming into the to the house
as you would normally do, come in, put her out
in the backyard for a little while and then bring
her in, so you're breaking the cycle, breaking the habit
that she's in, because it is probably a habit. The
(41:49):
other thing is, if peeing is a problem with anybody,
you know, don't leave water down all the time, down
every hour, you know, time it to go to going
out for a pee as well. So they drink, they
go out, they pee, that empties the bladder. Now the
water they've just drunk has got somewhere to go, but
when they come in, the waters has gone, so they're
not continually drinking and filling that tiny little better.
Speaker 3 (42:11):
But thanks for recalled, Anne. But I'm telling you I
think that cycle thing, Dan, if you're listening still, buddy,
please do uh the cycle is the most important thing
because dogs are very habitual. That's what I'm learning with
our dogs, Like because my morning is pretty much scheduled.
Everything I do is almost at the same time every morning,
and she reacts to everything I do. She knows where
I'm going, she knows what I'm doing, she knows what
(42:32):
she's gonna get.
Speaker 14 (42:32):
Yeah, they know what that what we're doing before we
do it, right, Yeah, they study us. That's the thing.
Speaker 3 (42:36):
Yeah, yeah, all right, seven seven zero three one four
seven nine one six four one talking to Darryl Pain
from Pop Fiction Dog Training. Let's go to Andrea. Andrea,
how are you doing?
Speaker 12 (42:44):
You're all with Darryl Hi, Darryl hijack.
Speaker 16 (42:47):
How are you good?
Speaker 3 (42:48):
Doing good?
Speaker 15 (42:50):
Okay, so my question is actually verirly similar to Dan's.
But my dog is he's elderly. We've been told that
he actually has dementia. And I just recently moved in
or with my boyfriend that has kids. But he peas
on the wall, peas on the bed, peas on his shoes,
not mine.
Speaker 11 (43:10):
But he has dementied.
Speaker 15 (43:11):
I don't know how to break that from him.
Speaker 12 (43:13):
With him, that is.
Speaker 14 (43:16):
Probably more to do with the move you just had
than it is the dementia in all honesty, because of
what's actually happening, where he's peeing on your your boyfriend's shoes.
That's a dominance thing. You know, there's been a change
of of pack there where he's been with you, he's
now you've moved in with your boyfriend. There's the kids there.
He's trying to work out the new pac dynamic. He's
(43:38):
a certain his authority over everyone. Okay, so I'm going
to pee on his shoes because he's the male figure,
which we've all done. So he's being on his shoes marking.
If he's going up the walls, that's marking so and
then the further up the wall it goes, the more
dominant and animal is. It happens with tigers too. Tigers
when they pee in the wild with their marketing, they
(43:59):
almost do a handstand to get the pe as high
up as they possibly can. It's like drunk men in
urinals in the pub. He will do that kind of
little way.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Yeah, we're good from about fifty percent of.
Speaker 14 (44:11):
The case until it gets my age and then you
don't play that game anymore. So it's more about the
dominance than anything. If things are settling down the dementia,
I don't think he's the primary cause of this.
Speaker 3 (44:23):
Although, so how do you start this? I mean, agree
with me. Is it just time because he will just
have to makeally realize that's his house now as well
as an he's sharing that space, or just gonna have
to get a lot more shoes.
Speaker 14 (44:33):
No, yeah, I think it's more about the fact that
your your boyfriend needs to show that he's the leader,
not the dog, because if you just leave it, it's
never going to get better on its own. It's going
to just keep going until the dog established itself as
the leader and other things will happen.
Speaker 3 (44:50):
Her boyfriend should pee on his toys then, But does.
Speaker 14 (44:55):
Your boyfriend have toys?
Speaker 8 (44:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 14 (44:58):
So, So with regards to the dementia, if you are
starting to get into that stage as well, just coming
off topic slightly, when dogs get to that point, we
treat them like they're eight week old puppies again, so
taking him out every hour, that kind of thing, because
they act like puppies. It's like humans, you know, we
go from being babies where we can't look after ourselves
(45:20):
to being you know, old people with dementia who can't
look after himself. So with that side of things, treat
him like a puppy if that starts to present itself.
But I think the problem we've got at the moment
is more to do with dominance and the change of pack.
Speaker 3 (45:33):
Yeah, thanks to Ricotty Andrew appreciate that very much. Just
if you have any continuing issues again, just keep listening.
We'll give you the information ab how to contact RYL
make an appointment if you have to that we can
have it in house. Adjustment we like to see that. Angie.
How you doing You're on with Darryl Pin take good?
Speaker 12 (45:49):
How are you all doing?
Speaker 3 (45:49):
Good?
Speaker 17 (45:50):
Hey?
Speaker 12 (45:50):
Angree, Hey there.
Speaker 18 (45:52):
So I have a two year old male palm chee
who's barking has just become unbearable. No matter what we do,
we'll walk them fat, I'm attention. He just will stop
and bark for no reason whatsoever and will not stop
barking unless we just put him in this craze.
Speaker 17 (46:08):
I don't.
Speaker 18 (46:08):
It's getting to the point where we can't even hold
a conversation without him just barking to interrupt us, to
where we just we want to get rid of them.
Speaker 4 (46:14):
We love them.
Speaker 14 (46:17):
Well, don't don't get rid of him. Give us a call.
We'll get it fixed for you. It's a very simple fix.
The reason it's happening is because he's two years old.
It's like a toddler tugging you know, mum's mum's pant
legs the whole time, mummy watching. So that's that's what
you've got going on. It's it's the dog demanding attention,
(46:39):
demanding to be the center of attention, and it's very
easily fixed. Just give us a call, will come round.
Nothing painful, nothing physical, nothing that will make him afraid
of you. But you won't have to get rid of
it either.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
Yeah, thanks for your Carley, and you appreciate it so much.
From was breaking up a little bit, so we had
to kind of put you on a hold. There. Let's
get to this last call here. This is Lisa, Lisa,
how you don't on your home with Darryl Payne.
Speaker 15 (47:01):
Guys, thank you so much for taking a call. Guys,
And I've been listening. I see, I've listened to a
lot of things she said. And I'm totally in awe
of a lot of the things. I've been raised with
animals in my life. But some of the things you
say just kind of like, you know, it's like, well,
I never thought of that. We are not normal dog owners.
(47:21):
My kids finally got a dog, and my husband's a
transplant patient, so we got this dog.
Speaker 11 (47:27):
She's a year old.
Speaker 15 (47:28):
She's a he's a pit ball. They thought she was
a pit bull rock, but she's looking like she's a
staff pick, you know, but the white coloring on it.
She likes to like lick me all over the face.
Speaker 14 (47:40):
M that Okay. I thought we were going somewhere with
the transplant then, so that's the point.
Speaker 15 (47:47):
Yeah, no, no, he's a transplant. Pat want transa he
didn't want a dog, And now it's like his best friend.
Speaker 4 (47:53):
So that's always the way it happens.
Speaker 10 (47:55):
Dog.
Speaker 15 (47:56):
But now he's on with her all day. I work
two jobs. I come home, I have a little playtime
with her. But when I lay down on this couch,
she will come up and say hi, which I love her.
But then she'll start this lick mode. But she'll go
all the way full plate face. I'm trying to not
get her to lick my face. I don't mind licking aside.
(48:16):
I mean she's licking like she's going in for something
I don't know what.
Speaker 3 (48:20):
All right, all right, you know that you just successfully
made this weird.
Speaker 14 (48:26):
A lot of people pay a lot of money for
this kind of thing.
Speaker 4 (48:29):
There, let us cute up your music man.
Speaker 14 (48:32):
Yeah, dog, Well, the good news is she loves you.
The bad news is that she's grooming you and washing
you if you if you give us a call, we'll
come over and fix that for you. We want to
do something that you know, stops her from being, you know,
(48:55):
a lick monster. Yeah, a little too attentive to you.
Which she obviously is.
Speaker 15 (49:00):
There's one more thing I wanted to ask you about too.
She's not She's a great dog. She loves people, but
whenever she sees somebody, anybody in a car come in
the house, barking is normal. But she is the one
point where she wants to bark and grow at every
single person, to the point it's kind of scared of people.
Speaker 11 (49:19):
Yeah, and she's not a mean dog, she says.
Speaker 15 (49:22):
I know she's establishing her, you know, dominancy, but I'm
just I try to tell her to.
Speaker 18 (49:27):
Stop, and she don't want to listen.
Speaker 15 (49:28):
So that could be puppy because she's a year old,
she's seventy pounds.
Speaker 14 (49:32):
No, I think you know, the age comes into it
because she's grown up now. But the two things you
mentioned actually are both links. So the licking of you
is a dominant act. She's grooming you and washing you.
It's like the old days where you know, in this
when I grew up in the sixties, your mum would
spit on her handkerchief and then wash your face with
(49:54):
a similar which I went to do once with our
kids and my wife threatened to kill me for it.
So it's like that. But so that's a dominant behavior,
and so is the barking and the growling other people outside.
She's taken or she's taking on this role of being
over protective of the family. One of it is, you know,
(50:15):
you've become one of her puppies and she's you know,
looking after you, but also she's protecting everybody, and we
don't want to get that out of hand. She's only
a year old, you know. By the time she is
two three, four years old, that's going to get a
little out of hand for you. So you know, do
give us a call. Let's let's fix that for you
so that you know things don't don't spiral.
Speaker 3 (50:33):
Thanks Leaks, appreciate it so much. Speaking of that, let's
tell people how to get ahold of you.
Speaker 14 (50:37):
If you want to give us a call, it's for
zero seven four five six one zero six six. You
can go online Perfection Dog Training dot com, which is
a horrible site on a mobile phone, but it's okay
on laptops. I am getting it fixed, I promise. Or
you can join our Facebook page. It's Perfection Dog Training
(50:58):
USA Members page. If you can't find it on there,
shoot us a text on the ten sixty six number.
And we'll send you an invite for it. There is
a public page as well, Perfection doc Training on Facebook.
But yeah, anything that's all gives a call will come back,
we'll fix it and you get a lifetime guarantee.
Speaker 11 (51:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
Absolutely, I would suggest the Facebook page for sure, because
there's also a group of people there who have already
had experiences with Darryl and you may be able to
just kind of figure it out through that. If not,
obviously they will take you know, make a phone call.
These guys will come out for and and help you out.
They help my daughter out, They help actually two of
my daughters out with their dogs, and they can certainly
do it for you as well.
Speaker 14 (51:33):
And Ron Holmes comes on a Saturday. I mean you
know now difficult he is and we can manage him.
Speaker 3 (51:40):
So all right, good loud for Darryl guys. Yea all
afection doctorning that Tom always good toe you buddy, you.
Speaker 14 (51:47):
Too, all right, I'll see in January.
Speaker 3 (51:49):
Four oh seven nine one six one four one text
seven seven zero three one.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
And as always, Animal House is brought to you by
Glenn Klausman over at Klosman Law. If you've been in
any kind of an accident, be car, truck, motorcycle, even
a slip and fall. Just a couple of reasons why
you should call Glenn. One, He's not going to pass
you off to a case worker. Glenn is going to
personally handle your case so much so he's going to
give you a 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.
(52:15):
He truly is an animal lover though, and a good
friend of the show. So if you've been in an
accident and give him a call four oh seven nine
one seven seventeen eighteen, or check him out online at
Klosmanlaw dot com.
Speaker 4 (52:26):
That's k l a U s m An Law dot com.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
Thanks deb your four o'clock keywords bank, B A n K.
Go to Role Radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Scott Maxwell up
next here on the Jim Goldberg Show.
Speaker 12 (52:39):
S Hey, dev I just got back from Madison this weekend.
Speaker 6 (52:46):
I know you're not from there, You're from green Bay,
but I just want to give the whole Stato, Wisconsin
like drops. That city of Madison.
Speaker 12 (52:53):
It's probably one of the coolest cities.
Speaker 6 (52:55):
I've been to, Yes, and I'm going up there with Berlin, Unich, London, Amsterdam.
I'm New York, or Orlando and I lived there Miami.
Like just the whole vibe, the whole walkability of it
in between the isthmus Man Madison was awesome.
Speaker 4 (53:11):
Love Madison should check it out.
Speaker 3 (53:17):
Welcome back to the Ja Cober Show, Real Radio one
oh four point one. I didn't throw my random travel dart.
Speaker 4 (53:26):
Hey, it's your loss, Wisconsin.
Speaker 3 (53:28):
I tell you, apparently bank.
Speaker 4 (53:31):
Is your fork like he did say Munich.
Speaker 3 (53:34):
Bank is your fork? Like here where that's B eight
and K go to Real Radio Dot Ben send that
away from your chance at a thousand bucks. I'm Jim.
There's deb hell he Jack is here as well. Yeah,
every Wednesday around this time we invite to show him
to come over and talk about some things he's got
going on, what he's writing about. Orlando Sentinels where you
can find and Wednesday, Thursdays and Sundays. You guys give
(53:55):
it up. Good lound for mister Scott Maxwell.
Speaker 19 (54:00):
What you know, if we're throwing random travel darts out,
I'd like to throw a shout out to Minnesota.
Speaker 4 (54:07):
Another great state Minnesota.
Speaker 18 (54:09):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
I guess if I had to throw one out there
that I would tell people to go to. That's the
best deal for your money and it's a lot of fun.
Is Maine's lovely? Yeah, Maine in New Mexico are two
like kind of outlier spots that I've experienced over the
last and Jackie shouldn't have actually even had a parallel
experience in New Mexico. Yeah, it was great when him
and he and Naomi went out. But I've been to
Maine a couple of times. I have to tell you, man,
(54:30):
great food, great beer. If you're a pothead, weeds legal,
and naturally one of the coolest states that we have
with a Kadie National Park on the east side, then
going westward Quebec. It's just a coolest place. It's a
and it's a it's a grown up place to visit.
There are no there ain't noffing around up in Maine. Dude,
that's a grown up place to go.
