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November 18, 2025 162 mins
Tuesday - Prison talk today including gangs and respect in the gray bar hotel. Rosen Plaza in studio with a Thanksgiving buffet. Are you ready to remove the artificial coloring from our foods? Listener Kevin recommended a short film on a guy and a dog for WYDTN. Rauce Thoughts on men’s fashion. It’s Only Money with Scott Brown with Edgewater Family Wealth on his trip to Antartica, and not waiting to enjoy your money. Plus, JCS News, Froggers Football Follow-up, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Management or advertisers.

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

Speaker 3 (00:14):
That's right, guys, here we go on a Tuesday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
Thank you so much for tuning in.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
We appreciate that, as we do every single day, and
we do have a loaded up program for you this afternoon.
We will get you caught up on what's happening in
the world. Dou will do that around three twenty with
JCS News four o'clock Howards, what'd you do that's new?
We'll go over the listener's choice that Kevin gave us.
I'll give you something to watch as well. We'll also
get some food from Rosen Center promoting their Thanksgiving brunch

(00:39):
five o'clock hours Trivia. We'll end up with ross thoughts
and it's only money with our Budy Scott Brown from
Edgeward our family Wealth. We'll also do you heard it
here first, your calls, text and talkbacks all day long.
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim to my left, my leveling,
very dangerous, go hosing this, deb Roberts, Hello, straight Out
Producer Brad Shof Afternoon Hoboedy Alien Ross Page, Believe in
Yourself four seven nine one text us and seven zero

(01:00):
three one. Find us easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at
the Jim Colbert Show on x Just at Jim Colbert Show,
and all day every day at Jimcobertlive dot com. That's
where you can check us out. On YouTube, get involved
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It's free as well. Grab the iHeartRadio app, go to
Real Radio and use that Mike to send your comment.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
Over to Jack and we'll get you on the air Superstar.
Make is your number one pre set on my Heart
Radio app pretty please. How you guys doing today? Good Tuesday?

Speaker 5 (01:25):
Oh yeah, ah yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
Doing good?

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Doing great?

Speaker 4 (01:30):
Anything exciting out there?

Speaker 6 (01:32):
I just found out that I got booked at the
Orlando Funny Bone this Friday.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
That's nice. Yep. I'm gonna be opening up for Damon
Wayne's junior. Yeah, that's cool. I'm very excited about that.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
His dad's super funny back in the day. Man, he's
still funny now.

Speaker 5 (01:46):
So is he. He's very funny.

Speaker 6 (01:49):
I gotta keep you guys up to date, dude, Damian
Wayne's Junior was also on the smash hit New Girl.

Speaker 5 (01:54):
That's right.

Speaker 6 (01:55):
I know that generated a whole new generation of towards
the family.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
Dude, that family's got to be one of the most
talented families in Hollywood history. Like, what is the most
talented Hollywood family Jackson's man, that's a good with Osmond's
Maybe Jackson's, Yes, because you have two major stars there
and Janet and Michael I mean the Banded Okay, Archridge family. Yeah,
that's a long time ago, and I think.

Speaker 4 (02:24):
You're onto something like yeah, the family wise, Yeah, the
Wavens man, they have a lot I mean Marlon Damon,
Damon's son. They had a lot of dudes who made
it quite well or made it pretty big in the
in the entertainment business.

Speaker 5 (02:39):
Scary Movie also, that's Marlin, right.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
Yeah, there's a new scary movie coming out and it's
supposed to go back to its roots. The og of
being rated are Scary Movie one and Scary Movie two,
very different than Scary Movie three and the bunch that
they made after that.

Speaker 4 (02:57):
I saw a list of movies yesterday that said that
were made in the these in nineties, they could never
release today, never in a million years. Released today just
would not make it now like monster episodes from the nineties.

Speaker 6 (03:09):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, every now and then you just got
to remember to grab my strong hand, like every now
and then you got to go.

Speaker 4 (03:15):
Back, all right, seven seven zero three to one. Couple
of things I want to start the show off with.
We do have a lot of topics to get to today,
plus some other cool stuff as well. So I wanted
to ask.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
I was watching a show last night and it was
talking about prison gangs, right, and mentioned all the prison gangs,
And of course we know some of them, right, I mean,
and they're not necessarily prison gangs. I mean, when you're
in prison, you affiliate with.

Speaker 4 (03:38):
Some gang, right, Yeah, But I thought it was just
based on ramicity.

Speaker 7 (03:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
In other words, you joined the white guys and they're
mostly like white supremacists, like skinhead types, or you draw
you joined the MS thirteen types like the Hispanic gangs,
or you join what.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
What are the blacks like? It would be the crips
of the bloods in prison. Still yeah, out sound white.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
I'm not gonnable. I'm sure that there's some element of
those chapters.

Speaker 6 (04:05):
I would like to think, though, you know, my imagination
roots for that it's not race based, and it's like,
what's your favorite color?

Speaker 4 (04:11):
No, it's never that.

Speaker 5 (04:12):
Yeah, it is.

Speaker 6 (04:14):
Dancing nobility. If you have rhythm, go to the left
side of the room.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
Yeah, yeah, it's theme fusia over here. Where are my greens?

Speaker 5 (04:24):
But yeah.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
It was a guy who in his whole Instagram thing
is talking about what it was like to be in prison.
It says that almost within the first day or two,
you have to swear some type of allegiance to one
of these groups, you will get approached by them. They
will not wait for you to come over and go, hey.

Speaker 4 (04:38):
Guys, how's it going. I mean, what you do in
your little group here? You guys?

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Yeah, you guys, you do it? You scrap booking? What
are you doing here? But they come up to you
immediately to find out who you're with. Here's my question.
Does that happen in female prisons? Deb We've never have
you ever seen any depiction of a female prison where
gang affiliation is necessary or that that seems to be

(05:02):
part of the culture almost immediately.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
I think my only experiment experience with female prison is
maybe a couple different X rated videos and then the New.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
Black Right, right right, and we know that, Like in
Orange is the New Black, they just had some hierarchy there.
It wasn't necessarily you were with a group of people,
it was like hierarchy.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
It's you know, how long have you been there?

Speaker 5 (05:24):
Who do you know?

Speaker 3 (05:25):
If you've been in there long enough, you have certain
access to certain parts of the jail house that are
prison that other people don't have.

Speaker 4 (05:31):
Therefore, you have other you have.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
Negotiating possibilities, maybe work in the kitchen one of the
easier jobs. But I've never seen that depicted in female
or women's prisons, that that affiliation with gangs has to
be immediate. I don't know why I found that interesting,
but I did.

Speaker 6 (05:47):
Well, ah, yeah, it's just that, like I think there's
definitely more men in prison, right, yes, So that's got
to be one reason why not here as many.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
I mean there's still but there are still black ladies,
they're still Hispanic ladies.

Speaker 5 (06:05):
There's still white ladies.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
And theoretically those are the three things that separate you
in jail. True, but pop culture and when in TV
and movies represents men in prison more than women in prison, right, yeah,
no question, And so the exposure to that and prison
lifestyle we're more exposed to what it might be like
for men in prison than women. Got it, Gotta got it,

(06:27):
And I just threw.

Speaker 5 (06:29):
This at, you know, the internet.

Speaker 6 (06:30):
The Internet gave me a response that you might be
a little onto something here is that female gangs are
in prisons. It's not like female prisons are gang proof,
but they do seem to be a little bit less themed, right,
a little a little smaller, less structured.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Right.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
You don't have to be part of that group to survive,
because in men's prisons, it seems like they make it
seem like you have to be one of those in
one of those groups to make it like you'll need
those people to get your back at some point during
your prison stay. And female prisons, it's just never been
like framed that way. And I kind of wonder why,
because you're telling you they're on the West coast. There
are certainly women that are affiliated with MS thirteen and

(07:13):
the La Kings and all those other Hispanic groups. I'm
sure there are some women who are associated with skinhead
groups or white supremacist groups and so on, but it
doesn't seem like to be as big as the prison
culture for the males.

Speaker 4 (07:25):
How many men do you think are incarcerated in the US?

Speaker 5 (07:29):
It's gross?

Speaker 4 (07:29):
And then how many women? Ten million? Just one point
one million men?

Speaker 1 (07:34):
Men?

Speaker 4 (07:35):
That seems in state and federal federal men make up
roughly eighty six percent of the total prison population. Wow,
which means there are less than two hundred thousand women incarcerated. Wow. Really,
that seems unbelievably low.