Speaker 19 (54:51):
We did a a Katie a couple of years ago,
and I would say the exact same thing. One of
the coolest things about there is you don't even have
to be huge to hiking, but you can start on
a trail right at the ocean, you know, right at
the ocean, I mean on the beach, and if you're
you know, you got a little bit of fitness.
Speaker 9 (55:08):
But thirty minutes later you're on the cliff.
Speaker 3 (55:11):
Yeah, I don't know, five.
Speaker 9 (55:12):
Hundred feet above the water.
Speaker 12 (55:14):
It is.
Speaker 19 (55:14):
It is a really neat But the problem is today
is like the last day you can visit Maine until March.
Speaker 3 (55:19):
Right, yeah, exactly. The other issue is this, I say
issue is not an issue, but when you go there
for the first time. We were in September, when we
went a year.
Speaker 9 (55:27):
After early October, same, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (55:29):
So when and you're right, it gets it gets cold
quick up there, right, I mean your August evenings are
like in the late August is like in the thirties already.
But when you drive through Acadian National Park and you
experienced that, it seems fake, like it seems like something
like an anomaly naturally happened, and it just seems fake
and it seems like something somebody built. Because it's so beautiful.
You can't believe that anything naturally can happen so perfectly
(55:51):
like that, you know.
Speaker 9 (55:53):
Yeah, and the weather is so cool.
Speaker 19 (55:54):
We were sweating our rears off while hiking at the
top of a mountain in Acadia in the morning and
sweaters and jeans and as the mist and.
Speaker 9 (56:05):
The fog came in over the evening on a boat
ride while looking for whales.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
Yeah, for sure, awesome place up there.
Speaker 7 (56:11):
Charlie fer Main just texted in. He's listening and Joe says,
it's snowing in Bangor today.
Speaker 3 (56:17):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, and that's where you're flying
in back.
Speaker 19 (56:20):
Well, the other thing you mentioned, Jim, that you've actually
you are responsible for putting on my bucket list, and
I feel like it was was it Main or New
Hampshire where you did your snow movie?
Speaker 3 (56:29):
Oh that's Main Yeah, yeah, yeah, I've got this straight
hookup for that. If you ever want to have a
snow building experience, I've got the spot. And the cool
thing is you booked the lodge, which is like basically
brand new, and on the way to the lodge from
the airport, you stop and get all your snowball billing stuff.
They deliver your snowmobile to the lodge the next morning
and off you go. It is was it something like
Partridge Lake Parlan Plan?
Speaker 12 (56:52):
Leave it or not?
Speaker 19 (56:53):
Jim, I wrote it down when you first mentioned it
to me, like a decade. Yeah, you made it sound so.
Speaker 3 (56:57):
Yeah, Lake Parland Lodge. Every buddy Joe Cruisey and his
wife Liz own that and and they're amazing people for
one thing. But that place up there is just absolutely magical, dude.
And it's very affordable. That's a good thing about it too, Scott.
Speaker 7 (57:09):
Just be real careful if you're gonna Snowmollbill with your wife.
It can be dangerous for spouses.
Speaker 9 (57:15):
I remember hearing that party as well.
Speaker 3 (57:17):
I don't get reminded about it though, not any more.
Speaker 19 (57:21):
Well, you know what, they're not great places to live
right now this time of year.
Speaker 9 (57:26):
This is a pretty damn nice place.
Speaker 14 (57:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (57:28):
I mean you cannot beat the weather today.
Speaker 3 (57:30):
You cannot. You cannot, and in fact.
Speaker 9 (57:33):
Before while I'm just randomly thinking about it. Two weeks
from tomorrow, is that?
Speaker 1 (57:37):
No?
Speaker 9 (57:37):
Three weeks whenever?
Speaker 8 (57:38):
Thanks?
Speaker 6 (57:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (57:39):
Thanksgiving is is my annual list of one hundred and
one things to love about Central Florida. So if any
of your listeners want to send in suggestion, I usually
get about five hundred suggestions. I'm looking for restaurants, you know, museums, theaters,
natural attractions, people, dishes, outdoor spots, any trails, anything you
(57:59):
might like you want to put on there, you can
send them to me Smaxwell at Orlando Centinel Dot Yeah.
Speaker 3 (58:03):
Events. I actually saw you put out the holler for
that last week, so I know that's one of your
more popular columns throughout the year. So check that out
for sure. Speaking of popular columns, I read your piece
today about visit Orlando, and you know, we've talked about
visit Orlando quite a bit on the show with you
over the last years because it's a valiant effort to
you know, shed some light on what's happening over there,
and it looks like, finally maybe there may be some
(58:25):
movement on, you know, regulating what happens with that place.
What did you find?
Speaker 19 (58:30):
Yeah, you know, I decided to take a step back,
and one of the things I was looking at it
is we're at a point in America right now where
there's a real crackdown on spending.
Speaker 9 (58:38):
I mean we know that, you know, you say the
word doge.
Speaker 19 (58:41):
The word didn't exist a year ago, literally and now
everybody knows what is and there's a crackdown and visit
Orlando is the absolute opposite of that. Their budget, their
subsities have tripled over the course of a decade. They
went from thirty five million dollars and taxes a year
they were getting, you know, as as the region's Tourism
Promotion Bureau, to one hundred and five million dollars. And
(59:03):
that's a lot of money. That's more money than some
small cities are spending. And one of my beefs has
been that there's not really been a whole lot of
checks and balances. And every time we found something that
was questionable about what they were doing, like spending nine
thousand dollars on a business class airfare to Dubai, throwing
one hundred and three thousand dollars party when they were
running radio ads, and I know we like radio ads,
(59:27):
but when they were running radio ads around Central Florida
that were encouraging people to be grateful for having a
tourism economy, that's fine for a PSA, but that's not
what we pay tax dollars to Orlando for. We pay
them to get other people to get their ass down
to Orlando. I mean, that's what we pay And every
time we would ask about that kind of money.
Speaker 9 (59:45):
They would They would say, oh, you know what, that's
private money.
Speaker 19 (59:50):
I know, we get a lot of tax dollars, but
we're spending our own private money, and so you don't
need to worry about any of that. Well, I and
some other people were looking at their budget and just
figuring I don't know how that worked, because the private
tax dollars donated from theme parks and hotels account for
about three million dollars of their one hundred and five
million dollars, and I think I think it should be
(01:00:11):
a boatload. I think, if this agency is doing a
great bang up job for putting people in hotels and
people and theme parks, I mean, they're the companies who
are benefiting for it, I think it should be like
a one to one ratio. But even if you don't,
I couldn't figure out how three million dollars was covering
every single questionable expense every time we had it. Well,
the auditors got in there, and this is an audit
(01:00:33):
that only happens like once a decade basically, and they
got in and they said there's some bs in here.
And among the things they found was they were calling
private money public money.
Speaker 9 (01:00:43):
Excuse me, vice versa.
Speaker 19 (01:00:44):
They were calling public money private money, and that's a
big accounting point.
Speaker 3 (01:00:47):
And no receipts. I mean, it's the thing is that
you show us. I mean, I think you've been saying
the column basically. You know I'm paraphrasing, but you know, hey,
if this is the case, just show us, and then
you know we will at least have a record of
it for sure. I mean, one hundred and three thousand
dollars for somebody who were tronment party.
Speaker 19 (01:01:01):
Yeah, yeah, that was another There was twenty was it
twenty or forty thousand dollars for a one night party
up in New York that the comptroller flagged. And it
was it was like every time something got flagged, they
went private money, private money. And he said, well, well
they looked at one year and they found I think
it was about three and a half million dollars worth
of what visitor Lander was saying private money, and they went,
that's not private money. For instance, they would stay like
(01:01:24):
take some money that was tax dollars and invested in
something and it would get returns and they'd call it
private money, and they'd say, that's that's not private money.
You know, money, that's that's yielded with tax with public
money is still public money, and you shouldn't be scared
to account for all that, in my estimation, and that's
what the comptroller said. And finally, after years of you know,
most elected officials cowtowing to tourism, there are a number
(01:01:46):
of county commissioners who are saying it's time to crack down.
I think they should cut back on the budget in general,
but they're talking about seriously cracking it.
Speaker 3 (01:01:53):
And not to mention, I think I can't remember if
you mentioned it in this story, but I know we
you and I have talked about this before. Is just
how how kind of odd it is that visit Orlando
is basically a subsidy for theme parks to get free
advertising for their businesses. I mean, they're making billions of dollars,
yet the taxpayers here in Central Florida and the tourists
that come in are paying for them to advertise their companies.
(01:02:15):
And I've said it for years. What are they gonna do?
Speaker 20 (01:02:17):
Leave?
Speaker 3 (01:02:18):
I mean, you're not gonna go build another Disney somewhere else.
Just you know, you don't have to play hardball per se,
but Jesus make it fair.
Speaker 19 (01:02:23):
You know, well, that's exactly right. And you know there
was a story just last week, I think this week.
Speaker 9 (01:02:29):
Last week they said.
Speaker 19 (01:02:30):
Something like Central Florida is tourism numbers surged because of
Epic Universe.
Speaker 9 (01:02:35):
Yeah, that's why tourism surges.
Speaker 19 (01:02:37):
Because Universal opens a new theme park, because Disney does
a new Avatar World, because Royal Caribbean puts a new
ship at Port Canaveral. It's not because of the tourism campaign.
But even if it is, even if marketing, and I
think you can argue that marketing can be a good idea.
Every other industry pays for their own marketing.
Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
I was about to say it, if I had a
company out there, I'd love to be I've been fun
Spot would love to tap into that one hundred and
five million dollars.
Speaker 9 (01:03:04):
Probably doesn't tap into it. That's the wrong, okay, But.
Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
But I mean, if any bid some bakery that you
may have, I'd love to get ten thousand dollars a
month to be able to promote my bakery or orando
business that we're supposed to be supporting.
Speaker 9 (01:03:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (01:03:17):
When a when a car dealer wants to bring in customers,
sure car dealer reaches into his own wallet. If a
law firm wants new customers, reaches into his own wallet.
You know, John Morgan and Dan Newlan are on your
radio station all the time.
Speaker 9 (01:03:30):
But with this one.
Speaker 19 (01:03:31):
Industry, it's subsidized through hotel tax dollars and uh and
and in other places, those hotel tax dollars actually pay
for the services that that that tourists, the strains they
put on our commat right. You know, we've talked about
the transit, you know, the buses. We've talked about housing.
But man, one of the things that I think gets
overlooked is cops.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
Uh.
Speaker 19 (01:03:52):
Tourists place a big demand on cops, sometimes because they
need help and sometimes because they get their drunk asses arrested.
I mean, I mean there's a big cost. I mean,
as the head of the Christian Service Center always says,
if you've met a tourist that came to Orlando for
three days and didn't flush his toilet, in other words,
use our water, I'd like to.
Speaker 3 (01:04:12):
Meet him, or drive the roads or or any of
that stuff. And Uh, it's so funny this whole paragraph
that dedicated to this firm, the Razorfish Firm.
Speaker 19 (01:04:20):
Oh yeah, yeah, So there's a and that's another thing
that has long bothered me. Some of them, and I
would think bothers, other CEOs, I would think they would
start to speak up. Some of the biggest checks and
contracts they have are for companies that aren't based anywhere
in Florida. They're based in New York. I think there
was one based in Wisconsin. We may love Wisconsin, but uh,
(01:04:41):
but they're based And if I was trying to I
would want you're telling me there's no creative agency, there's
no farm that can come up with an ad campaign.
Speaker 8 (01:04:47):
And then the.
Speaker 3 (01:04:48):
Interesting thing is that we're not talking about small dollars here.
And this is uh, this is right from your column
and says the comptrollers. Check registry shows that Visit Orlando
has cut monthly checks this year ranging from one hundred
and seventy two thousand to one point seventy five million
to a New York based headquartered firm called Razorfish, which
(01:05:09):
I guess is basically an advertising firm that comes up
with concepts and ideas at which they did this thing
called Orlando's. But the fact is exactly what you say,
you're telling me in all of Orlando and all of
Florida from Miami to Orlando to Tampa, that we couldn't
find a creative firm that could do that work and
keep that money in house.
Speaker 19 (01:05:28):
Like you get, the base rate that I see this
firm getting from looking through two years of check registries
is two hundred and seventy thousand dollars a month.
Speaker 3 (01:05:36):
That's bananas.
Speaker 19 (01:05:37):
And I've seen monthly payments as high as one point
seven and two million dollars another nine hundred thousand were
In other words, we're talking real money here. But there's
it's always just viewed as this this agency's.
Speaker 9 (01:05:49):
Been viewed as untouchable.
Speaker 19 (01:05:50):
But I think one of the other things that really
started to rub some of the county commissioners the wrong way,
and God bless them for it, was Visit Orlando was
spending money on lobbying, basically lobbying for their own agency,
saying we deserve more money. That's you think about how
meta and how nuts that is for taxpayers to give
money to an agency to lobby for.
Speaker 9 (01:06:12):
More tax dollars. Oh yeah, that's everything that's wrong with.
Speaker 3 (01:06:15):
Government, right right, right right? That is a core bad value.
Speaker 9 (01:06:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
And by the way, the other the other.
Speaker 19 (01:06:22):
They stay focused on the mission. I think they need
to have their private interests donating more. I think I
mean Disney. They do things like putting Miny Mouse's face
on a bus in Times Square. There's one company that's
benefiting from something like that, that's Disney, and Disney should
probably be the one paying for it in min mind.
So anyway, the comptroller, his name is Phil Diamond. He
(01:06:44):
seems to be taking this real serious. And to give
a shout out to two of the commissioners, Maira Uribe
and Kelly Simrad. They put out a long memo and
they sound like they're not going to be compromising.
Speaker 9 (01:06:53):
This is all going to come to a head in
a few weeks.
Speaker 3 (01:06:55):
And not to mention some of the other incitious stuff
that happens, and this happens in Florida from our own
government to agencies of this nature. Are these no big contracts?
Speaker 16 (01:07:05):
Man?
Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
That is that is like, that's such shaky business when
you just you know, you you have a massive contract,
maybe a ten million dollar contract for a service or
a product, and you don't even bid it out, and
of course it winds up into some brother in law's company.
It's just it's so sketch Alligator.
Speaker 9 (01:07:20):
Yeah know that you're you're both right.
Speaker 19 (01:07:22):
And I got to tell you if I I mean
trends in government EBB and flow, and if I had
to look at the most devious trend that I've seen
in Florida over the last two years, it is this
no big contract thing.
Speaker 9 (01:07:34):
And if any and if your listeners aren't appreciating, I
think they would appreciate it.
Speaker 19 (01:07:38):
I mean, if most people, if you need to get
a new roof, you don't just call one roofer and
ask them how much it's going to cost and then go,
here's all my money. You call three roofers and you
see what they're gonna do, and you check their experience,
you check what kind of track record they're doing. Anytime
you see a no bid contract, that should send up
a bright red flag.
Speaker 9 (01:07:57):
Often we've seen, as.
Speaker 19 (01:07:58):
Jack mentioned with Alligator, there's political cronies involved.
Speaker 12 (01:08:02):
Man.
Speaker 9 (01:08:02):
I saw one that steam my clams last week.
Speaker 19 (01:08:05):
So the Florida is going after professors for their Charlie
kirk Kirk posts, Okay, fine, that's what they want to do.
Speaker 9 (01:08:12):
But there's a contract to a law firm.
Speaker 19 (01:08:15):
That is getting nine hundred and twenty five dollars an
hour an hour to go after the college professors who
are posting about Charlie Kirk.
Speaker 3 (01:08:26):
And they're going to lose, right, I mean, there's our
First Amendment protected, well other than the if it's a
government agency, they would have to lose.
Speaker 17 (01:08:33):
Right.
Speaker 19 (01:08:34):
Well, it's murky, it's it's a little murky. Most of
their no bid long because I mean, you know what,
an employer has a right to fire someone for doing
something that's you know, that reflects poorly on the organization.
But I think that's a really wide swath and courts
are really reluctant to step on to say that that
(01:08:57):
it's obscene speech.
Speaker 3 (01:08:58):
Ure yeah, almost or speak. Almost every one of these
cases I've read about is being challenged in court. I
mean like nobody's just taking going like nobody's just going, okay, well,
I guess I'll just screwed up. Nobody's doing that.
Speaker 19 (01:09:08):
And most of it, and for the free speech ones
are the ones that keep losing, like the ones like
stop Woke, where they were trying to tell private companies
you can't have employee training lessons where you tell your
you know, uh employers, well you've never been a black person,
so you might need to uh consider what it's like
to walk in their shoes. Well, Ron DeSantis and James
Uthmeier may not may not like that as a lesson
(01:09:30):
to employers. But if I if I created ABC Incorporated Contracting,
and I'm spending my own money, and I want to
tell my own employers that because I think it's going
to help boost my you know, multicultural business.
Speaker 9 (01:09:41):
That's my own business. And every court has said, who
the hell do you think you are?
Speaker 19 (01:09:45):
Rh Yeah, yeah, who as a state to try to
tell businesses that they can't do what they want?
Speaker 3 (01:09:51):
No different than they guy who rolled through his warehouse
a few years back and said, if you don't vote
for this particularly candidate, I don't. I'm not. I can't
guarantee your employment. I mean you you just can't do
stuff like that.
Speaker 9 (01:10:00):
No, no, you can't.
Speaker 19 (01:10:00):
And you know, speaking of which, before we go off,
have you all talked about you know, do you remember
one of the most famous people in town who did that.
They basically said, if you, uh, if you don't vote
for my guy, you're gonna lose your job or I'm
going to close down my company and leave town.
Speaker 9 (01:10:14):
Isa resort.
Speaker 19 (01:10:15):
Yeah there, yeah, bing bing bing all the way around
it's fascinating. Did you see that that Broadway musical starring
Kristin Chinelworth is on Broadway?
Speaker 9 (01:10:24):
Now?
Speaker 3 (01:10:25):
Yeah, yeah, Savannah and uh Jackie actually just came back
from New York. I think either yesterday or the day before, because.
Speaker 9 (01:10:32):
Savannah to admit, I'm curious to see it.
Speaker 3 (01:10:34):
Savannah was up there. It was interesting because today Matthew
palm uh did a review of it and the review was, look,
they made a Broadway They made a Broadway show about
Jackie Siegel. That was pretty much the thing. I mean,
nothing was written about it. Nothing. He just said that
it was that it existed.
Speaker 19 (01:10:51):
He said, there's some people that have given it surprisingly
good reviews, and a whole lot of people have been
like WTL, well.
Speaker 3 (01:11:00):
God bless her. I guess always good seeing you, Scott.
We're so late. You do this to us every single time.
Scott Scott, Scott, Scott.
Speaker 9 (01:11:06):
Scott's minutes from next week?
Speaker 3 (01:11:07):
All right, No, I will not do that. Good laugh
for Scott. There you go, yay see you buddy. I
was always you got man all right for our seven
nine six four one text us seven seven zero three one,
got a few minutes left for your fork, like keyword.
It's bank b A n K. Slide over to real
Radio dot FM and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars back in one sec with more
of The Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 20 (01:11:27):
Stay put, good afternoon, The Jim Colbot Show. Of course,
this Prince of the Islands. We live comfortable, boy, we are.
But Jimmy, you are in Florida and you're already putting
(01:11:49):
on the heat.
Speaker 4 (01:11:50):
Come out from the Islands.
Speaker 9 (01:11:56):
I don't even know my heat.
Speaker 3 (01:11:57):
Worse on the that's a branu but I don't know
if they hear it works.
Speaker 14 (01:12:02):
I never put this.
Speaker 20 (01:12:03):
I've been hit twenty five years.
Speaker 3 (01:12:05):
Never put the.
Speaker 9 (01:12:08):
Never.
Speaker 3 (01:12:08):
He just can't do it.
Speaker 7 (01:12:09):
Now wait a second. He took a second shot at it.
You want to hear Yeah, sure, here we go.
Speaker 20 (01:12:16):
Cool afternoon, dichm called boot shop brains of the Islands.
Of course, Jimmy, you're putting the sc heat on in
Florida in October November.
Speaker 3 (01:12:28):
Come on, man, so design you're going to put the
s on. I don't even know if my heats tripping it?
How on us for the last twenty five years that
I've been here.
Speaker 16 (01:12:41):
Okay, but.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
Against it.
Speaker 16 (01:12:43):
He can't do it.
Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
He just can't do it. A are welcome back up, Jim,
there's dead Hello jack us here as well. We're so
late already for being late. We gotta go already. But
I did want to cover this real quick before we
get to the top of the hour, because I do
have an interesting topic at five o'clock to talk about
regarding the White House, which I did not know by
the wait. I thought this would be standard issue equipment,
but it is not. I can't believe that three Remember
(01:13:05):
we said that Bob Ross they were gonna start selling
some of his paintings to start funding some of the
other stuff that's going on there at PBS. Yeah, absolutely,
they had the very first auction. Did you see any
of the numbers? I did not.
Speaker 4 (01:13:17):
Yeah, did you see the number just briefly?
Speaker 3 (01:13:20):
Okay, I didn't know. If you saw the number, I
know you saw the story. Yeah, three paintings fetched a
total of They still have twenty seven to auction off.
So this is a real good look for BBS. Okay,
I'll say three hundred thousand dollars not bad. Four fifty
six hundred thousand dollars why for all three is what
(01:13:41):
they went for. So we don't know if they will.
Speaker 7 (01:13:43):
Were that was that the same painting, because I know
he did three or that's three separate paintings. No, it's
three separate paintings, Okay, Like one of them got three
hundred eighteen thousand, one of them got you know, two
twenty nine. So they were all separated up by maybe
what the subject was or anything. But yes, six hundred total.
I remember like for the show, he would do three
of the same painting. I guess, like one test, then
(01:14:04):
one for the station.
Speaker 3 (01:14:06):
Right, yeah, and then something yeah, yeah, yeah. The joy
painting went for three eighteen to a bitter on the phone.
Let's see another painting done on a nineteen ninety three episode,
lush green landscape called Home in the Valley went for
two hundred and twenty nine, and a third called clip
Side sold for one hundred and fourteen, eight hundred dollars.
And like I said, they saw twenty seven of these
talk show. That's great. That is I got so much
(01:14:27):
stuff at my house. I wish I could say, no joke.
I every time I've done the garage shell at the end,
I've always I'm never doing this again. We're just gonna
donate it.
Speaker 7 (01:14:37):
That everything, and then I have this pile of stuff
and it's like, oh, I could sell it on like
eBay or marketplace.
Speaker 3 (01:14:44):
It's like I just can't motivated myself to do it.
Speaker 21 (01:14:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:46):
Yeah, it's stuff because you don't see the big number
at the end of No. I got a friend who's
his girlfriend, wife, fiance, whatever, does this and it just
seems so exhausting to buy a you know, buy a
lot of something and go through it one piece of
time trying to sell it online because some of the
stuff you'll for months a year. Some of them you'll
never sell, you.
Speaker 7 (01:15:02):
Know, if someone I'll pay someone to do it like
they get in percentage.
Speaker 3 (01:15:07):
Yeah, that's going to really make you loaded there. Well,
it's also it's about getting rid of stuff.
Speaker 16 (01:15:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:15:12):
Well today I just found out that the White House
doesn't have one of these, and I kind of can't
believe it. I'll tell you what it is next.
Speaker 4 (01:15:23):
Hey, how's it Ohano in this homp day yep.
Speaker 2 (01:15:28):
I can't give any more five thumbs up for a
Kadian National Park than I can.
Speaker 19 (01:15:33):
I think everybody, if they can once in their life,
they should visit this place.
Speaker 21 (01:15:37):
It's absolutely amazing.
Speaker 2 (01:15:40):
Yeah, like Bretta Scott said, I can Mount Dessert Island.
Speaker 11 (01:15:43):
It's not a rough hike.
Speaker 6 (01:15:46):
Really has something to offer everyone, but it's absolutely beautiful.
Speaker 11 (01:15:50):
Check them out.
Speaker 10 (01:15:52):
Hello Breda happy he daycover the company. It's Corcreek and Mike.
Why I'm sitting here stopping go on? I seventy five
listening to the show and I heard a guy Leavey
talk back about Madison, Wisconsin. Fun fact about Madison, Wisconsin.
I have been trespassed from that university, also Perdue University
(01:16:14):
and Northern Illinois University. Back in the day when I
was a younger, lad did some things what it's supposed
to be doing.
Speaker 7 (01:16:22):
Got kicked out, didn't He also tell us us we
got kicked out of a froggers.
Speaker 3 (01:16:26):
Yeah, because he's right. He dipped a testicle into a
shot glass. Yeah, that was sitting on a table. Yeah,
a double shot. Last Maybe we should invite him in
to tell his life story a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:16:36):
His shot glass.
Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
I don't know whose it was. I mean, but it
doesn't matter. If you pull your you know, your package
outs are dipping it into drinks in the general public,
it's going to be bad. I don't know, what do
you mean? You don't know any maybe we need security.
All right, you're five o'clock. He were to check the HGCK,
go to real radio dot FM and send it on
(01:16:57):
for your chance in a thousands of bucks. Check is
the work? Get that money, Jim, there's deb Hello, Jack
is here as well?
Speaker 9 (01:17:03):
What's going on?
Speaker 3 (01:17:06):
I don't know who does? All right? So obviously you
can't avoid politics on the news cycle. This is not
like you. This is not a political story. It is
interesting about the White House though, because I thought, for sure,
considering how many others, how many other organizations, facilities, touring shows,
(01:17:33):
bands have this and the White House doesn't. As a
matter of fact, the White House actually was kind of
fighting this a little bit in certain circumstances. A family bathroom. No,
it's really good guests though. It's a service provided to
the White House for a group of people, and they
(01:17:55):
don't have one on staff, a defibrillator. And I can't
believe it, because when you can sit catering people who
have you know, people as well, I say, people institutions
have one of these so that when they, you know,
when they make statements, you know, everybody can get the
picture podium translator close asl that's the answer right there.
(01:18:19):
Oh my goodness, Yeah, dude, US appeals court order to
use American Sign language interpreters at the White House briefings.
And basically what's happening is the Department of Justice is
actually appealing this. It's a federal judge's order requiring the
White House to immediately begin providing American Sign Language interpretation
at its press briefings when President Trump or Secretary Caroline
(01:18:42):
Levitt is speaking. And what they wanted to do. The
White House only wanted to provide it during certain instances.
They didn't want to provide it during Q and a's
with the President, and no you can. I don't really
want to make this a political thing. I don't understand
how the White House doesn't have one. Touring bands have one. Yeah,
like you can't go see a band, you can't do
anything without on the right hand side, some very animated
(01:19:05):
person who winds up stealing the show. By the way,
is doing the entire show in asl.
Speaker 7 (01:19:09):
Any governor emergency you know, a speech you know for
hurricanes and yeah, yeah, however they have to make those announcements,
those press conferences.
Speaker 3 (01:19:21):
Yeah, they always have someone doing SILI. It would seem
to me that the what I guess I couldn't believe
is that the United States governments, the White House does
not have an on staff ASL interpreter. I can't believe that.
That seems like a I mean, like again, you know,
we have laws in the US that and we've talked
about this before with attorneys who go around to make
(01:19:43):
sure your website is compliant to the ADA, the American
Disabilities Acted.
Speaker 4 (01:19:49):
If you don't give them an idea of the next
website to go.
Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
After, and if you don't, you get caught up in it,
right you, They actually sue you. You have to wind
up paying like thirty five hundred and five thousand dollars
and you have to make your website compliant and get
it reinspected to make sure that it is compliant. But
yet the White House doesn't have an ASL interpreter. And
this doesn't matter who. By the way, this has nothing
to do with the presidency. This could have been I mean,
I can't believe Biden had had one, Obama didn't have one.
(01:20:14):
Nobody had one. They don't have an on staff ASL
interpreter for the White House. I can't believe it.
Speaker 4 (01:20:22):
I'm shocked as well, yeah, it doesn't make.
Speaker 3 (01:20:23):
Any sense because when you hire them, and it says here,
one of the reasons they that they can't provide it
all the time is is because they require a twenty
four hour notice. I'm like, well, that's why you should
have one on staff, Like, how much could it possibly cost,
considering our budget to be able to communicate with a
large portion of constituents in the US who just can't hear.
Speaker 5 (01:20:42):
Well, it's crazy that local eeocs would have to have them, right,
it says.
Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
The Department of Justice is appealing at Federal George A
Judge's order requiring the White House to immediately prevent begin
providing American Sign Language interpretation of its press briefings when
President Trump or Press Secretary can Mariline Levitt or speaking,
it says here, that says in the court. Finally, on Friday,
responding to the US District Judge Amir Ali's ruling, the
(01:21:09):
Justice Department requested clarification on which type of events should
have ASL interpretation available. The DOJ says it believes the
services should be limited to regularly scheduled briefings and not
other events. But the President takes questions from the press,
And I don't understand that what makes that information any
less viable to that community than the one before? You
(01:21:30):
see what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (01:21:31):
Yeah, but you'd have to ask the DOJ for their
reasoning behind that, because it doesn't make sense. Again, local municipalities,
smaller cities have to have somebody on staff to be
able to pass along, you know, evacuation routes where you
can get sandbags when your power is going to be restored. Y. Yeah,
it seems crazy that the head office would be exempt
(01:21:52):
from that.
Speaker 3 (01:21:53):
It says here that DJ's judge's order should not apply
to remarks made in a broad set of scenarios. Quote,
the White House does not understand press briefings to encompass
events with other purposes, such as a ceremony or a
speech at which the President may choose to take questions
from the press. But I guess I don't understand why
(01:22:14):
these circumstance matters at all. If the press shouldn't if
the President, or to be honest, any of the cabinet
members or the Press Secretary are speaking. And it's important
to tax paying Americans, Every single tax paying American, which
would include our deaf community, should be able to get
that message should be able to you know, hear that
(01:22:35):
said now, of course they could read it down the road. Understood,
But if you're watching the press briefing in the right there,
it's just inconceivable that the United States of America doesn't
have an ASL interpreter at the highest possible level. How
much does real time closed captioning though, negate the need? Yeah,
I don't know if they even do that do that?
I mean, I guess it's your device, right, you can
(01:22:56):
choose it or not. Yeah, I don't know, because I
mean then that it requires the person to have a
television that does that. Sure, And maybe they don't have that.
Maybe they don't get their information that way, maybe it
comes to their phone, they only get it through iPads
or whatever. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:23:13):
I can't believe that no administration has had.
Speaker 3 (01:23:17):
Look up Jack, if you don't mind, how much does
an ASL interpreter make a year? I mean, I mean
a good one. I mean I'm talking about I don't know,
ten years in the business. I don't know that it matters.
I mean, I guess if you're ASL in the business
two years, how does it change if you're in their
ten years. The language doesn't change. I don't believe it varies.
Speaker 7 (01:23:36):
And the averages between sixty one to seventy nine thousand
per year, or about thirty four to thirty eight bucks.
Speaker 3 (01:23:43):
An hour, That would be by far the lowest paid
people in that room, and they can easily pull that off.
Everybody in that government makes more than that. Entry level
positions may start around thirty two k top burners making
over one hundred and forty one. Yeah, it says the
White House Press. If things engage American people on important
issues affecting their daily lives, in recent months, wore the
(01:24:04):
economy in healthcare, and in recent years a global pandemic.
This is the judge saying this. The exclusion of deaf
Americans from that programming, in addition to likely violating the
Rehabilitation Act, is a clear and present harm that the
Court cannot meaningfully remedy after the fact. I just found
that amazing. I don't know why it hit me so
hard this morning that the US, the United States government
(01:24:27):
doesn't have an on staff asl interpreter. I just for
some reason, it be so weird.
Speaker 7 (01:24:32):
Ironically, the only deaf college, it's Galadet University is in Washington, DC.
Speaker 3 (01:24:41):
All right, four seven nine one six one four one
Again you can always text us at seven to seven
zero three one. A very interesting case out of North Carolina.
And I'm going to make a pitch on how this
should be everywhere in the US. But it's not yet.
I'll tell you what that is next.
Speaker 2 (01:25:06):
Still to come, we find out what's in the good
Sauce with Ross Paget.
Speaker 11 (01:25:15):
Today it's six on the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 3 (01:25:18):
Hey, guys, not.
Speaker 22 (01:25:19):
Sure we're going to cover this or when, but the
Arizona Senator just got sworn in today. Yeah, so she's
gonna be the tutor at eighteen signature. It looks like
the White House is running damage control and trying to
get people to pull their names.
Speaker 3 (01:25:36):
Yeah, that is the story that And actually Caroline Levitt
just confirmed that the White House did have a meeting
with at least one person, Lauren Bobert Uh And the
rumor is that they're trying to convince her to pull
her name from signing the discharge discharge Geez Louise discharge
petition put forward by mo Conna and Thomas Massey. And
(01:26:01):
this is for the release of the Epstein. Yeah, yeah,
less yeah, I read on that today, though. I have
to tell you it's so funny because a lot of
a lot's been put into this signature. But I you know,
as I read today, it doesn't really matter. Really. What
they're trying to do is I don't think that any
belief there's not going to be this treasure trove that
like her signature doesn't open like a safe deposit box
(01:26:24):
and you know, images and video and audio recordings come
flying out. It's not going to be like that, basically,
because this has to also be approved by the Senate
and then it has to get the signature of the
President as well. So I think we kind of understand that,
you know, with Republican control of the Senate, and of
course the President's probably not going to sign this. But
what they're trying to do is they're trying to get
(01:26:44):
on the record people voting against the releasing of these
files so that they can basically say you are protecting
a pedophile. And now the two other email that came
out today, you know, throw even more wrenches in the machine.
I just watched Caroline Levitt's press conference trying to explain
away the email were Epstein sent years and years ago,
saying that Trump was the only dog that hasn't barked,
(01:27:07):
and also confirming that Trump knew what he was doing
and knew that Epstein was into the young girls and
knew what was happening, and that was almost alluded to
in the infamous birthday card. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, And
again this is stuff released by the estate. There was
a twenty thousand more I guess pages or something released today.
Some of the emails weren't very flattering at all actually,
(01:27:30):
so we'll see how that goes. But yeah, I just
don't want people to get over just overly excited.
Speaker 4 (01:27:37):
Yeah, that there's gonna be this spectation.
Speaker 3 (01:27:38):
That there's gonna be a website that you're gonna be
able to flip through and see all these salacious photographs
and hear all this stuff. It's not gonna be like
that at all. Yeah, not now. Anyway, Welcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show, Real Radio one to four point one.
Check is your five o'clock keyword that's chgck. Slide over
to Real Radio Dot of fimins and then offer your
chance at a thousand bucks. I'm Jim, There's deb Hello.
Jack is here as well. So much warmer today. Yeah, yeah,
(01:28:00):
it is so much warmer today. What do you guys, degrees,
What do you guys think that let me see if
I get this story up here, what do you guys
think that the states of Hawaii, Illinois, Mississippi, New Mexico,
North Carolina, South Dakota, and Utah all have in common?
You're not gonna get it, okay, but I just wanted
to name the states. They have a thing called the
(01:28:22):
alienation of affection laws. Oh yeah, And I have to
tell you it's so funny. I actually didn't think it
was eight states. I only thought it was like two.
I thought it was North Carolina and like New Mexico
that had it. Now you have more to avoid. Now
there's more out there. And the reason why I bring
this story up, and if you don't know what it is,
I'll tell you right now. Right So, this is a
(01:28:43):
story out of North Carolina where a TikTok personality is
gonna have to pay one point seventy five million dollars
because under this alienation of affection law, a jury found
her liable for destroying a Durham, a Durham couple's marriage.
I guess the guy was her manager or something. She
(01:29:03):
started an affair, and basically the other wife sued the
husband or sued her for breaking up their marriage and
won one point seventy five million dollars. You mean the wife, yeah,
not the other wife. Yeah, the wife, right, yeah, I
said the lawsuit following the other woman. Yeah. The lawsuit,
filed in Durham County Court, accused Brene Cunard and an
(01:29:26):
influencer with nearly three million followers on TikTok and two
hundred and seventy four followers on seventy thousand followers on Instagram,
of seducing and having an affair with her manager, Tim Montogg.
She's received justice from losing her husband and the father
of her children. That was the attorney for her, said.
The jury found her libel for criminal conversation and alienation
(01:29:49):
of affection And this I have to tell you. Do
you like these laws?
Speaker 4 (01:29:55):
By the way, I think it would I think it
would make adults maybe stopping.
Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
I have to tell you, I read this story today
and I did not know that there were eight states.
I'm like, that's a federal law in my opinion, Like,
I think that's that's a situation where you know when
you talk to Ray Trendley, and you hear like divorce
scenarios and how things kind of break down and how
things happen. And you hear like, just you know how
gnarly it can become, you know, and there's no repercussions
(01:30:22):
for the person who caused the calamity other than you know,
they they are going to lose their marriage. But the
person who is the person in question, they you know,
he's just gonna walk away.
Speaker 12 (01:30:32):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
They don't have anything. And these stags can't do that, right, Like,
if I have an affair with somebody and I break
that marriage up, that man consume me for in one
of these states, consume me for doing that, and it
goes to a jury. A jury gets to decide whether
or not I have to pay a fee to this
guy for breaking his marriage up because I entered a
(01:30:53):
relationship with his wife knowing that she was married.
Speaker 4 (01:30:59):
That's a lot of money to have to pay.
Speaker 3 (01:31:01):
But TikTok pays good though. Yeah, so they got married. Yeah,
and they wound up getting married. Yes, Yeah, the coult
didn't wind up getting married. But it doesn't matter, right,
that doesn't matter, so says the court. Yeah, so says
the court, so says this law.
Speaker 5 (01:31:17):
So now instead of having to pay alimony, he just
gets to paid a lot more.
Speaker 3 (01:31:21):
Yeah. A Kira Montag, who brought the suit to the
civil court, married Tim on October twentieth of twenty eighteen,
claim the affair cost her mental anguish, damaged to her health,
and deprived her children of a two parent household. Canard
slammed the verdict, saying A Kira Montag knew her marriage
was over and allowed the affair.
Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
Oh, those are fighting words.
Speaker 3 (01:31:42):
She gave her consent, that's what she said.
Speaker 14 (01:31:45):
She said.
Speaker 3 (01:31:45):
It was only she said it was okay because she
knew her marriage was over and it was done. The
affair played out both in the manager's home, on canard
social media and all of this. He eventually left his
wife and actually went with the girl. He had the
affair with the TikTok person, and the TikTok person so
has to pay the one point seven five million and
then he has to pay I guess he still has
(01:32:07):
to pay like child support and alimony too. Well, this
is what you want. You You would have moved to
one of these states and hope somebody cheats on you.
Speaker 4 (01:32:15):
Yeah, no doubt.
Speaker 3 (01:32:18):
It says in previous North Carolina cases involving this alienation
of affection, plainists have received millions of dollars. In twenty eleven,
a woman named Kara was ordered to receive thirty million
dollars from Betty Devon. He owned a trucking company and cheated.
And it's the largest settlement of its kind in North
Carolina history. And actually this happened to an NFL player
(01:32:41):
as well. In twenty eighteen, NFL star Fletcher Cox was
sued by a North Carolina man easy deb named Joshuva Jeffords,
who claimed that the football player had an affair was wife.
So Fletcher Cox has an affair with a woman he's
she's married. The dude winds up suing Fletcher Cox for
(01:33:01):
let's see how much. It doesn't say. They settled out
of court and would have won the case obviously because
he settled. And then another one in twenty twenty one,
former State Senator Rick gunn senator lawsuit filed by Arthur
John's for three million dollars. Gun was accused of having
a long running affair with John's wife, who was Gun's
legislative assistant. Now and he has to pay I love
(01:33:25):
this law. By the way, I think it's great. I
think it is. I think it just it would make
you at least give that whole idea of rolling up
on somebody who's married a little more time to just
kind of let want to pause, Like if you knew,
for a fact, if you're at a bar and you
rolled up and a woman's got a wedding ring, and
you go to buy that beer or buy that drink
or make that move, you look at that wedding ring.
I'm like, nah, I'm good, call me when you're done.
Speaker 4 (01:33:48):
What if she took off the wedding ring, you'd still
see the shadow.
Speaker 3 (01:33:52):
Well, let's get like a true like a truth warrior.
Speaker 7 (01:33:57):
Let's let's let's say the affair happens without the understanding
that the other person is mattering.
Speaker 3 (01:34:04):
That's a good point, but I think you know you argue,
you're arguing this in front of a jury. Yeah, you
know if I'm making this argument, But that's the whole
Isn't that the same argument? Like, Anna know I didn't
know she was not of.
Speaker 12 (01:34:13):
Age, right, right?
Speaker 4 (01:34:15):
She looked eighteen?
Speaker 3 (01:34:16):
Yeah, and that we know for a fact in Florida,
that doesn't matter a matter of fact in Florida, if
somebody shows you a fake ID that has them at
twenty years old and you do something and they're seventeen,
you're still done.
Speaker 4 (01:34:24):
So they kind of like saying, I was following orders, right, right.
Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
They Well, even if you have a fake ID that
says it and it's perfect, and you ask for the
fake ID and you look at it and go, yep,
says you're twenty one, let's get it, and you're not
twenty one, you're seventeen with a good fake ID, the
person who had sex with you is still in trouble
as if they knew the whole time. I guess maybe,
so this scenario would be exactly the same.
Speaker 4 (01:34:48):
Yeah, makes sense, right, I mean I think it does.
Speaker 3 (01:34:54):
I don't know what it takes to get this kind
of legislation through, but I mean eight states have it.
I mean Hawaii has it, Illinois, Mississippi, New Mexico, North Carolina,
South Dakota, Utah. And it's not really broken up by
geography either. You know those are that's all over the US. Yeah,
you know, that's in the South, that's in the Midwest,
that's in the Pacific Northwest, that's you know, not even
in the states. You know, it's not even in the
(01:35:17):
continental US and Hawaii, so I would think that you know,
that holds different political parties as well. New Mexico is
a purple state. North Carolina's red.
Speaker 4 (01:35:26):
I don't believe New Mexico is purple anymore.
Speaker 17 (01:35:28):
It was.
Speaker 3 (01:35:29):
Yeah it is blue now or red? Is it really
New Mexico. Yeah, in Arizona.
Speaker 4 (01:35:37):
I'm thinking of Arizona.
Speaker 3 (01:35:38):
Yeah, New Mexico prod Governor. And it's a makeup. In
other words, it doesn't really have a political affiliation this law.
It has nothing to do with that. It just basically
it's in states that are red and blue and purple
for that matter, like and culturally.
Speaker 4 (01:35:52):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
I mean, I wonder what takes a state, what it
takes to get that on the ballot.
Speaker 4 (01:35:56):
You should get it passed in Florida, that's an entry.
Speaker 3 (01:35:58):
I mean, boy, I wonder if it's popular the gave
me obviously if it's only eight states, I mean, it
hasn't really are Maybe they just don't have a legislator
that's put it on the uh put it on the docket.
But I mean, I wonder how that would go over
in Florida. Would you vote for something like that? The
question is does it do you think it deters adultery?
If it was common knowledge that you like, Let's say,
(01:36:21):
let's say I think okay, so let's say I let's
use that again, because it's always fun to do. Chris
and Debora married. Yeah, yeah, right right. I tried to
start a relationship with deb She she hates this. That's
fine because I think he listens. And Chris, I love you, buddy,
but this is just what we have to do because
I can't do it with the Jack. Yeah, and uh,
(01:36:42):
and we have an affair and it causes you to leave.
Speaker 4 (01:36:45):
Why don't I ever get to date Jack?
Speaker 12 (01:36:47):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:36:48):
Yeah, we do it with Jack. That's fine. No, No,
Jack is having an affair with Debt. That's what working.
Can't Jim and I have the affairs.
Speaker 17 (01:36:54):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (01:36:54):
I'm not having an affair with what everyone is already
assuming is happening. The way you talk to each other fighting,
let's do.
Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
With Jack jacket. You and Jack get together and Jack
is throwing that lovely on you. He's throwing that love
you on yeah yeah, and he's taking you in some
really nice dates. I mean, you guys share coffee.
Speaker 4 (01:37:13):
I bring a coupon. Next time he brings a coupon.
Speaker 3 (01:37:17):
Yeah, you gotta share a dollar General bean burrito.
Speaker 5 (01:37:20):
Oh, I make sure he never misses his dollar a
day Saturday coupon.
Speaker 4 (01:37:24):
Thank you, You're welcome.
Speaker 3 (01:37:25):
That's relationship we have on the show right now. She
knows me, So Jack has Jack has an affair with you?
Speaker 11 (01:37:31):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:37:31):
Do you think that that still happens if he knows
in the back of his head, Jack being a smart
cat understanding the laws that bind us here. If Jack
thinks secondly about doing that, knowing that Chris could turn
around and sue him, and on top of that, he
would lose his relationship, which would mean alimony and child
support on his end as well, you get double bombed
(01:37:52):
on this.
Speaker 4 (01:37:52):
I don't see how any d or P is worth
any one million.
Speaker 3 (01:37:58):
That's probably that's probab relative to what she can pay.
Speaker 5 (01:38:01):
I know, but I mean again, if you're being sued
and you're I mean, hell, hath no fury right, you're
going after everything you own.
Speaker 4 (01:38:09):
I just what I talk about not being worth it.
I love you, Jack, Yeah, I do, But.
Speaker 3 (01:38:20):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (01:38:23):
Math does not add up. I don't know a person
or a relationship. Ever, that would be worth not just
the breaking up of your marriage, the breaking up of
your home.
Speaker 4 (01:38:33):
How that affects your career, how that affects your family relationships.
Speaker 5 (01:38:36):
But then you add in the financial strain of having
to add in a financial judgment on top of alimony,
on top of child support.
Speaker 3 (01:38:44):
And the thing is is, like with this lady, you
know there are two kids involved in one of these cases,
so you have to assume that in that situation it
even gets worse for the person who is perpetuating the affair.
Mebe if you're the guy here and you've started an
affair with a married woman and you have kids and
a wife on your end as well, and you wind up,
you know, you wind up causing the person that you're
(01:39:05):
having an affair with to have a divorce, and then
of course they find out you get divorced. So now
you have to be child sport and alimony, and the
person that you've just hooked up with has to pay
the ex wife money as well because of this new law.
Speaker 5 (01:39:19):
So imagine this blossoming new relationship. Right these two people
hook up, they decide he doesn't just want to be
as manager her manager.
Speaker 4 (01:39:28):
He wants to be her husband.
Speaker 5 (01:39:29):
They start married life off having to worry about how
to pay a one point seventy five million dollar judgment
on her side yep, while also paying alimony and child
support on his side. You have to hope that content
creation is good enough that you can meet those financial obligations.
It's a relationship killer, beginning, middle, and end. Just pay
(01:39:51):
for a hooker, no, because you're still going to get divorced.
And I mean you could still Oh could you see
the hooker?
Speaker 4 (01:40:00):
I don't know. The first thing they have to do
is find your body first. Yeah, Agen, they won't.
Speaker 7 (01:40:07):
Last segment, we were talking about the interpreter at the
White House being court ordered to do it, and said
that they never had one before. There actually was, It
was only just a few years ago. The Biden White
House hired as full time American signed language interpreter back
in twenty twenty two, specifically for interpret briefing speeches and
(01:40:28):
recorded events.
Speaker 3 (01:40:29):
Yeah. And then I read a text earlier that Obama
had one part time or something, and then this White
House does not have one. They have one during certain things,
but they what they're arguing is they don't believe that
they should be able to have the ESL person at
all briefings that they shouldn't be there when the president's
doing Q and a's that they shouldn't have to do that.
Speaker 4 (01:40:50):
Only informal when we want them too.
Speaker 3 (01:40:52):
I wonder what the threshold is for getting a law
like that passed. I have the research a little bit
find out when that came to North Carolina and how
that you know, what it takes to get something like
that passed, how it gets on the ballot. Interesting.
Speaker 5 (01:41:04):
Yeah, first you're gonna have to write the answer to trivia,
but then you can get to that research right after,
all right?
Speaker 3 (01:41:08):
Four seven text seven seven zero three one year, five o'clock.
Keyword is check that's c H G c K. Got
a real radio dot of him and send that away
for your chance in one thousand bucks.
Speaker 5 (01:41:17):
What No, someone just said, don't get caught at a
Coldplay concert?
Speaker 14 (01:41:22):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:41:23):
That would work? I mean, that's it, That's exactly what
it is.
Speaker 5 (01:41:26):
But that's up in the northeast. And I don't remember
you saying one of those laws on the right state.
Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
It's not in the right state. They're safe. Yeah, we're
not safe, but safe, you feel me?
Speaker 11 (01:41:34):
All right?
Speaker 3 (01:41:35):
Back in a second, let them up. It's not for trivia.
Speaker 14 (01:41:38):
Do you want to play a game?
Speaker 11 (01:41:40):
It's good Jim Colbert Show. Trivia is next call now,
four o seven four.
Speaker 23 (01:41:53):
So I walked up to this bitch yesterday and this
guy was sitting here at this cute little dog.
Speaker 9 (01:41:59):
I said, oh, well, can I pet your dog? Does
your dog bite? He goes, no, my dog doesn't bite.
I leaned over to pet the dog, and he nearly
took my hand off. I said, I thought, your dog
doesn't bite. He goes, well, that's not my dog.
Speaker 4 (01:42:15):
I shouldn't gut you that hard.
Speaker 3 (01:42:17):
Yeah, I like Joe.
Speaker 17 (01:42:18):
That's a good one.
Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
Good job, buddy. Yeah, I was wonder where it was going.
He sideswy me, I had no idea that was where
I was going.
Speaker 17 (01:42:28):
I didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:42:28):
I didn't think it would get that big a laugh
for a good Yeah. All right, welcome back to the
Jim Coulward Show. That's how easy it is, guys to
entertain us. Got we hope you're easily entertained. Check is
your five o'clock You word c h c K. You
know what to do? Go to a real radio out
of him and send then off for your chance of
one thousand bucks on Jimnor's Depp. Hello, Jack is here
(01:42:51):
as well. Greetings, and he has the Jackie Sack. What
is in it? My friend? Oh boy?
Speaker 7 (01:42:55):
It Overfloweth added another price today, so I must say
all aboard.
Speaker 4 (01:43:01):
Chuck at Chuga.
Speaker 3 (01:43:03):
Clicking a glec clickity gleck.
Speaker 7 (01:43:04):
Okay, So we've been all week, been going along and
I you know, talked to some people. Got another prize today,
so the winner will get to pick. I will fly
through these. It could be a four pack of tickets
and pit passes to Monster Jam coming to Camping World
Stadium January tenth. It's you know, Monster Jam is crazy,
(01:43:26):
this is outdoor, this is in the arena event awesome
truck's amazing stunts and you can be there January tenth.
And if you want to just get your own tickets,
go to ticketmaster dot com. Also in the Jackie Sack
a pair of tickets to an evening with Toto. Toto
is coming. We talked to the lead singer, Joe Williams
(01:43:47):
a week ago. They're coming to the hard Rock Live
on March first. You can get tickets at ticketmaster dot
com or to the hard Rock Live box office. But
the classic hits I saw them over the summer. They
were fantastic. This is going to be a great show.
I can't wait to go to this an evening with
Toto at the hard Rock Live in Orlando.
Speaker 3 (01:44:05):
Nice something happening this Sunday.
Speaker 7 (01:44:07):
How about your defending NWSL champions, the Orlando Pride moving
ahead to the I believe it's the semifinal round of
the NWSL playoffs. That's this Sunday at three pm at
Intermco Stadium. And that is going to be an option
for you if you want a little playoff soccer this
(01:44:30):
Saturday afternoon or maybe Saturday afternoon.
Speaker 3 (01:44:34):
You're looking for comedy, this just in. It's Hassan Hates Ronnie.
Ronnie Hates Hassan. It's Hassan Minaj and Ronnie Chang comedy.
They added a second show.
Speaker 7 (01:44:45):
We were giving away tickets to this comedy show at
the hard Rock Live at seven pm show Sunday.
Speaker 3 (01:44:50):
They added a.
Speaker 7 (01:44:51):
Four o'clock show because it was so popular. So we
have tickets to the four o'clock show this Sunday. Nice
for Hassan Minaj and Ronnie at the hard Rock Live.
Go to the hard Rock Live box office if you
want to get yours or ticketmaster.
Speaker 3 (01:45:05):
That's all the prizes in the Jackie sacks.
Speaker 4 (01:45:09):
Nice same here clickety class a smack.
Speaker 3 (01:45:11):
I gotta lay down, all right, one, two, three, four
or five?
Speaker 4 (01:45:15):
Let's go three?
Speaker 12 (01:45:16):
Three?
Speaker 3 (01:45:16):
Is big Joe? Big Joe, how you doing doing well?
Speaker 12 (01:45:20):
How are you doing doing good?
Speaker 3 (01:45:21):
Boss, glad to hear you're doing okay. We want to
play a little game with us. Yeah, absolutely, all right,
let's do it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:26):
Bigin Is he the puzzle master or is he the
guy who's currently writing today's game? Can he be both?
Speaker 11 (01:45:32):
Let's find out. It's time for j C. S Trivia.
Speaker 3 (01:45:36):
All right, Big Joe, this is an easy game. Boss,
got a question here for you. Four answers. One of
these answers is a lie. What But if you can
find it, I'll send you over to Jack and he'll
take really good care of you in so many ways, Joe,
so many easy Joe. What's your favorite beer? Buddy?
Speaker 8 (01:45:55):
Favorite beer? Right now?
Speaker 3 (01:45:57):
Maybe go on a big way. That's a good there
you all right, buddy, Here we go. On this day
in nineteen seventeen, Joseph Corer's CEO of Autolf Cors Brewing
Company is born on this day. Oh wow, here are
three fun facts about Cores and one Rocky Mountain Live.
We're talking about Cores Brewing buddy, which one of these
is not true? Here we go. Number one, Cores owns
(01:46:20):
a company called Corestech, which is a company that makes
technical ceramics for semiconductors and car parts. Number two. In
nineteen fifty nine, Cores was the first brewer in the
world to put their beer in aluminum cans. Number three,
Cores Brewery in Golden Colorado is the single largest brewing
facility in the world. Or lastly, cors Light comes in
(01:46:43):
a silver can because while printing the cans they rant
out of yellow ink and just ran with it. Which
one of those is a lie.
Speaker 8 (01:46:52):
I've been to the Cores Brewing Company, but I remember
much about it because I was in Denver and wasn't
really there most of the time. Let's go with number one.
Speaker 3 (01:47:01):
No, that's absolutely true, and I have to tell you
something to do. Sorry, but it is a fascinating story.
During Prohibition, Cores is like, well, what are we gonna do?