Speaker 6 (07:48):
So like the more people in my guestimation, you got
to hit seven hundred and fifty thousand until you really
need the backbone community that is gains.

Speaker 4 (07:57):
May you know, did you guys find that number a
little load? Did you think there were more men in
prison than one point nine million? I thought it was
going to be a bigger number.

Speaker 8 (08:03):
Yeah, I thought it was going to be like seven
to ten million.

Speaker 4 (08:05):
Yeah, yeah, yes, you said one point nine No, one
point two, one point two and then there's two hundred
thousand women.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
I feel so much better about our country now that
you said that number. For some reason, I thought our
prison population was gigantic. I mean, look, I mean one
point one out of three hundred and eighty million.

Speaker 4 (08:23):
Isn't bad when you include local jails and other detention facilities.
The overall incarcerated population in the United States is approximately
one point nine million. That's so insane. Would you have
thought that number would be bigger? Jet I did, Yeah,
got closer to ten Yeah yeah, same here, man.

Speaker 5 (08:41):
It's crazy.

Speaker 6 (08:41):
Also reading this, this is a different element about female
prisons that I hadn't really thought about. And it's also
an aspect thrown this out here and the WNBA, because
there is let's just say a lot of lesbians and
the not.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
All ross paget as the w n b A.

Speaker 6 (09:04):
I'm just saying that that aspect and that sport is
just it exists there. It's not really existent in male sports.
They they're gay men are probably in the NBA, and
they're going to take that secret probably to the grave
because of male homophobia. Yeah, I don't think that exists

(09:24):
as much in the w n b A, and female
prisons are often centered around protection, emotional support, or even
romantic pairing.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
I'll be damn, that's crazy. It's not well. I mean,
I don't know that it's not like that. Male prisons
is certainly not depicted to be that way on television
or news, that's for sure.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
Like, I don't think I said anything to inflammatory. You
guys always freak me out, man.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
Yeah, you said, the w NBA is just like a
female prison, and we choose it all. And remember we've
stepped in it over the year, so we understand what
saying stuff like that can can mean, especially now.

Speaker 6 (09:59):
You know I I was born and raised watching and
being around LPGA.

Speaker 5 (10:04):
Yeah, yeah, golf, you know, no gays there.

Speaker 6 (10:06):
Yeah, yeah, all right, it's a thing, all right, seven
nine one And the other thing, just real quickly, did
you guys hear the Trump remark to the to.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
The reporter on Air Force one about well, he was
being asked questions. I mean, this is like a thing
now where he gets a questioned on Air Force one.
You hear the jet engines in the background. He kind
of does lean around on the door. Yeah, that's not
like that, like he's in and out, like he's just
leaning in the press.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
Correct.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
But what happened yesterday was there's obviously the questions were coming.
It was about some of the Epstein stuff, and there
was one a reporter he called on somebody and the
report one reporter started asking a question. But I think
the reporter he that maybe thought that he called on her,
and she kind of started powering through with her question,
and he looks at her and says, quiet, quiet, little piggy.

Speaker 9 (10:55):
Oh my, oh wow, called a feed Belle reporter, a
I think a CBS reporter a little piggy, he said, quiet,
a little piggy.

Speaker 5 (11:06):
I mean that checks out. I'm not shocking.

Speaker 4 (11:10):
I haven't heard that one yet, Like if all the
other insults, I haven't heard that one.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
But he pointed and like lean down her. He said, quiet, quiet,
little piggy. Wow, unbelievable. Right, that was like I thought
that was even out of character or context for him.
You just gonna throw a lot of darts, for sure,
but that one seemed a little harsh. All right, four
oh seven nine six four one, texts seven seven zero
three one doub What do you have for news?

Speaker 8 (11:32):
Several popular websites and apps are returning to normal. The
team at the center of a Marion County kidnapping hoax
has been sentenced, and Firehouse subs to the rescue for
your dry bird. We'll talk about that and more coming
up next during JCS news.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
All right, well, talk a little break, come back, get
Debt's news, and do more than Jim Colbert shows.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Stay right there?

Speaker 1 (11:50):
Today? Is mom better way?

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Ross paget sponsored by Jos Coolmo, Orlando's injury attorneys.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Welcome back to the Jim Cober Show. RO Radio one
O four point one four seven nine to call us
text us at seven seven zero three one.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
Welcome back.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 5 (12:15):
Jack and Ross are right over there, and Dev has
your news.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
It's time for JCS news.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Wow, this guy gotta put his name on everything.

Speaker 5 (12:26):
It's in my contract ed.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Here's the news on the Jim Colber Show.

Speaker 8 (12:30):
And JCS News is brought to you by that mortgage
guy Don all right, good news. Several popular websites and
apps finally back to normal up and running after a
cloud flare outage. The web services firms said a fix
has been implemented and the incident has now resolved, but
the outage caused issues with apps and websites like chat,
gpt X and the video game League of Legends.

Speaker 5 (12:53):
What Yeah, You've gone too far.

Speaker 8 (12:55):
The issue started a little before seven o'clock this morning,
when down Detector received more than eleven thousand reports of
x outages and estimated sixty one percent of the problems
we're with app usage and twenty seven percent were with
the website. All right, Speaking of gaming Changes are coming
to the accessibility of the online gaming platform Roadblocks.

Speaker 5 (13:18):
Why.

Speaker 8 (13:19):
Under a new agreement Roadblocks, users who want to chat
will soon have to verify their age by providing a
government ID or by letting an artificial intelligence age estimation
tool photograph their face now. The move comes as the
platform faces several lawsuits claiming it has enabled sexual predators
to connect with children after reports of abuse and in

(13:41):
some cases, you guys, even kidnappings by adults they met
on Roadblocks.

Speaker 5 (13:46):
Wow, I would.

Speaker 4 (13:48):
The kids need government issued IDs? No?

Speaker 8 (13:51):
I guess if this would be any kind of an
adult that wants to chat, they would have to give
their idea. I don't know how they're setting this.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
Up, because the idea is that the adult is pretending
they're a kid, so they you know.

Speaker 8 (14:01):
This way, they'll be like, uh uh, you're over eighteen.
Roadblock says the updated policy will make it easier to
prevent young users from connecting with adult strangers, as all
users will be required to verify their age before accessing
chat features. I don't know how they're going to do
it for kids, because all you still have to do
is click that box.

Speaker 5 (14:21):
That's it.

Speaker 8 (14:22):
So I guess if you're on and you're an adult,
You're going to have to provide more information than that.

Speaker 5 (14:26):
I like Jack's idea. That is very funny.

Speaker 6 (14:28):
You're like, uh, too old, Like you have a digital
bouncer checking the ID exactly to make sure that you're
above the age of eighteen.

Speaker 8 (14:37):
So a bill that would lower to eighteen the minimum
age to buy rifles and other long guns in Florida
is going in front of a House subcommittee. Broward State
Representative Robin Bartleman calls it a gold Seal law.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
It's the standard that other states look to. We did
something right in Florida. We have red flag boss now
to take guns away.

Speaker 5 (14:57):
There's no reason an eighteen year old needs in ar now.

Speaker 8 (15:00):
If passed, it would undo a law that was passed
ever after the twenty eighteen attack at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas
High School, which raised the minimum age to twenty one.
Bartlman says lawmakers should pass universal background checks and safe
storage laws now. Proponents argue that listen, eighteen year olds
get to vote, go to war, and serve on jury's,
they should be able to buy these weapons too, all right.

(15:23):
The Marion County teen accused of making up. A kidnapping
story is now on house arrest. Investigators say seventeen year
old Cadence Spiite texted his mom back in September to
say that he'd been kidnapped and shot, but detectives say no,
he actually rode his bike to a different county and
shot himself in the leg. Yesterday, a judge sentenced him

(15:45):
to one year of house arrest with an electronic monitor,
which he'll have to wear for six months. His driver's
license has been suspended a bunch of other things. The
interesting part is Thanksgiving dinner is going to be a
little tense this year. The odd Spits fan only has
been ordered to pay nearly twenty five thousand dollars in
restitution for the cost of resources used by the county

(16:07):
during the investigation.

Speaker 5 (16:09):
I want to say thank you for the gravy. I
want to say thank you for the stuffing.

Speaker 6 (16:12):
I want to thank you for you because you eight
miled yourself right.

Speaker 5 (16:17):
You have ruined the holiday season.

Speaker 8 (16:21):
Lone Depot Park was packed with officers wearing black bands
through their badges as they said a final farewell to
Miami Dade Police Deputy Devin Hadamiyo. Melanie Alzat, his ex
partner from his first job at the Coral Gables Police Department, says,
you meet someone in this job that changes your life forever.

Speaker 10 (16:37):
You were the kind of officer every partner hopes for,
loyal driven, you faced every call.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
With courage and every person with heart.

Speaker 8 (16:47):
The twenty seven year old Miami native was shot and
killed after being attacked while responding to a crash in Kendall.
The gunman died by suicide after snatching the officer's weapon
away from him and using it to kill him.

Speaker 11 (16:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
Yeah, believable, Yeah, yes, unbelievable.

Speaker 5 (17:02):
All right, something for you, Jack.

Speaker 8 (17:04):
A city in Seminole County can move forward with an
infrastructure project.

Speaker 6 (17:08):
Ooh.

Speaker 8 (17:09):
Winter Springs announced it has secured over nineteen million dollars
in federal funding. Okay to build a new wastewater treatment plan.

Speaker 12 (17:18):
Day.

Speaker 4 (17:21):
That means in what about ten years?

Speaker 8 (17:22):
I can drink the water, A city official tell Spectrum
News thirteen. The project should be done in twenty twenty eight. Okay,
sow ten years and then over in Ovido, they're taking
steps to clean up Lake Jessup. The city announced filters
will be installed starting tomorrow in storm sewer inlets in
the Sweetwater Creek basin. This is part of the Sweetwater

(17:43):
Creek water Quality Improvement project.

Speaker 5 (17:46):
All right.

Speaker 4 (17:47):
The filters, that's a whole bunch.

Speaker 8 (17:49):
That is a whole bunch. The filters are designed to
catch nutrients, bacteria, and other pollutants before they reach the lake.
Installation will start next We'll start Wednesday and will last
about two days.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
Very cool.

Speaker 8 (18:01):
Yeah, you know, keep that lgae bloom, keep as many
lakes as we can.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
Is healthy nitrogen on your lawns?

Speaker 5 (18:06):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (18:07):
And isn't there a rule about that? Come fall anytime anyway?

Speaker 4 (18:10):
Yeah, if you do. I've done the like at the
extension offices where they do the classes, and they will
give it. They want it like zero nitrogen because you know,
there's a three numbers. The one they want like a
zero because they you don't want the runoff and getting
in our water supply in the aquifer.

Speaker 8 (18:30):
Absolutely all right. Florida's insurance commissioner is cautiously optimistic things
are moving in the right direction, calling it the most
complicated insurance market in the world.

Speaker 13 (18:40):
Florida is now the seventh largest insurance market in the
world as a state, fifteenth largest economy.

Speaker 8 (18:46):
Oh Michael Yarsky says the more than seven point six
million residential insurance policies have an average homeowner's premium of
twenty seven hundred and fifty five dollars. He adds Florida
no longer has the highest insurance premiums in the country
and had the lowest average increase in the nation compared

(19:08):
to other states. Jimmy, you look like you don't believe him.

Speaker 5 (19:12):
Is that true?

Speaker 8 (19:13):
You don't believe him?

Speaker 4 (19:14):
It doesn't a whole bunch, but I could be wrong.

Speaker 8 (19:17):
Now, when it comes to auto insurance, the top five
companies have all filed for rate decreases on top of
excess profits being returned to customers.

Speaker 4 (19:27):
So what state does have the highest homeowners insurance?

Speaker 1 (19:30):
Right?

Speaker 4 (19:30):
If it's not, it's got to be California, Buddy.

Speaker 8 (19:33):
I would say it's California's probably after the Palisades fire
and everything else they're dealing with right now, they got
over there atmospheric rivers and right now earthquakes.

Speaker 5 (19:42):
I wish my last name was Yarsky.

Speaker 6 (19:44):
It would be just a whole different level of existence. Yarski, dude,
he casts spells.

Speaker 5 (19:51):
Yeah, yeah, that was one right there. People just.

Speaker 8 (19:56):
Necromancer uh, Kroger it is closing three of its customer
fulfillment centers nationwide, including one in grove Land.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (20:05):
This sucks, by the way, this really sucks. This is
at Kroger delivery service. You see those vans everywhere. Yeah,
they shut down the entire thing and unfortunately the plant.

Speaker 8 (20:13):
Well yeah no, but Kruger has eight customer fulfillment centers
in the US on top of like announcing just last
month they're closing sixty stores now. Kroger says the closing
of the customer fulfillment center locations, they weren't meeting financial expectations.
So the grocer is now going to look to third
party delivery companies think Instacart and door Dash to improve

(20:37):
its e commerce profitability. The centers are going to close
in January twenty twenty six.

Speaker 4 (20:42):
The thing I read today that sucks a little bit
is that went out there are employees, about.

Speaker 5 (20:45):
Fourteen hundred people, most of them on hundred.

Speaker 4 (20:47):
Most of them live in Groveland. That's seeing kind of
a real state boom because of some of the jobs
that are coming out there are much like this Kroger facility.

Speaker 8 (20:56):
That's why I'm surprised, because, like you said, you see
the vans everywhere.

Speaker 4 (20:59):
I used to it for a little bit and it
was great. Yeah, there is. It's weird, you know, ordering
groceries online. I know some people just like going to
the shore to look at it, put it in their
cart and get it.

Speaker 8 (21:12):
If you've got someone who's you know, home bound after
surgery or it can be a really good.

Speaker 4 (21:18):
Short Yeah, you also need to. It forces you to
make a food plan, and a lot of people just
are more just haphazard. They just go to see what
they Yeah.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
I saw that truck in my old neighborhood every day,
all the time. Every single day, that thing was making
the rounds to my old neighborhood. It was crazy how
many people used it.

Speaker 8 (21:35):
And that's why I'm surprised that they said that it
wasn't meeting profitability expectations, because I was like, are you
kidding me? Have you seen how many of your vans
are rolling around?

Speaker 5 (21:44):
All right?

Speaker 8 (21:44):
More than one thousand pilots are picketing Allegiate Airlines nationwide,
demanding that management offer a fair contract. Pilot and South
Florida Teamsters Captain Brian brad Dugan rather says although Allegiant
is a low cost airline. It's also one of the
most profitable airlines in the country.

Speaker 14 (22:03):
So unfortunately, instead of investing those profits into a proper
pilot contract, they've wasted these profits by building failed resorts
on the west coast of Florida, the Sunseeker Resort, as
well as investing in foreign airlines.

Speaker 8 (22:15):
Allegiance fourteen hundred pilots flight travelers from cold climates to
warm tourist destinations like Punta Gorda, Tampa, Las Vegas, Orlando,
and Phoenix, and Dugan says so far there is no
threat of a strike, but pilots have voted to strike
if need be, so they're kind of holding their feet
to the fire and say.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
Just passing bread here.

Speaker 8 (22:33):
Hell right, exactly, Yeah, so never good.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
Yeah, despite the guitar interruption. I do know the largest
state with the highest homeowners insurance. Now, you guys guess
it was California. Yes, I will tell you that is
not right. Oh, well, then maybe it's uh Texas or
maybe Louisiana. Their high rates are primarily due to severe

(22:56):
weather rists like tornadoes, hail, and strong storms like Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Nebraska, Maraska,
with an average rate of five six hundred forty dollars
for a thirty thousand dollars dwelling.

Speaker 5 (23:10):
Damn. Every four years they have to go like, well,
we'll build it again.

Speaker 8 (23:14):
Yeah, yes, I guess that is crazy.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
All right.

Speaker 8 (23:20):
SpaceX is going to launch another Starlink mission from Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station today. The Falcon nine rocket is
scheduled to take off around six thirty pm. It's going
to carry a batch of Starlink satellites and the Low
Earth orbit. The event will be live streamed on SpaceX
dot com.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
There you go, all.

Speaker 8 (23:38):
Right, another pro football team is coming to Orlando.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
Yeah, I saw this, let's go. I mean, this is
what we do.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
Yeah, nobody hosts more small town, small time sports than
we do.

Speaker 5 (23:52):
Nobody does it. There's another question, Yeah, I mean nobody
does well.