Speaker 16 (01:47:10):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:47:11):
So they started making ceramics, right, pot stuff like that,
and they found that in the making of ceramics, they
could also make ceramics for other things like parts, and
as the company grew Cores Tech, they actually started specializing
in ceramic products for like semiconductors and things of that nature.
And the company still stands.
Speaker 4 (01:47:31):
Oh kind of crazy, right, well, you gotta pivot.
Speaker 3 (01:47:33):
That's right. One, two, four or five?
Speaker 4 (01:47:36):
It's four?
Speaker 3 (01:47:36):
Or is Corey Corey? How you doing good? All right, Corey?
We're talking about the Cores Brewing Company. Which one of
these isn't true? Number one? In nineteen fifty nine, Cores
was the first brewer in the world to put their
beer in aluminum cans. Number two, the Cores Brewery in Golden,
Colorado is the single largest brewing facility in the world.
Or lastly, Cores Light comes in the silver can because
(01:47:57):
while printing the cans they ran out of yellow ink
and just ran with it. Number one, No, that's absolutely true.
Cores was the first brewer in the world to put
their beer in aluminum cans.
Speaker 4 (01:48:11):
Oh wow, that's the one I thought was a lie.
Speaker 3 (01:48:13):
And by the way, they recycle almost every one of them.
It's recycled stuff. So one, two, or five, let's go too.
Two is Kevin Kevin? How you doing good?
Speaker 10 (01:48:24):
Guys?
Speaker 17 (01:48:24):
Y'all?
Speaker 3 (01:48:24):
Good boss we're talking about Cores here. You have a
fifty to fifty shot at winning. Which one of.
Speaker 20 (01:48:28):
These is a lie?
Speaker 3 (01:48:30):
Number one, the Cores Brewery in Golden Colorado is the
single largest brewing facility in the world. Or lastly, cors
Light comes in silver cans because while printing the cans
they ran out of yellow ink and just ran with it.
It's gotta be number one, it's not, Buddy the cost
The Cores Brewery in Golden Colorado double triple check is
(01:48:50):
the largest brewing facility on planet Earth. Really yep, one
or five.
Speaker 5 (01:48:56):
On one of the last couple of days, let's go five, Brian,
how you're doing?
Speaker 4 (01:49:01):
Hey, what's going on?
Speaker 11 (01:49:02):
I like the default when yeah, you are.
Speaker 3 (01:49:04):
A default winner.
Speaker 16 (01:49:05):
Here.
Speaker 3 (01:49:05):
Cors Light comes into silver can because while printing the
cans they ran out of yellow ink and ran with it. Yeah,
is that true? That is a lie, but we'll just
call it the silver bullet. Yeah, that don't work. A
college student named it. And it is funny though, because
they did They did want to print the normal yellow
(01:49:27):
color on there, uh, but they wanted to make it different,
so they wound up just going with the regular can.
I remember when we first started drinking. That was a
big thing.
Speaker 7 (01:49:35):
If you could get cores, it was almost like a
smoky and vandit just like you just couldn't get it
where you live.
Speaker 3 (01:49:42):
Where we live. Yeah, it wasn't available because it was
a Colorado thing. And I will tell you they had
a product that was one of the best lagger beers.
And I don't even know if they make it anymore,
but for a while they made a product called Corps
Extra Gold, which was a really you know, whereas Cores is,
you know, kind of like a bud lightish kind of lagger.
The extra Goal was rich and delicious. It was so good.
(01:50:04):
And even then I remember drinking Cores beer. When I
first moved to Orlando, I played on a softball league
for this gas station I was working at, and the
guy who owned the gas station would bring this giant
cooler of cores that's all he would drink, and we
would go there to play softball and then just sitting
left field and get so blotto just drinking cores. And
think when you get them cold, they go down.
Speaker 4 (01:50:27):
Real easy, especially when you're hot and sweaty after a
softball games.
Speaker 3 (01:50:30):
A couple other things, you mean, I know about Coors.
Before we get to the top of the hour and
find out what's happening with good sauce. Cors recycles almost
one hundred percent of the products used to make their beer.
Speaker 4 (01:50:38):
That is such good news.
Speaker 3 (01:50:40):
Uh, miners, Now you know what's called, right, the Cores
is the what of beers? Champagne, no banquet, banquet of beers?
Speaker 16 (01:50:48):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:50:48):
Oh really, So here's how I got that name. So
nobody I never understood why they called it the banquet
of beers. Right out in Colorado, when miners would come
out of the mines for working, you know, twelve fourteen
hour day, they would go and they would sit around
and they would have dinner and drink together, and they
called those little get togethers banquets, and Cores was the
beer they drank.
Speaker 4 (01:51:09):
Oh, there you have it.
Speaker 3 (01:51:10):
So that's exactly how it's or why it's called the
banquet of beers. Beer that's miller like highlight. And then, uh,
during prohibition, Cores made malted milk, which they sold to
the Mars candy Company. So for a while and you're
having candy was actually coming from the Cores company at
(01:51:31):
least the malted milk. And then last week Cores invented
the push tab can. Really, where you have the can
that you would take the tab off and throw it away.
They invented the one where it would push in, and
they discontinued it because people hated it, and then they
brought it back later. Really, now everyone does it, and
now exactly you didn't get a tab. You didn't get
a pull tab anymore. All right? Four O seven nine
(01:51:53):
six four one textus seven seven zero three one. We
have another keyword for you and Ross Pageant on the
other side of this sh like I said, dollar d
O L L A R. That is your six o'clock
you were. Move over to real radio. Dout of him
and send that off for your chance at a thousand
of those dollars. I'm Jimner's deb Hello Jack is here
(01:52:15):
as well. Yeah, celevery single Wednesday around the time, we
have a good friend of ours drop by to tell
us what's happening on his awesome podcast. It's called good Sauce.
This guy is Ross page.
Speaker 12 (01:52:29):
Baby. How goes it? Everybody?
Speaker 3 (01:52:31):
I like seeing you in a sweater. It makes you
look younger. I don't know all, I don't know why.
Speaker 17 (01:52:37):
Ah man, Let's just jump right into it. What is
the rule about people leaving clothes in your home.
Speaker 4 (01:52:43):
Oh that's not your sweater.
Speaker 3 (01:52:47):
Buddy, what do you do it?
Speaker 9 (01:52:48):
Sup?
Speaker 3 (01:52:49):
It is not my sweater to wear it once?
Speaker 12 (01:52:53):
Well, then I got good news.
Speaker 3 (01:52:54):
And you returning.
Speaker 12 (01:52:55):
This is my first though, my first time wearing this sweater.
Speaker 3 (01:52:58):
That's a big sweater. Dude, you look like a turtle
on with GOVI yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:53:02):
You like it though, right, full wool baby, hugo boss.
I forgot it's dark history.
Speaker 3 (01:53:09):
I'm gonna pair. I'm gonna pair those dark history jeans myself. Yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:53:14):
Man, they make good products, but just don't pick up
a history book when you wear it.
Speaker 12 (01:53:18):
Right, It's all I'm trying to say.
Speaker 17 (01:53:20):
All I'm trying to say is that this morning, this
is the only time I think wool is acceptable right
now on weather like this. And I just I even
facetimed them. I said, yeah, pretty sure this is yours
and I'm wearing it.
Speaker 3 (01:53:34):
Is it your brothers?
Speaker 17 (01:53:36):
No, it's not one of my good No, it's one
of my good friend He moved away though, so like.
Speaker 3 (01:53:43):
Yeah, yea, well, dude, that's your that's your sweater. And
if it's a if it's a real hugo boss. Yet
a sweater. That's an expensive sweater.
Speaker 4 (01:53:50):
It is.
Speaker 17 (01:53:50):
It's probably around a buck forty buck fifty in the
in the world of sweaters, it.
Speaker 3 (01:53:55):
May be a lot more.
Speaker 9 (01:53:56):
Dude.
Speaker 3 (01:53:56):
If it's an actual Hugo Boss, it may be a
lot more than that. It may be more like four
to six hundred what.
Speaker 17 (01:54:02):
Oh no, it's still got I know it's a real
Hugo Boss because whenever I put it on, I can
still feel the nineteen forties eight.
Speaker 12 (01:54:10):
But I can't stop making World War two Hugo Boss jokes.
Speaker 17 (01:54:14):
But I'm here to tell you about what's going down
on episode eighty two. And yes, EDC is a big topic.
But we already talked about d C yesterday. But you
should know, talking EDC with someone who's been to a
festival once or twice is a lot different than talking to, say,
someone who would be considered a shaman. Dare I say,
a guru of music festivals? And that is my best
(01:54:38):
friend John Arc. He's been to about thirty total.
Speaker 3 (01:54:41):
Festival oh As he really had no idea that about
that part of his personality.
Speaker 12 (01:54:45):
Oh, he has tasted music before.
Speaker 17 (01:54:48):
And you can go ahead and get a better insight
of that festival. That's one of the that's a big
portion portion of today tonight's episode, but a huge portion
of tonight's episode is the different between nicknames and joke names. Okay,
so like a nickname, I believe, Jim, one of your
(01:55:10):
nicknames was was.
Speaker 3 (01:55:11):
Chipper, Yeah, chipper back in the day, because I had
I had a chip tooth.
Speaker 17 (01:55:15):
And that would be also knocking on the door of
being a joke name, because it's pointing out something that
probably not the thing that you're most proud of.
Speaker 3 (01:55:25):
Yeah, no, it wasn't my favorite thing that ever happened.
When you call me chipper and basically just tell people, hey,
look at this guy's blanked up mouth.
Speaker 17 (01:55:32):
Good just right there, right there, it's like it's like
calling somebody who's bad with money, Like look at Deddy.
Speaker 12 (01:55:41):
It's like, why do you got to bring that up?
Right now?
Speaker 8 (01:55:43):
Man?
Speaker 12 (01:55:44):
Look at scratch off McGee.
Speaker 16 (01:55:47):
Jack.
Speaker 9 (01:55:48):
What a buddy.
Speaker 12 (01:55:49):
I'm so sorry to even point this question towards you.
Speaker 3 (01:55:52):
What do you mean? I just I would think very
first nickname, very first one was cracker Jack. Wasn't it
fat Jack? Fat Jack? That's right, fat Jack, eight and
a half pound baby. They call me fat Jack.
Speaker 17 (01:56:07):
See I would have thought cracker Jack just well, no,
that's still as offensive.
Speaker 3 (01:56:12):
Hey and and Ross. Thank god it wasn't all women
calling him that, because it probably had no effect at all.
His sisters, his mom, everybody calling him fat Jack, all women.
Speaker 12 (01:56:23):
I listen, this might.
Speaker 17 (01:56:24):
Come off as sexist, and I honestly don't care, because
it's extremely true.
Speaker 12 (01:56:29):
Getting bullied by a female as a dude.
Speaker 3 (01:56:33):
It's the worst. It's the worst, times worse, It's way worse.
I would rather take a beating by a thousand dudes
with sharp tongues than one chick coming at me.
Speaker 12 (01:56:43):
I agree, But no, Jack, that's your first nickname.
Speaker 17 (01:56:48):
But the reason why I shiver and struggle asking this
question is because your first name is Jack.
Speaker 12 (01:56:54):
And how often did.
Speaker 7 (01:56:55):
You g oh, buddy, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah? There was
a yeah yeah yeah. Because Jack is also a verb
yeah uh. There are a lot of associations that that
came up a lot. Explain more, Jack, I don't think
he can.
Speaker 12 (01:57:13):
Going in great details.
Speaker 3 (01:57:14):
I think we need to get off, take a snop back,
take us to the start, and so and deb I know.
Speaker 17 (01:57:24):
And I remember this because we talked nicknames before, but
I really want to talk about like I wish Deb
Roberts is set up for one of the coolest nicknames.
Speaker 12 (01:57:34):
Dare I say the coolest nickname out of us four?
Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
Well, I remember what she said her nickname was, and
it wasn't super flattering, so I don't yeah, oh yeah
yeah d rob oh yeah yeah yeah rob Our drop
top deb remember she has that too, because she went
through a period of time where she liked to run
down beaches topless.
Speaker 17 (01:57:55):
Yeah yeah, drop drop top deb Robe. Like there's so
many cool nicknames and I know that, and remind me.
I was trying to remember it.
Speaker 13 (01:58:06):
Isn't it?
Speaker 17 (01:58:06):
Like God, I don't want to get it wrong because
then it just just now I'm just digging myself a grape.
Speaker 12 (01:58:11):
But wasn't like your nickname like like pood Was it pooch?
Speaker 11 (01:58:15):
You got it?
Speaker 3 (01:58:16):
That was pooch.
Speaker 4 (01:58:17):
Yeah, it was pooch.
Speaker 17 (01:58:18):
Well, don't smile as I get that right. That's still
awful news. And I'm sorry that that was part.
Speaker 3 (01:58:23):
Of yourn And I don't know who the further. Let
me just say something, I don't know who these bitches
were that were going you pooch because you were absolutely
gor I mean, look, you're still a gorgeous woman. When
you were younger, you were like a you were a knockout.
Speaker 4 (01:58:36):
It wasn't just the girls, it was my entire sixth
grade clabs.
Speaker 7 (01:58:38):
Why would they do that, I don't know, because that's
sixth grade, middle school school, more human beings on the planet.
Speaker 3 (01:58:45):
Yeah, oh yeah, and you had an olive skin. Damn.
Speaker 4 (01:58:47):
They used to make me fetch sticks.
Speaker 12 (01:58:50):
God, and then would you go get them if I.
Speaker 4 (01:58:53):
Wanted to get on the school bus. They blocked the
door to the school bus.
Speaker 3 (01:58:56):
Jesus, I hate hearing that. I want to go back
there and shoot everyone them in the face. Oh my god,
I can't stand with.
Speaker 12 (01:59:02):
A rubber band.
Speaker 4 (01:59:03):
With a rubber band, don't go airsoft gun.
Speaker 3 (01:59:09):
We have history with that too, that'sh.