Speaker 8 (23:56):
It sure seems like that does.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
It seems like every other week there's another franchise of
some sort. They playing in the arena, they playing old
spirit Halloween stores wherever they.

Speaker 5 (24:04):
I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (24:05):
This is like they set up shop and all of
a sudden they're in business. They got a helmet and
they're ready to.

Speaker 5 (24:08):
Go, I know, and they want us to be excited.

Speaker 8 (24:11):
And it's like, I mean kind of.

Speaker 4 (24:13):
I guess yeah, I'll be excited for the seven games.
You're gonna make it through before you fold. Well, hold on, now,
that's the disclaimer. You guys preface the news story with
that energy. What are we exactly talking about?

Speaker 5 (24:25):
Its arena football.

Speaker 8 (24:26):
The Massachusetts Pirates of the Indoor Football League announced yesterday
they're moving to Orlando next year. They're gonna play their
home games at the Kia Center. The IFL says the
move reflects a strategic decision to align the team with
one of the nation's most vibrant and fast growing sports markets.
I think that's how they refer to it. Reach around.

(24:47):
The IFL includes fourteen teams that play on fifty yard fields,
so they're saying it's the outdoor game, it's just bringing
it inside. Orlando is already home to the UFL's Storm.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
It's basically arena football, right it is, yes, but it's
yeah i FL Indoor Football League. But Predators are no more.
Yeah right right, but we also have the storm coming.
The thing is the Predators.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
I think we saw three iterations of that, the original
one that was very popular, then they kind of disbanded.
Then they came back then I think they came back
again and they were playing and ac arena.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 5 (25:21):
And then we had what the Apollos. Yeah yeah, that
was a fun time.

Speaker 4 (25:25):
Okay, so that's six games ever a little we won
that one Orlando Football League history. We have the United
Football League, We have the Orlando Storm coming before that,
we had the Florida Tuskers. Right, Oh, I forgot about
Orlando Apollos. We were the number one top team led
by Steve Spurrier. Yeah, we were the number one team
when that one fo.

Speaker 5 (25:46):
Telling you we won the championship.

Speaker 6 (25:48):
It never happened, but we had the best record when
they canceled it.

Speaker 5 (25:52):
XFL twice.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
We had the Orlando Guardians in twenty twenty three and
the Orlando Rage, who employed Jimmy and myself into one
thousand and one. There's Orlando Lightning, right, the Orlando Thunder
ninety one, ninety two, the Renegades in eighty five, and
in nineteen seventy four, the World Football League featured the
Florida Blazer.

Speaker 8 (26:14):
There you go, oh Blazers, that's a threatening name.

Speaker 5 (26:20):
Okay, I need your help on.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
You get intimidated by my dinner coach.

Speaker 5 (26:23):
Exactly.

Speaker 6 (26:25):
A blazer's got to be something. It's a trup right, yes,
a blazer. All I know is that Portland caught a
couple of strays, right there, Jack?

Speaker 8 (26:34):
Real quick?

Speaker 15 (26:35):
Is it?

Speaker 8 (26:35):
Munachi, New Jersey? Munaki, Mnaki? Okay, thank you.

Speaker 5 (26:42):
Friday, n I think it's missing a beat.

Speaker 4 (26:45):
She's in the Minaki.

Speaker 8 (26:48):
Mazes is holding its studio day in Munaki, Monachy, New Jersey,
where this year's Thanksgiving Day parade floats are being revealed.
Parade producer Will Cross Costs says, there are seven new
floats this year and they will feature entertainment stars.

Speaker 16 (27:04):
We have a variety of performers this year who are
going to be on the floats, from Debbie Gibson to
Foreigner to Jewel, covering a really eclectic wide range. We
like to say we've got a little something for everyone.

Speaker 5 (27:17):
What's cool.

Speaker 8 (27:18):
What's funny is when he said Jewel. When I played
the clip while I was listening getting the news already,
I was like, wait a minute, did he say tool?

Speaker 17 (27:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (27:26):
Thanksgiving Turkey is a mohawk and a really angry disposition.

Speaker 5 (27:32):
Jewel is cool, Jewel is timeless.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
She is hold back your hate Yeah, I don't have
any hate for jewel that he gives.

Speaker 6 (27:39):
Yeah, that would say a lot about you if you're
like I hate jewel.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
It's like the most wholesome.

Speaker 6 (27:45):
Songwriter pre Taylor Swift. Taylor Swift, great story.

Speaker 4 (27:49):
I hate that free mental health therapy she tries to
give on.

Speaker 5 (27:53):
Off.

Speaker 8 (27:54):
New floats include the Land of Glaciers, Wildlife and Wonder
Fantastic Winter Mountain and Master Chocolate Eer Ballroom. There's also
Stranger Things and PopMart, the makers of the Boo Boo Jewel.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
By the way, for invisi line the White Buffalo.

Speaker 8 (28:10):
Yeah, all right, I was going to do the story
about the gravy extinguisher that was being offered by Firehouse Subs.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
I mean, would you, shaped.

Speaker 8 (28:21):
Like a fire extinguisher, holds two leaders of gravy, you
have to provide the gravy to douse your dry bird.
It just went on sale this past Friday and it's
already already sold out, already.

Speaker 4 (28:32):
Gone a gravy.

Speaker 8 (28:35):
Fire, gravy fire for twenty dollars. But what's really cool
was that the proceeds would benefit the Firehouse Subs Public
Safety Foundation. Now how much money has that foundation from
Firehouse subs granted to first responders.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
Forty million over how long, over its existence, for its existence,
I'll go one hundred and fifty million, Jack, two hundred million.

Speaker 5 (28:57):
Yeah, because how quickly and how upbeach? She said. That
means that we're both way lower.

Speaker 8 (29:02):
It's one hundred million, it's one hundred million dollars. So instead, yes, instead,
I will do this story. A Northeastern supermarket chain is
looking to address the current penny shortage by hosting a
double exchange day for customers Stop and Chop shoppers at
Price Chopper, Price Chopper and Market thirty two stores are

(29:24):
being asked to bring in loose or wrapped pennies okay
in exchange for a Price Chopper card worth double the
value of their change. That's cool, that's not bad, right
at all. The promotion will only be available, It was
only available in November. Exchanges had to be a minimum
of fifty cents. Can't just come in with a quarter.

(29:44):
But you couldn't go over one hundred dollars in pennies
right there?

Speaker 3 (29:47):
You Yeah, I saw a thing today that it's the
new placard that people are putting on their counters to
let people know how they're dealing with the penny, you know,
being gone now like, if it's below this much, we'll
round it down. If it's up with this much, we'll
round it up exactly. Just so you have an idea
of when you get your change, what it's gonna look like.
You'll feel a ripped off. Nobody wants getting a fist
fight to McDonald's over three cents.

Speaker 5 (30:09):
I a feeling it's coming.

Speaker 8 (30:10):
You know what happened.

Speaker 5 (30:11):
I got a feeling it's coming.

Speaker 8 (30:12):
And that concludes your JCS Newsly it's.

Speaker 5 (30:16):
Coming, all right.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
Four oh seven nine four one terminator. You can text
us at seven seven zero three one. It's Tuesday. That
means it's time for the Froggers football follow up. Somebody
out there is gonna win a twenty five dollars gift
card to Froggers Grilling Bar.

Speaker 4 (30:30):
Fill them up right now. We'll find out who that
is next.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
Them follow up is next call down for your chance
to win. Four oh seven nine one six one O
four one.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
Out O.

Speaker 5 (30:50):
One O four.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
It's time for the Froggers football follow up on the
Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
Like Jim Colbert Show real ready one of four by
it is time for the Froggers football forecast. This is
where somebody on that phone line right there I'm looking
at is gonna want a twenty five dollars gift card
to Froggers going bar if they can find the person
on this show that had the most correct picks this
weekend in NFL Action. That's right, Froggers available for your

(31:18):
viewing and dining pleasure drinking as well. Why not watch
the games, enjoy great food and beverages at four area
Frogger locations. They might be a Mount Dora, it could
be O Vito, a Popka, Altamont Springs, all on the
menu for Froggers and you find them at Froggers dot com. Now, Jim,
looking at the overall standings, it is Ross Paget, who

(31:44):
last week took over the lead for the season with
one hundred and four wins in second place.

Speaker 4 (31:50):
You find Deb Roberts. I am in third place, and Jim,
you are right behind with ninety three wins on the season.
And that's where the standings are going in to this
past week. It did you guys make any changes to
your picks since we discussed them on Thursday? I did
not make one change.

Speaker 18 (32:09):
To no me.

Speaker 5 (32:11):
Neither I made one change I did.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
We'll find out what that is. Deb two, three, four
or five.

Speaker 5 (32:20):
Let's go too, Let's go to two. Is Tim? Tim?

Speaker 4 (32:24):
How you doing?

Speaker 19 (32:26):
Garret?

Speaker 20 (32:26):
Jimmy, how are you doing?

Speaker 5 (32:27):
Doing good? Buddy? All right?

Speaker 4 (32:28):
In this past NFL Week of Action, what member of
the show do you think had the most correct picks?

Speaker 12 (32:36):
Oh?

Speaker 14 (32:36):
Man, I'm gonna take a hail Mary here, and the
NFL has been pretty unpredictable, So I'm gonna go with you, buddy.

Speaker 4 (32:42):
Oh okay, oh goo, whoa roa, whoa, who whoa whoaa.

Speaker 6 (32:45):
We ross who laughed, laughed, laugh, I laughed last Yeah,
and I'm laughing right now.

Speaker 1 (32:50):
That was great.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
It's awesome.

Speaker 6 (32:56):
Hail Mary, Shot in the Dark, super Dead sprint, Go Jim?

Speaker 4 (33:03):
What if I told you? What if I told you
Jim had twelve correct picks? But then I also told
you that was not enough to win the weed, not
enough to win the week, Buddy, I was. I was
out this week. I made a valiant run. Yeah, but
I had a really bad Sunday afternoon and evening.

Speaker 12 (33:21):
He was.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
I had a really bad Sunday afternoon and evening. Jim
was one off the lead. Yeah, yeah, all right, deb three,
four or five?

Speaker 5 (33:31):
Let's go five?

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Five?

Speaker 4 (33:32):
Is Jeff? Jeff? How you doing?

Speaker 5 (33:35):
What's going on? Jimmy? All right, nothing much, buddy. We're
trying to find a winner here.

Speaker 3 (33:38):
We need to give away this twenty five dollars gift
card to Frogger's Grilling Bar. Dead or excuse me, I
am off of the list. Tell me, buddy, who do
you think had the best pick this weekend in NFL Action?

Speaker 5 (33:50):
Well, I gotta change my pick.

Speaker 21 (33:53):
You didn't make it, so go off day.

Speaker 20 (33:56):
Let's go Rosh.

Speaker 5 (33:57):
You got it right. It's cool to be called rass
daddy and dad. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (34:01):
Actually, Ross is coming off a win last week. Ross
has four weekly wins on the year, and Ross leaves
our pick for the season. But he did not win
this week.

Speaker 5 (34:11):
He did not win this week, also.

Speaker 4 (34:13):
Twelve wins, tying with Jim. He laughed at me, but
yet I actually finished ahead of him this week.

Speaker 5 (34:19):
Oh you count the tiebreaker.

Speaker 4 (34:21):
Oh I'm counting the tiebreaker, Dog, That's part of the game.

Speaker 5 (34:23):
Oh yeah, you're bad.

Speaker 8 (34:25):
Sorry.

Speaker 5 (34:25):
You can apologize at any point in any language you
feel like.

Speaker 6 (34:28):
I don't apologize to people that are below me, I.

Speaker 4 (34:34):
Am gonna snatch your pist mop head all over the
point when we get out of this break. You have
no idea. Right before he said that, he said, I'm sorry, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (34:44):
All right, Deb, four or three or four?

Speaker 8 (34:46):
We're gonna go three?

Speaker 5 (34:47):
Three? Is Stacy? Stacy?

Speaker 4 (34:48):
How you doing?

Speaker 3 (34:50):
Ray rivet rivet indeed, fifty fifty shot.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
At going and getting this twenty five dollars gift card
between deb and Jack? Who do you think of the
best weekend in NFL picks? Captain chat Oh, Stacy from
the layer, I really would love to tell you. Let
me scroll down and see where he is.

Speaker 5 (35:14):
It is me scrolling.

Speaker 6 (35:16):
Hey god, I'm just one pick behind, scrolling scrolling.

Speaker 4 (35:20):
I had eleven right because he came in dead last
this week with usad last.

Speaker 5 (35:25):
Yeah, you know why I do know what? You know
why you suck?

Speaker 14 (35:28):
No?

Speaker 4 (35:28):
Because I swing for the fences, I went, she went, Sorry,
I went for the pin instead of the layup. Yeah,
and I switched my pick at eight o'clock last night
to the Raiders because if the Raiders would have pulled
it off, then I would have been in first place.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
So you gotta go for the clock. You do, buddy,
You do all right, let's get to him.

Speaker 15 (35:48):
Dan.

Speaker 5 (35:48):
How you doing?

Speaker 4 (35:49):
I wonder who I'm good?

Speaker 5 (35:50):
How are you? Yay the winner? What's the magic words? Buddy?
There you go by your winter.

Speaker 3 (35:58):
I'm gonna put your whole Dan, get that twin about
our give card of Frogger's drill and bar.

Speaker 4 (36:02):
Thanks for playing, buddy, and thanks for listening to you.
You got a buddy, Thanks for picking me. Deb Roberts
finished with thirteen correct giving her one hundred and fourteen
wins for the entire season, still two behind Ross, but
Jim actually got one closer to moving into third place.
I have one hundred and six and Jim has one
hundred and five and Ross has one hundred and four sixteen.

Speaker 3 (36:24):
Yeah, I whipped on Kansas City and I whipped on Detroit.
I had a really bad Sunday afternoon and Sunday evening.

Speaker 4 (36:30):
If not, I'm right there. Actually, Jim and I had
the same picks until I decided to go for the
Raiders last night. Man today look awful like they have
every week this season. You know who looks terrible?

Speaker 5 (36:41):
The Chargers. I mean the Chargers.

Speaker 8 (36:43):
They cost me a game too, mighty.

Speaker 3 (36:45):
I think everybody almost missed that game. I know they
were Jacksonville, but they got whacked.

Speaker 4 (36:49):
I don't know what the deal. I thought they were
going to be good. And then now you if you
look at it, uh, the Panthers are actually winning in
one like five out of the last six.

Speaker 5 (36:58):
What happened?

Speaker 4 (36:59):
Well, and I would say the Patriots that's gonna be
the biggest surprise of the year.

Speaker 5 (37:02):
I mean, he's good. Coach of the year.

Speaker 4 (37:04):
Raiders have two wins on this year, one of them
against the Patriots, which is crazy, and then they become
one of the best seams.

Speaker 3 (37:10):
Yeah, well, thanks Rogers, we appreciate that. Find the location
nearest you at Froggers dot com. All right, four oh
seven nine one six one o four one. Again, you
can always text us at seven seven zero three one.

Speaker 4 (37:20):
Waiting in the wings. About twenty minutes from now. Rosen
Center is coming in with some of the Thanksgiving dinner
that we can go out there and get.

Speaker 5 (37:26):
Yeah, it's that good. Good. Is this Harry's pool sidebar?

Speaker 4 (37:30):
No, No, this is just the hotel.

Speaker 8 (37:32):
The hotel, so the Rosen Center Hotel.

Speaker 4 (37:34):
Oh yeah, yeah, so fricking good man. I'm gonna go
get me a plate right now. Jim we want to
remind everyone we are actually going out. We're taking this
show on the road along with the other two. It's
the Annual Real Radio Bike Drive on December tenth, and
we are going to be broadcasting live from Orlando.

Speaker 5 (37:52):
Harley.

Speaker 4 (37:52):
Now, this is happening December tenth. I'm telling you this
now because we want people to bring bicycles and what
happens next Friday is Black Friday, then Cyber Monday. So
if you want to join us for our bike drive,
our annual bike Drive, start thinking about picking up a
kid's bike, maybe kids bike helmet as well, And if

(38:12):
you're gonna take advantage of some of the specials that
are gonna be happening over the next couple of weeks,
get that bike now and make sure you bring it
to Orlando, Harley on December tenth and come see us
as we broadcast live from Orlando. Harley Davidson. Big shout
out to just call Mo dot com and also Core
Flooring Center, two of our sponsors for this year's event.

(38:32):
Thank you, buddy, appreciate that.