Speaker 11 (01:59:13):
Don't do that.
Speaker 12 (01:59:13):
They don't like that either. All right, all right, I
learned that the hard way.
Speaker 17 (01:59:17):
I remember this crucial moment, and I think I've shared
this with you guys before, but I remember I was
in private school first to fifth grade, learning about God
and chapel every Thursday where you where you your white uniform,
because that was God's Day for us, not Sunday Thursday.
(01:59:38):
It was filled with so much continuity and nothing explosive.
Speaker 12 (01:59:44):
And then my mom didn't make enough money.
Speaker 17 (01:59:48):
I don't know, but I went to public school my
sixth grade, I go to middle school and that's my
first time in public school.
Speaker 3 (01:59:56):
Oh my god.
Speaker 12 (01:59:57):
And my last name is pad oh Man. Yeah, and
it's middle school.
Speaker 3 (02:00:04):
Yeah, they probably added an h.
Speaker 12 (02:00:06):
So this is this is my I mean just massive moment.
Speaker 17 (02:00:11):
I'm in geography class that I raise up my hand
to answer a question. I go India, and they go,
you're right, Ross Paget, good job. And then there's this
kid named Jared.
Speaker 12 (02:00:23):
He stood up and ross Paget the geography.
Speaker 3 (02:00:32):
F word for paget.
Speaker 12 (02:00:34):
Yeah, he didn't say tablet.
Speaker 3 (02:00:35):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah, he didn't say and
then he didn't say maggot.
Speaker 17 (02:00:41):
He did not, And I just remember going here it is,
this is it, It's gonna stick. This is gonna be
my name for the rest of life. And then this
deafening amount of silence as I completely hear his joke bombing,
Oh I dodged a bullet. It was the nice thing.
Speaker 3 (02:01:00):
Hey, no, it's no Dora of the Explorer, that's for sure.
I truly think that.
Speaker 17 (02:01:09):
And this is how thickle this whole life thing is
if that happens and that nickname sticks, what trajectory does
a young Ross pageant go on.
Speaker 3 (02:01:22):
That's tough. And this is actually leading me to as
I'm listening to you, are you saying this? Because I
believe you should head it off at the pass for
Miles and already come up with his nickname so that
when he goes to school, he already has his nickname.
Like you can already say, oh, you know, my boys
and home already gave me this nick name. You can't
give me another one. It's this and then that way
you can control the narrative.
Speaker 17 (02:01:44):
I call him money Mileo. I'm already making fun of him.
I keep calling them kilometers just to.
Speaker 3 (02:01:49):
Get ahead of it.
Speaker 17 (02:01:50):
I'm doing everything that I possibly can. But that's a
huge part of tonight's episode is the difference between nicknames
which are accepted from that party that goes Yeah, I
do like being called that and joke names. And this
is the best tease that I can give you. I
had to ask Jack if we could say Nko's nickname.
Speaker 3 (02:02:15):
Okay.
Speaker 12 (02:02:16):
It was like FCC, like, are we good? Can we
say this?
Speaker 3 (02:02:22):
Can you confirm? Jack? I can confirm? He asked me. Yeah. Yeah,
you can confirm what your answer was.
Speaker 7 (02:02:29):
At a certain time of night. You could say one
time and one time only.
Speaker 3 (02:02:34):
Are you saying it tonight?
Speaker 12 (02:02:36):
We cut the second time we said it. We say
it once baby.
Speaker 17 (02:02:39):
Let's right, it's all going down, Episode eighty two. If
you ever got picked on, or if you really want
to know what's happening over at EEDC, this is your episode.
Speaker 12 (02:02:51):
Really proud of the boys on this one. Really proud
of this episode. I hope everybody enjoys.
Speaker 3 (02:02:55):
Tonight at eight o'clock right here on Real Radio one
oh four point one, or you can go to the
iHeartRadio app download it there. You can also get it
a good sauce as well. Man, So any stand up coming.
Speaker 12 (02:03:03):
Up outside of Secrets hide Away on the fifth?
Speaker 3 (02:03:09):
All right, you gonna have a Ross page guy. Yeah,
we'll see ross tomorrow right here on the show for sure.
Good scene, and you big dog, have a good one man.
Speaker 8 (02:03:18):
All right?
Speaker 3 (02:03:18):
Four seal dollar is your six o'clock. Hey word, that's
d O L L A R. Slide over to Real
Radio dot and him and send that away for your
chance at one thousand of those dollars back in a
second with more of the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 23 (02:03:45):
All right, guys, you got in the subject of pennies
and change and paying with cash for digital payments and
bank accounts, et cetera. As a forty five year old man,
I'm not going to say that paying with cash is
quote unquote cringe, but as also a very technologically sacked
as savvy guy who you know, kind of understands how
the world works today, and I'm fine with that. I
(02:04:06):
kind of equate paying with cash these days as of
like twenty years ago, when I go to the grocery
store and an old lady would.
Speaker 14 (02:04:11):
Pay with a check.
Speaker 3 (02:04:12):
Yeah, dam was he checking somebody out? Yeah, or he's
driving an old honky horn car from like the twenties.
Speaker 19 (02:04:23):
Hey, guys, Jimmy, miss Deborah, mister Jackie Fingers, I'm so sorry.
Speaker 9 (02:04:31):
I think I missed it.
Speaker 11 (02:04:32):
I got no color.
Speaker 13 (02:04:34):
I know you never have one.
Speaker 9 (02:04:36):
No the last time I won, no and I missed
the call.
Speaker 12 (02:04:41):
Damn it.
Speaker 11 (02:04:42):
Bring the phone with you everywhere you go. Love you, guys.
Speaker 3 (02:04:45):
I try to tell you thanks, buddy, appreciate it.
Speaker 16 (02:04:47):
Hey guys, It's Heather from Nisimona Beach. I wish I
could say Happy Humpday, but I just need you to
send help or some sanity my way, because Lord save
me from teaching a seventeen year old how to drive
ten days before her list and my niece is not ready.
Speaker 4 (02:05:12):
Lord help us.
Speaker 3 (02:05:15):
Yeah, that's what empty malls are for. That's a driving school,
is score. Yeah? All right, welcome back to the Jim
Colbert Show. Dollar is your six o'clock? Heyword, that's d
O L l A R. You just heard her man
missed it.
Speaker 4 (02:05:33):
I really hope that was a bill collector in his case?
Speaker 3 (02:05:35):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 16 (02:05:37):
I am.
Speaker 3 (02:05:38):
So you're wishing him to be in debt?
Speaker 4 (02:05:40):
No, but I really hope you didn't miss a thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (02:05:43):
I get it, I get it. Deb and Jackery here
as well. I can't remember you guys. Deb you said
you were doing your fall stuff, you were not putting
up Christmas stuff until after Thanksgiving.
Speaker 4 (02:05:52):
Well, I asked for the Christmas stuff, but then I
got the are you crazy?
Speaker 3 (02:05:57):
Did you really?
Speaker 8 (02:05:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:05:58):
Okay, Jack you are.
Speaker 7 (02:06:00):
We will be putting Christmas stuff up before Thanksgiving because
my one daughter will not be able to join us
at Christmas, okay, and she will be there for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (02:06:09):
Understood. Let me ask, do you believe that you should,
regardless of when you do it. Like, this is the
earliest we've ever had our Christmas up because we wanted
up during Thanksgiving. You know, this is the earliest we've
ever done it. It's it's basically all up. The tree
just has to be decorated, but that's a family thing.
But all the other okutreman, except for a few things outside,
(02:06:29):
are already up.
Speaker 7 (02:06:30):
Even twenty twenty pandemic year. I remember every the big
talk was everyone putting it up early.
Speaker 4 (02:06:36):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (02:06:37):
I do not remember us having it up this early.
I don't remember pre Thanksgiving because usually what happens is
our tradition for years was after Thanksgiving dinner, that's when
we start putting stuff up, or we have the tree
ready to go, and then after dinner we start decorating.
But by December first, we're already ready to go. Do
you judge people who do it too early?
Speaker 4 (02:06:57):
No?
Speaker 3 (02:06:57):
Do you judge people who leave it too long? Yes? Okay,
I'm the same way. Deb If somebody puts it up
too early.
Speaker 4 (02:07:03):
Are you like, what the hell are they doing a
little with the Christmas in August?
Speaker 3 (02:07:08):
Yeah? Of course, But I'm saying like, like the second
half of November A perfectly fine. Yeah, absolutely, Are you
the same way like people who leave it up a
little too long? You're like, okay, guys, we get it.
Speaker 4 (02:07:17):
It's March.
Speaker 3 (02:07:18):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'll give you three Kings Day. It's Easter,
you guys, come on in.
Speaker 4 (02:07:24):
So don't laugh.
Speaker 5 (02:07:25):
My best friend, who by all things is she's Jewish,
but she used to put up a Christmas tree and
she would have it up till April or March.
Speaker 4 (02:07:34):
Oh man, really, oh yeah, fully decorated.
Speaker 3 (02:07:36):
She didn't change the decoration.
Speaker 7 (02:07:38):
I my sister, the one with like twelve Christmas trees,
there's one that's permanently up, but it's always then it's
the Valentine's.
Speaker 3 (02:07:46):
Day track, right, and it's the Barbie tree. I don't
even know anymore. You guys, remember there was a building
trend for a while for new homes for a tree closet,
and the whole idea of the Christmas tree closet was
in your living room. They built a wall panel that
looked like a wall, but you would open it up
and your Christmas tree would stay completely decorated and lighted
(02:08:09):
the entire year. You just drug it out of this
closet when it came time. That was an actual home
design thing for.
Speaker 4 (02:08:15):
A while, because we get real Christmas trees.
Speaker 3 (02:08:17):
Oh yeah, okay, but for artificial that would work from yeah,
that would work great. I like artificial because just easier.
Speaker 9 (02:08:24):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (02:08:24):
I do love the smell of the new of a
real tree.
Speaker 4 (02:08:27):
Though.
Speaker 3 (02:08:28):
The reason I bring this up is this, right, there's
an Air Force base, Tendaal Tindall Air Force Base the Panhandle,
that's right, has recently instructed residents to remove their Yule
Tide decorations and refrain from putting them back up until
after Thanksgiving. And dude, they are being militant about it. No,
(02:08:49):
pun Intendo, we see what you did there. And it
says all holiday decorations should be reflective in their respective
months and not any sooner than thirty before the given holiday.
What a ba humbug coming. Here's what sucks. And I
did not realize this. On Base Living is not run
(02:09:10):
by the Air Force. They actually shop that out. It's
another company that runs and collects rents and handles all
that stuff. The Air Force doesn't do that even though
it's on government property and by them. You know, they
have their own rules that the Air Force really can't
do anything about, kind of like a homeowners association for
the living on property on base, which I did not
(02:09:32):
know that, by the way, and it says the guidelines
are part of a broader Air Force policy. Community standards
are set by the privatized housing management company at some installations.
Standards may vary from base to base. But it's getting
a lot of news because not only is it you
can't put it up until after thanks sivving bright bright
blah blah blah. You can't only light your stuff. It
(02:09:54):
can only be lit from six in the evening till
eleven at ninth, So you only even have a four
or five hour window where you can display your lights.
Anything before or after that.
Speaker 5 (02:10:02):
Is no good, which I think is crappy because just
like in jack situation, what if you're decorating early because
someone's going to be deployed.
Speaker 3 (02:10:10):
Yeah, exactly, or there could be a thousand reasons exactly
why you want to put it up. Who cares? Maybe
you have a child that really likes it and it
makes them super happy that you put them up five
days early. And by the way, I mean if they
say thirty days, I mean December is the twenty fifth,
so theoretically by that weekend you could put them up anyway.
So basically what they're saying is still after Thanksgiving you
(02:10:30):
cannot put up your decorations on this Air Force base.
Speaker 4 (02:10:33):
They say, do it anyway.
Speaker 3 (02:10:35):
Yeah, yeah, you don't pitch off the base commander. Well yeah,
that was the commander, it says. Air Force Captain Justin
Davidson Biebe, a Tendalls spokesperson, said Wednesday that the landlord
ball for Betty Communities set the policy and then they're
not gonna They're not going to you know, they're not
going to revisit.
Speaker 10 (02:10:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:10:54):
Well they're not going to just step out against the
company that runs the That's what they hired them for.
You hire a comed to run your base and then
you go, hey, well we don't like that part of it.
I don't think they can do that. Well, they probably could.
There's a fifty nine page community handbook living on Tyndall
Air Force Base, and it explicitly states that winter decorations
and lights are only allowed from the week after Thanksgiving
(02:11:17):
through New Year's Day, and the lights can only be
lit from six until eleven. Fun.
Speaker 4 (02:11:22):
Fun, fun, I say, get a holiday wrap package. Of
dog pooh.
Speaker 3 (02:11:27):
Yeah, I say, hey, these people are serving our country.
Speaker 4 (02:11:32):
Let them do whatever the hell they want.
Speaker 3 (02:11:33):
Let them put their lights up. Yeah, exactly, just tom bitching'
Let them put their lights up. Let them enjoy life
a little bit.
Speaker 12 (02:11:38):
Exactly.
Speaker 3 (02:11:38):
You run so many other aspects of their life. Let
them have a little frivilty frivolry.
Speaker 4 (02:11:43):
What is it with a Oh? I don't know, but
jack sears.
Speaker 23 (02:11:46):
Just hang on.
Speaker 4 (02:11:47):
Let them get it out of.
Speaker 3 (02:11:51):
That's it?
Speaker 12 (02:11:52):
Is it? Oh?
Speaker 3 (02:11:53):
I got a chicken tip. That's the word on them.
You guess you guess you talk about I can't spell
it right. How do I know if it's wrong? If
against spell it, that's why you use voice to text.
But in your case, I don't think it'll out. Yeah,
it's free volity, right, freevoy.
Speaker 4 (02:12:12):
There you go.