Speaker 8 (38:34):
Yeah, we're gonna have a lot of fun that whole day.
Like you said, Jack, all three shows will be out
there broadcasting. It's gonna be a party atmosphere.

Speaker 4 (38:41):
It is food trucks. They'll have a cash bar as well.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I have a small buzz. It'll
be great. Exactly what are you doing that day?

Speaker 5 (38:48):
Why don't you come back? Yeah? I barely know where
I am right now?

Speaker 22 (38:52):
Right?

Speaker 5 (38:53):
All right? For seven?

Speaker 4 (38:55):
Back with what you do that's new?

Speaker 5 (38:56):
Right after this?

Speaker 1 (38:59):
This has been Froggers Football follow up.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
Find the Froggers near you at Froggers dot com.

Speaker 13 (39:10):
I mean, you're right about the pro football teams in Orlando.
There has been many, but one thing I can't figure out.
I know we used to have the minor league team
for the Double Rays in Orlando, but we don't have
any minor league baseball in Orlando's kind of surprising. I
think Orlanto is like the biggest city not to have
any kind of baseball of any kind, and it's weird.

Speaker 21 (39:29):
Jimmy and Friends. Can I call a show that Jimmy
and Friends or whatever? Let's change the Jimmy and Friends guys.
I just got to meet John Stainles today, if they
may have a convention walk by him throughout some code words
from the Howard Stearns show that he understood and then
got to talk to me about how incredible was to
see him performing the Beach Boys over the weekend at
at Cot.

Speaker 5 (39:47):
It was awesome. I got to meet Uncle Jesse today.
That's great.

Speaker 4 (39:52):
My hears are gonna do. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (39:55):
A guitar player, right, drummer? Drummer, that's it? Yeah.

Speaker 4 (39:58):
So yeah, he's playing drums with the Beach Corps. He's
been doing that a while, haven't he. You used to
play drums on General Hospital?

Speaker 19 (40:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (40:05):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (40:08):
Is that because of his hair? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (40:11):
Sure?

Speaker 13 (40:11):
All right?

Speaker 5 (40:12):
Is his nick?

Speaker 4 (40:12):
That was his character's name on the show. I oh yeah,
he's had a couple of partners. All right, Welcome back
to the Jim Colberg Show. We're already at one O.

Speaker 5 (40:21):
Four point one.

Speaker 4 (40:21):
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello Jack it here.

Speaker 5 (40:23):
So it's ross. He's a musician on full House.

Speaker 4 (40:26):
Yeah, let's do what'd you do?

Speaker 5 (40:27):
That's new? What'd you do that?

Speaker 4 (40:35):
What did you do thatday? Do I need to tell
us something? That's right?

Speaker 5 (40:43):
Thanks?

Speaker 3 (40:44):
Cosman Law that's kla U s m A and Law
dot com Amas is right there and winning Part four
oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen car crash called Klausman.
We will talk to Glenn on Thursday for corporate Court.
Every Tuesday around four o'clock, we.

Speaker 5 (40:56):
Do what you do. That's new.

Speaker 3 (40:57):
One of the show members will choose something for the
others to watch listen to. We will do that and
then reconvene the following Tuesday, discuss it and then move
on to the next member. This week, it's actually the
listener's choice, and we had Kevin.

Speaker 4 (41:10):
Yeah, Kevin Triplett posted this. What we do is after
we go through the four of us and then we
go to a listener choice, and that's in gym members
on Facebook. We encourage you to join that group and
about once a month we put up the query for
you to call the opportunity the prompt and Kevin gave
us a twenty two minute long drama on YouTube entitled

(41:34):
Lucy Yes. Do you want to hear how they describe
it on YouTube? Yeah sure? A Lonely Electronic A lonely
electric scooter collector's routine in Los Angeles is disrupted by
an unexpected encounter. This quiet drama follows a journey of
unexpected emotional challenges. The film uses deliberate pacing and expressive

(41:57):
gestures to tell a moving story. I think this is
the type of thing Ross would love. Did you watch it?

Speaker 5 (42:10):
I did not.

Speaker 6 (42:11):
Okay, I'm gonna be transparent, but it does seem like
something that I would love because this seems like a
short film.

Speaker 4 (42:19):
It is, and I didn't mean to put Ross on
the spot, but when I watched it, I'm like, Ross.

Speaker 5 (42:23):
Would totally dig this.

Speaker 4 (42:25):
Yeah you think so, I do.

Speaker 6 (42:27):
I love independent filmmaking, and that sounds exactly what this is.

Speaker 3 (42:32):
It is, but I mean, man, this one was tough. Man,
this one was tough.

Speaker 5 (42:38):
Deb I hated it, but did you really? Ohods, I
hated it.

Speaker 8 (42:44):
It was dystopian, it was sad, it was cruel.

Speaker 4 (42:47):
That's kind of how it hit me. It's very empty.
It made me feel very empty, like it felt.

Speaker 3 (42:52):
It felt like this guy was on a meaningless path
to nowhere. And about five minutes in it, you're like,
I do not want to live.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
It's just like you.

Speaker 3 (43:02):
It's it's weird. It just you get the feeling that
this is this guy's everyday life. And of course, you know,
he finds this dog, and this dog kind of gives
him a new lease on life.

Speaker 4 (43:11):
Or something to love and I don't know, man, this
one was. This one was hard. This had a lot
of This had a lot of those uh, what's that
dystopian show Handmaids? This has a very Handmaid's field to me. See,
I liked it. I really did. And it's yes what
I mean. They were right in the description about the

(43:32):
deliberate pacing where you just realized this guy he's lonely,
he has nothing. All he has is his job and
his apartment, and he he lives to do his job,
and he needs his job just to live.

Speaker 8 (43:45):
He never changed his clothes, He grabbed the same Chinese
container out of the fridge that still had the chopsticks
in it.

Speaker 4 (43:51):
He had a miserable life. But then I cried. He
encounters this dog.

Speaker 5 (43:56):
Did I bald?

Speaker 8 (43:57):
After this?

Speaker 15 (43:58):
That was?

Speaker 4 (43:58):
And in an effort to keep the dog, he has
this breakdown and you realize he has he has heavy
emotional problems and really that dog he was going to
make it a therapeutic dog, and what you realize is
it really is and he really.

Speaker 8 (44:16):
Needs it, and the dog saved his life. The only
redeeming qualities to this was literally the last couple of
scenes where he ends up, he get the dog. Well,
I'll just leave it at that, because if you're going
to watch it, he has the dog, and then he
has that breakdown in the psychiatrist's office, and that was
the only hope going forward, is that maybe, just maybe

(44:38):
life is going to get better. But like this scene
right here that if you're watching on our YouTube channel,
as he's walking up to that scooter and you just
see a pile of dismembered bird wings just kind of
shoved in like a pile of rubbish, and people fighting
and cussing at each other.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
I cried so hard. I haven't it was nothing.

Speaker 8 (44:54):
You made me?

Speaker 5 (44:56):
Make you feel good?

Speaker 4 (44:57):
No, But what I think it does, I think it
really holds up a mirror two. So so many who
are unseen in our society struggling with mental illness, just
doing doing these jobs. And how many people have used
these pace scooters and just left them wherever, and you know,
and one of the few things he says in this
movie is who would put a scooter there?

Speaker 2 (45:18):
You go?

Speaker 4 (45:19):
You know, an a hole.

Speaker 8 (45:21):
Only time that I smiled was when he pushed over
the Lime scooters. When he pushed over the competing scooters.
I was like, all right, that was funny.

Speaker 4 (45:29):
Yeah, I didn't know this job existed, by the way,
Oh I've I've actually seen that job happening in real time. Yeah,
I didn't know that existed.

Speaker 3 (45:36):
I didn't know there's a people who there are people
who wrangled those things and brought him back to where
they were supposed to be. I guess it makes sense
that there is.

Speaker 6 (45:42):
But there's basically an uber for Lime scooters. Yeah, it's
a weird cycle that's happening right now. I'm curious, though,
deb I note that these feelings, you know, this piece
of art, this small short film, and what was it called?

Speaker 5 (45:56):
Again, Lucy, It's called Lucy? Do you? Is there any
part of you?

Speaker 6 (46:03):
Because when I get those feelings when I watch something,
I also can I'm still able to celebrate it because
I like being able to feel things and like being
able to watch No.

Speaker 8 (46:14):
Because then I have to go into work and read
news stories three quarters of which I'll never repeat what
I've read. But what so, this isn't the way I
wanted to start my day.

Speaker 6 (46:22):
But the two difference is because one of those is real.
This is a movie.

Speaker 5 (46:26):
This is real.

Speaker 8 (46:27):
It's just in a movie. There are a lot of
people that are living this kind of dystopian experience, and
it's it's not an act of it's it's a piece
of fiction, but it's really not.

Speaker 3 (46:37):
And I think the interesting part of this for me
is is this doesn't have to be a guy down
on his luck using an umbrella to hold up his
hatchback and a beat up car in la wearing the
same clothes for you know, four or five days in
a row doing this job that's very monotonous. This could
be an insurance executive, This could be somebody working in
our sales department. It doesn't have to be desolate all
the time to be empty and lonely. That's what I

(46:59):
got from It tells a story of many people. This
just happens to be a bit of a rundown story,
But there are people living that very life who have
the surroundings and trappings of success and Clid still feel
that exact same.

Speaker 8 (47:09):
Way, including the guy he stopped next to in traffic
who is driving a nice car and was bawling at
a steering wheel.

Speaker 6 (47:15):
But like, I guess that would be even a great
talking point as well as like that's what good art
or good filmmaking can do.

Speaker 5 (47:22):
Is that it gave you a thought, it gave you
a feeling.

Speaker 15 (47:25):
Though.

Speaker 6 (47:25):
One of my favorite movies that I've ever seen. I
know I've talked about it so much, but that substance,
I just love it because I've never had a movie
move me as much as that thing has. Even though
it's a feeling that I might not necessarily love or enjoy.

Speaker 5 (47:39):
It's acting and it's film.

Speaker 6 (47:42):
And I just like if it pushes you through like
a line and a threshold that you're like, I can't
even be in the same room as this film. Yeah,
I'm just always curious of like, can we can? Is
there still a level of appreciation? Oh, without a doubt.

Speaker 8 (47:55):
I just would. This isn't anything I would have ever
saw that, and I've had movies do.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
That before, or Dead Poets Society like flattened me, I
mean just completely flattened me. But I thought it was
artistic and good, but it was. It's still very difficult
to watch for me, but I mean, you know, it's
just one of those things.

Speaker 8 (48:10):
I'm happy enough that he wanted to keep the dog
enough to get help, because that's probably the first time
he's ever really sought help.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
And he and he would have not have done that
had he not discovered the dog exactly.

Speaker 3 (48:21):
Yeah, it shows that there's redemption in the smallest things,
maybe even when you're not expecting it, because the dog
was just kind of chained up to a fence and
left there, so they kind of found each other.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
Actually, when you're thinking about.

Speaker 6 (48:30):
It, see now that you guys are talking about it,
and once again, I have not seen this film.

Speaker 5 (48:34):
It's hard for me to.

Speaker 6 (48:36):
You would have to convince me all over again that
you didn't enjoy it, or that you didn't have some
sort of affection towards the table.

Speaker 8 (48:44):
I mean not affection, but it was twenty two minutes
of our time. So you want to come out away
with something.

Speaker 5 (48:49):
You know, something that a two hours, right, but.

Speaker 8 (48:51):
You want to walk away with something that makes you
feel better than when you Yeah, the first eighteen minutes
of it.

Speaker 4 (48:57):
The only redeeming part was the dog.

Speaker 8 (48:59):
Yeah, the dog and him getting help. Yeah, I'm very happy.

Speaker 4 (49:01):
If I had the choice between the dog and the dude,
I take the dog.

Speaker 5 (49:05):
Once again, this is a movie, not a real human
all right, great choice, keV.

Speaker 3 (49:10):
And here's I think the perfect choice for this segment
is having somebody not really care for it and then
having people like it as well, like the bookends of
emotions there when it comes to doing that, I think
that's that's my interpretation of art, like it just moves
you to make.

Speaker 5 (49:22):
A decision one or the other. Ross.

Speaker 4 (49:23):
I really think you will appreciate it. If you want
the link, you go to jimculbertlive dot com. What do
you do that's new? We list everything there and this
is the link at the top will only be passed
by what Jim now gives us.

Speaker 3 (49:37):
Yeah, so we will continue on our nineteen eighties hip
hop tour. And I actually almost gave you guys this
record before I gave you Paid and Full, because paydon
Full already known as one of the legendary eighties hip
hop albums. This is another one that we listened to
quite a bit while skateboarding and kind of playing around

(49:57):
Pine Hills in the in the early and mid or
in the mid and late eighties as I moved down here.
That's when I moved down here.

Speaker 4 (50:04):
Is it's a epm D strictly business is what I
want you guys to listen to this week and give
me a heads up on how you feel about that.
EPMD strictly business is the.

Speaker 5 (50:16):
Album all right, EPM D.

Speaker 3 (50:19):
Yeah, EPMD, that's the band. I think it's called Eric
and Parish making dollars. I think that's what it stands for.
But strictly business. I think this is their debut album.
The big song on there is called You Got to Chill.
But it just gives you a real idea of what
hip hop was like in the early eighties.

Speaker 4 (50:37):
Again, I don't think there's cursing in it. Nobody's talking
about hose or.

Speaker 5 (50:40):
Anything like that.

Speaker 4 (50:41):
It's just a guy telling you he's a better rapper
than you for like, you know, an entire album.

Speaker 5 (50:50):
It's good.

Speaker 4 (50:50):
If you haven't heard of check it out.

Speaker 5 (50:51):
You're like, all right, all right four.

Speaker 3 (50:52):
Seven nine six one text us at seven seven zero
three one. You guys ready for some food?

Speaker 4 (50:58):
So I just went over during the break Rosen set
up their big Thanksgiving buffets coming up. They give me
this menu. This menu weighs a pound. Just a menu
weighs a pound. And uh so, what we have today
is we have some roast turkey with their in house
turkey gravy, and we have some of their sweet potatoes
with this crunch topping.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
That's toffee and some other stuff. We have some Tomahawk
steak wow. So we're gonna get a little taste and
then come back and talk to these guys about this
menu and what they're doing this Thanksgiving. We'll do that
next right here on the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 22 (51:38):
Bradley sponsored since day one by Glenn Klausmanclosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 12 (51:43):
Hi.

Speaker 2 (51:47):
Today is mob Betta we Ross Pageant sponsored by jos Colmo,
Orlando's injury Attorneys.

Speaker 3 (51:59):
Welcome back to the gym Cover Show, Roll Radio one
oh four point one. Thanks so much for tuning in
to the guys. We appreciate that very much, as we
do every single day. If you'd like to text us
that number seven seven zero three one. If you'd like
to leave a talk back, that's easy and it's free.
Grab the iHeartRadio app, go to real Radio and use
that mike to send your comment over to Jack.

Speaker 4 (52:15):
We'll get you on the air. Superstartum is right around
the corner. It's just that easy, guys. I promise also
make it sure number one pre set on the iHeart
Radio app as well.

Speaker 5 (52:22):
Welcome back.

Speaker 4 (52:23):
I'm Jim, there's deb Hello, Jack is here, so is
sau stadding. My god, you know every I know every year.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
You know, we have such a wonderful relationship with the
Rosen Group out at Eye Drive and all the hotels.
Of course we do our sip and saber events and
I have been doing those for years, but here recently we
also have been helping them promote their holiday buffets Christmas
and Thanksgiving. Christmas come up a little bit later, of course,
Thanksgiving next week. And these guys are here today. You
guys give it up for Adrian and Chef Michael.

Speaker 5 (52:50):
What do you say to see you guys?

Speaker 4 (52:55):
How's things?

Speaker 23 (52:55):
Things are great?

Speaker 5 (52:57):
Party girl, I like it.

Speaker 4 (53:00):
Things. You're good man. You know, we love obviously.

Speaker 3 (53:03):
You know, the Rosen Group has such a historical place
in the growth of Central Florida, not only as the properties,
but of course mister Rosen got Rest of Soul has
been just really instrumental in you know, growing this city.
And then of course now with this new culinary you
know cup that we have, you know, up and down

(53:24):
the East coast. It's so great to see the hotels
really getting their due because you know, the Rosan Group's
been serving great food out there with some of the
restaurants for many many years, but a lot of the
locals never made it down there because you know, it's
eye drive and there. You know, a lot of Orlando
wins will think there's two Orlandos. There's o Orlando over here,
and then the South Orlando is the tourist Orlando. But
that really isn't the truth anymore. I think a lot

(53:44):
of locals are now starting to figure out that, you know,
some of the big properties down there are really focusing
on bringing people from Orlando proper down into that area
so that they can experience some of these wonderful flavors,
like this incredible, ridiculous, cartoonish Thanksgiving buffet. It is cartoonish,
it's so big.