Speaker 3 (02:12:13):
They don't let out. They don't allow it. They want
you to just serve and move on.
Speaker 4 (02:12:17):
I guess I would be two.
Speaker 3 (02:12:21):
Other thing here that's happening as well is the first
ever radio or alien radio signal from an interstellar comet
has been received here in the US. It was an
RC Hill commercial. To those astronomers have detected the first
(02:12:43):
ever radio signal coming from the interstellar comet thirty one
Atlas as it passed by the halfway mark on its
way to a trip to our entire solar system.
Speaker 4 (02:12:52):
Isn't that the one that doesn't have a tail?
Speaker 3 (02:12:53):
Yeah, something like that as wild.
Speaker 5 (02:12:54):
Yeah, and it kind of doesn't look like a asteroid
or meat year. It's kind of like, hmm, that's interesting.
When's that arriving?
Speaker 3 (02:13:05):
And then lastly here for the day. I do love
these stories, and we've talked about these puzzles, and we
talked about these things that dudes and they do and
they create these like it's almost like our search or
asof thing, right, it's like this.
Speaker 4 (02:13:18):
Cryptic kind of public treasure hunting.
Speaker 3 (02:13:21):
Kind of like that. Have you ever heard of a
thing called cryptose No? I had never heard about this
until this day. Until today I read this story. This
is an AP story in Boston. It said when Jim
Sandborn was commissioned to create a sculpture at CIA headquarters,
he wanted to do something that spoke to its world
of spies and secret codes. And if you ad to
(02:13:43):
the story, Jack, if you don't look it up on
AP and you can put it up on the up
on the screen I can get Deb to see it.
Just type in the word of cryptos with a K
and it should pop up, and you can bring the
story up and then put it up on that fourth
panel so Deb can see what I'm talking about you
as well. By the way, The result was a ten
foot tall S shaped copper screen called Cryptos that resembles
a piece of paper coming out of a fax machine.
(02:14:06):
One side features a series of staggered alphabets that are
key to decoding the four encrypted messages on the other side.
Oh wow, this is outside of CIA headquarters. This is
At the time codes in encoding was an esoteric subject.
I wanted it to be less so, and I wanted
(02:14:26):
it to be fun. So this guy's done this a
couple of times. He's actually found other than he's done
other like little you know, little you know puzzles like this, right.
The interesting thing is is the first three messages there.
It is right there on the screen. The first three
messages on the sculpture that dedicated to nineteen ninety, known
as K one, K two, and K three, were or
(02:14:49):
cracked pretty quickly, but thirty five years later, the fourth
cryptic message K four reminds remains a mystery and a
source of obsessive fascination among thousands of fans. There's an
entire group of people who've been trying to figure this
out for years, really for over three decades. They've been
trying to figure it out. And that's where the story
(02:15:10):
gets interesting. This guy Sandborn is not doing well health wise,
and he's actually going to auction off the solution.
Speaker 4 (02:15:20):
To this so he can pay for his medical care. No,
it doesn't say for his medical Okay, that's going to
say America.
Speaker 3 (02:15:25):
And by the way, he kept getting so many email
about the solution that he started charging people fifty dollars
a pop to ask him a question, really, because that's
how often people would email and try to get an
answer from him on what's going on?
Speaker 4 (02:15:39):
Man, I wish I could ask for fifty every time
someone email.
Speaker 3 (02:15:42):
It says Boston Base our our auction launched the auction
last month. It runs through November twentieth, which is next week,
with a top bid currently at and this is the
entire archive. Everything he used to build this is in
this auction. They're asking two hundred one and forty one
dollars and it's not there yet. That's just where it
(02:16:04):
is right now it's become a worldwide phenomenon, and I
had no clue what was even there. It says everything
you need to solve K four, along with an alternate
paragraph that the artist is calling K five will be
available in that form in that in that portfolio. Yeah,
and by the way, he had to clear it was
(02:16:24):
CIA years ago.
Speaker 5 (02:16:25):
I was gonna say, how did CIA feel about an
ENCRYPTID message outside their headquarters?
Speaker 3 (02:16:30):
Had to show it to the director years ago and
their attorneys to make sure that nothing was going to
be in there. That was like, it was no secret
that could harm national security or anything like that.
Speaker 15 (02:16:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:16:40):
He's created about fifty public sculptures, including a memorial for
a twenty nineteen shooting in Odessa, Texas. So he does
this all the time, and he actually almost had. It's
kind of interesting because in the middle of it, when
he was doing all this stuff and kind of figuring
this out, a person who was one of these sleuths
for this for this puzzle, snapped a picture of some
(02:17:01):
stuff that he had on a desk, and in the
picture it was all of his notes describing how he
came to the solution. Oh no, and he freaked out.
Because he thought it was going to ruin the auction.
And it turns out that the person who who took
the photograph was cool and didn't wasn't going to say anything,
so they able to go forward with it.
Speaker 4 (02:17:18):
That is cool.
Speaker 3 (02:17:19):
It actually, it's a really cool thing.
Speaker 16 (02:17:21):
Man.
Speaker 3 (02:17:21):
I don't know what the messages is because it doesn't
say here at all. It just says that K four
and K five are still still looking for an answer
and answer.
Speaker 15 (02:17:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:17:30):
Yeah. It says it was designed to unravel like a
ball of string or a nesting Russian doll. Kind of cool,
all right, four seven nine four one text us at
seven seven zero three one. What do you get for news?
Speaker 5 (02:17:45):
We're learning more details about the survivors of that Ebor
City crash. Good news for residents flooded out of their homes.
And when a cockroach tells you to kill Okay, we'll
talk about that next during your first Yeah, let's.
Speaker 3 (02:18:00):
Take a little break back with debv's news. We'll get
the hell out of here. On Wednesday, are friends at
tk low want to remind us to look ahead?
Speaker 7 (02:18:09):
Looking Ahead on Real Radio Tomorrow Thursday edition of The
Monsters in the Morning. Guess what you'll have a chance
with Tripler Trivia to win tickets to Trans Siberian Orchestra
or Who's Live Anyway at the hard Rock Live Just
some of the prizes on tomorrow's Monsters in the Morning.
When it comes time to look ahead for you and
(02:18:29):
your family, do it with the team at TK Law.
Speaker 3 (02:18:33):
Visit one firm forlife dot com.
Speaker 24 (02:18:46):
First off, good afternoon.
Speaker 9 (02:18:48):
Uh count your day's covert crew, hear me, count your days?
Speaker 18 (02:18:53):
All right?
Speaker 24 (02:18:53):
I watched that Infinity Thing. How dare you recommend something
so amazing yet so wrong at the same time, that
whole gut feeling thing. At the time, I was like, oh,
you're feeling the stomach here. I felt that the whole time.
Speaker 3 (02:19:08):
Not cool, not cool, amazing dude.
Speaker 21 (02:19:11):
Hey guys, Uncle Tony here with a pretty funny dad
joke I heard. I thought you guys would get off on.
I mean, what do you call a magic dog? A
labra cadabrador.
Speaker 12 (02:19:28):
Labor?
Speaker 3 (02:19:30):
My man, I'm telling you. Ross said straight up that
the thing made me nauseous just by watching and explain it.
He said the same exact thing on the Infinity Thing.
Speaker 7 (02:19:39):
Yeah, yeah, no, maybe I stopped it after chapter one
because that was our Assignment.
Speaker 15 (02:19:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:19:44):
Yeah, I don't know if I got weird after that,
but I know it's just I rolled through like three
of them because I just wanted to keep watching it.
So next thing, I know, I just saw a little
thing that said chapter three I didn't like. I didn't
even know too many other things I'm watching right now.
Speaker 7 (02:19:57):
Yeah, Death by Lightning and this Squid game, the game
show squid Gabe.
Speaker 3 (02:20:02):
Yeah, yeah, they have their second season now. Yeah. Sabby
text me the other day and said, I think it's
Plurbium oh or whatever it is, and she said that
you got to start that. It's trippy, but it's good
and Sabby and I like a lot of the same stuff.
Speaker 7 (02:20:13):
I want to watch that because that's Vince gilligame Yes, yeah,
creator a better call Saul and also Breaking Bag yeah yeah,
big Talent and that's also on Apple TV Plus.
Speaker 3 (02:20:23):
Yeah. If I can watch it, then I'll feel better
about that monthly expell Right, very good four seven nine
four one. Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show right
here on Real Radio. I'm Jim Jacket is right over there,
and Deab has your news.
Speaker 11 (02:20:35):
Good time for you heard it here first on the
Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 5 (02:20:39):
All Right, more details about last week's tragic car crash
and Ybor City are coming into focus. For we're killed,
more than a dozen, a dozen injured, and now we
know that two of those who are hospitalized were students
at Marjorie Stone and Douglas High School in twenty eighteen
when seventeen of their classmates died in the mass shooting.
Bob Dietrich is the father of Connor and Brandon Dietrich,
(02:21:01):
and he tells ten Tampa Bay it's unfortunate that his
son has to deal with yet another trauma.
Speaker 25 (02:21:07):
He's never opened up to us about that, and I
was afraid we're going to have the same kind of
an issue with this, but surprisingly you can see it
in his eyes. He's struggling, but he's talking, which is
that's the most important thing he can do.
Speaker 5 (02:21:20):
Connor, usf graduate, remains hospitalized at Saint Joseph's. He and
his brother, along with their longtime friend Riley, were outside
Bradley's last Friday when a car driven by Silas Sampson
plowed into the crowd at a high rate of speed.
Speed Suspect Silas Sampson has a court date tomorrow.
Speaker 12 (02:21:37):
All right today.
Speaker 4 (02:21:38):
It did turn out to be true.
Speaker 5 (02:21:40):
Residents in the Spring Ridge Estates neighborhood in Eustace were finally.
Speaker 4 (02:21:43):
Allowed back in their home.
Speaker 5 (02:21:46):
Yes, twenty one homes were evacuated at the end of
October after that historic rainfall washed out the only roadway
to get to their properties. Eustace Fire Chief Mike Swanson
said all of the water and power has been restored
to the properties, and while residents are able to walk
over this portion of the roadway, they're still not able
to drive over it as yet.
Speaker 4 (02:22:07):
Emergency vehicles can.
Speaker 5 (02:22:09):
Chief Swanson said the goal is to have the bridge
completely opened up by Thanksgiving, and they think with their
construction and where they're at, they're going to be able
to make that happen. Sweet and then finally, a New
Mexico man charged in a double homicide told deputies a
cockroach told him to kill the Bernardillo County Sheriff's office
as twenty five year old Alexis Hernandez was charged with
(02:22:31):
two open counts of murder in connection with a Friday
incident inside a home southwest of Albuquerque. The man allegedly
said he received quote an encrypted message inside.
Speaker 3 (02:22:41):
A cockroach got him mighty man.
Speaker 5 (02:22:43):
End quote that he needed to kill Hernandez then said
he did quote what he had.
Speaker 4 (02:22:48):
To do, and you heard it here first on the
Jim Culbert You'd.
Speaker 3 (02:22:53):
Probably eat dinner next to people like that at least
five times a year in your life and have no idea,
no clue, No U is coming a part of the
seams and he's armed.
Speaker 4 (02:23:05):
Your final take on that?
Speaker 3 (02:23:06):
All right? Who do we have to think today, young lady?
Speaker 5 (02:23:08):
We want to thank Darryl Paine of Paw Affection Dog Training.
I also want to thank Scott Maxwell from The Orlando
Sentinel check out his column today, Ross Padgett from Good
Sauce with Ross and Joel. Just in case you missed
Animal House, Scott's segment or Ross's.
Speaker 4 (02:23:22):
All of the podcasts have been posted at The Jim Culpert.
Speaker 5 (02:23:24):
Show and last but never least, Sam Bowen and Canvas
Rich for running our YouTube chats.
Speaker 3 (02:23:29):
Yeah, guys, thanks, we appreciate that, as we do every day.
Jack question of today in our YouTube chat.
Speaker 7 (02:23:34):
It stems from the conversation about the government doing away
with a penny.
Speaker 3 (02:23:37):
It's how much cash do you usually carry?
Speaker 7 (02:23:40):
And the choices were under twenty dollars between twenty and fifty,
fifty one to one hundred or more than that?
Speaker 3 (02:23:47):
What do you think is the most popular answer? I
think most people have like twenty to fifty bucks on them,
like I would, whatever the choice that is. That was second.
Twenty to fifty came with thirty percent.
Speaker 7 (02:23:59):
Fifty percent of the people responding said under twenty dollars
in cat unbelievable. Just ten percent between fifty to one
hundred and ten percent more than one hundred.
Speaker 3 (02:24:09):
Yeah, that's crazy. I thought it'd be a little bit
more than that. Man, I don't know why.
Speaker 7 (02:24:14):
Well, you're looking at eighty percent of the respondence are
fifty dollars or less?
Speaker 3 (02:24:19):
For sure? Coming up tomorrow, we'll have our friend Danny
Meyering in for date night. Done right. Glynn Closman will
drop by for Colbert Court. Let's see what else we'll do.
Speaker 4 (02:24:28):
We'll have uh rosson house.
Speaker 3 (02:24:30):
Ross is gonna be here with us, the Froggers football
forecasts tomorrow, as well tons of fun stuff in Frogger's food.
That's right, three, let's get the hell out of here.
Speaker 14 (02:24:40):
What are you saying?
Speaker 16 (02:24:42):
All right?
Speaker 3 (02:24:42):
On? We having Devin Jack, I'm Jim. We followed the
new Shuggie. They follow the monsters in the morning. After us,
it's Tom and Dan with a corporate time and our
friends from Real Laughs. We'll see tomorrow three for more
of the Jim Colbert Joint. Till then, have yourself a
fantastic Wednesday evening and put some mump in your day
back at the Damn Dancers, y'all.
Speaker 2 (02:25:05):
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.
Speaker 11 (02:25:12):
Both are available for free on the iHeartRadio app.