Speaker 11 (54:01):
There's a lot of items.

Speaker 4 (54:02):
Yeah, that is the understatement of the century.

Speaker 11 (54:05):
There's actually three pages. But we won't touch all the.

Speaker 3 (54:08):
Yeah, we're not gonna be able to do that for sure.
Let's talk about some of the stuff you brought today though.

Speaker 24 (54:12):
Okay, so we had the you know, we have the
traditional staples. The roast turkey would be apple cider gravy. Yeah,
turkey gravy, absolutely wonderful. You tasted the roasted shallatte pear
and French bread stuffing yeah, yeah, that was good.

Speaker 5 (54:29):
The chef says it's good. Yeah, that's good.

Speaker 11 (54:32):
Yeah, that's one of their favorites too.

Speaker 4 (54:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 24 (54:35):
Baked sweet potatoes with oatmeal, pecans, trusle, and then we
drilled it with a bourbon barrel aged maples.

Speaker 5 (54:39):
That's the one that's so by your tickets.

Speaker 4 (54:41):
Now do this, and look, the sweet.

Speaker 3 (54:43):
Potatoes haven't been destroyed. I was telling chef earlier. You know,
they roast them, they cut them, they lay them the
way they're supposed to be, so you actually get the
flavor of the sweet potato and it's not inundated with
sugar and sweet stuff. You actually let the thing shine.
But the topping gives you just enough of that to
really make it flavorful and delicious.

Speaker 24 (55:01):
Yeah, a little on in the sweet and salty sauce. Yeah,
and when they're not ever cooked.

Speaker 5 (55:04):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 24 (55:05):
Also warm pumpkin spice latte bread pudding with toffee sauce.

Speaker 5 (55:09):
Which is amazing.

Speaker 3 (55:11):
Is that a new one, by the way, Yes it is, yeah,
because I had the bread pudding from last year did
not have that pumpkin spice thing to it. But the
way that you guys make it, it is a true pudding.
Some of the bread puddings get set up a little
too hard and they don't eat like they should. This
one has just enough texture to give you a good
bite and tons of flavor and again not too coyingly sweet.

Speaker 11 (55:31):
Right No, and it's it's light and fluffy too. It's
not that hard.

Speaker 5 (55:34):
Yeah, no, it's great. It's so delicious.

Speaker 24 (55:36):
So we have some menu highlights here and I won't
touch on all of them, just a few of them.
But we have a soup and salad bar featuring creamy
fall corn bisk with jala peinut, corn bread croutons, local
and international cheese, and chocolateical fruit. A seafood station with
crab claws, shrimp, New zealand green shell mussels, made to
order hand rolled sushi. Wow, really, we have our sushi chefs.

(55:57):
Wo'll be handrolling it there for the guests. Unbelievable and
us our friend chef Tello, our ship and savor cheft
that we haven't Rosen center. He's going to be having
a coconut crusted mahi mahi boobun.

Speaker 15 (56:08):
Damn.

Speaker 5 (56:08):
That sounds incredible, man.

Speaker 3 (56:10):
Any you have a pasta station, you have a breakfast
station with made to order omelets, made to order pumpkin
spice pancakes. Look, here's the great thing about this buffet.
If you like eating breakfast food for brunch or savory
food for brunch, you can do whatever you want. There
is literally no thing that you can come up with
is not some iteration of it isn't on this menu.

(56:31):
The miso glazed cod, the apple shall atte, French bread
stuffing like we just have simply amazing. The desserts are incredible.
You guys have the carving station with the tomahawks steak
on it. We could literally do this for the next
ten minutes and mostation to and is that new by.

Speaker 24 (56:50):
The way, Yes, yes, And you can choose between shrimp
or pork belly.

Speaker 5 (56:53):
Yeah, that's nice.

Speaker 3 (56:54):
And then last year, I remember one of the big
things was you guys, the antipasta area where you have
the sliced meats, the sausages and cheese, is so that
you can do that grilled veggies for people who are
you know. So here's the cool thing. Like, if you're like,
you know, just kind of watching yourself and making sure
you get some healthy stuff, you can pick around there
and find stuff that would easily fit your diet. If
you just want to get loose and bust your butt.

Speaker 8 (57:13):
Not on that day.

Speaker 5 (57:16):
No diets something, there are no diets.

Speaker 8 (57:18):
You load up on all of them creutons.

Speaker 24 (57:19):
Yeah, we have a lot of people waddling out after they.

Speaker 8 (57:23):
Should like a turkey.

Speaker 6 (57:25):
Yes, I I have to ask this, and I've always
wanted to know this. Everything I've ever had that's strewsle
I enjoy, but I don't know what it is.

Speaker 24 (57:36):
It's the uh, it's the butter in it. The butter
in the season of cinnamon, a little bit of touch
of salt, but mostly the butter brings it together. It
gives it a richness.

Speaker 4 (57:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, because it's super velvety.

Speaker 6 (57:47):
The Strewsole sweet potato brown sugar explosion celebration.

Speaker 5 (57:52):
I think that's what you called it. That.

Speaker 6 (57:57):
I feel like I just walked out of a place
with the black belt on that.

Speaker 5 (58:01):
I feel like I'm a master of flavor now.

Speaker 3 (58:03):
And they even have a kid's buffet by the way,
so if you have kids are a little testy when
it comes to eating. They have The kids buffet was
chicken tenders, mac and cheese, buttered corn, mini meatball, mozzarella,
and marinaire sauce. So you can even with the kids
who are very picky, there's gonna be plenty of choices
for everybody on this buffet.

Speaker 25 (58:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (58:20):
I saw kid last year. He had chicken tenders and
chocolate cake and I was like, do anything else? He said, no,
that's all I need.

Speaker 5 (58:26):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (58:27):
And the very thing is when it comes to being affordable,
all right, seventy two ninety five for adults, right, that's
plus tax and service charge. Children four to twelve it's
thirty four to ninety five, and the children under three
eat free. Now the adults also get access to mimosas
and champagne.

Speaker 4 (58:41):
Yes, which is amazing.

Speaker 5 (58:43):
It is.

Speaker 23 (58:43):
It's a nice little touch to enjoy the holidays and
you don't have to cook. You can back and enjoy
with the momosa.

Speaker 4 (58:47):
And can I tell you know what The funny thing
is a lot of people I know that go out
for Thanksgiving. The number one reason they do that is
they don't want the hassle of cleaning up afterwards. They
don't wear the hassle of going to the grocery store.
They don't want to have to stand than line, they
don't want to make sure the turkey's done right. Let
the pros take care of it, and for seventy two
dollars you can eat yourself into a coma. There is

(59:07):
so much prep of, more than any other meal than Thanksgiving,
right you know. Yeah, it's one hundred dance day of
and all the pressure. My wife and I had a cleaning.
My wife and I, this is a true story, almost
got into our very first.

Speaker 5 (59:22):
Who gets the oven wind argument? Yesterday?

Speaker 3 (59:25):
Because we have to figure out how everything gets cooked.
Everything's coming to our house. We have like ten twelve
people coming and we're already time to scheduling oven time.

Speaker 5 (59:33):
You should have just given a double oven to the house.

Speaker 4 (59:34):
Oh yeah, yah, I should have just done that.

Speaker 24 (59:36):
Yeah right, yeah, it has a lot to do with
their timing also, but we have about fifteen ovens, so
we're all throughout the day.

Speaker 5 (59:42):
All throughout the day, no arguments there.

Speaker 6 (59:44):
Everyone needs to try these sweet potatoes. I just want
to double down on that real fast. They make them
better than you. Please get these.

Speaker 11 (59:52):
We appreciate that.

Speaker 3 (59:53):
The desserts get the pumpkin spiced cheesecake, bourbon maple pecan pie,
pumpkin pie, macaron's cupcake, as assorted, sweet shots, A warm
a pumpkin spice latte, bread pudding like we just had delicious,
a torch to order, Bourbon maple crembrewlet, there's no rules,
Vegan carrot cake, vegan brownie, soft serve ice cream.

Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
Guys, you just literally cannot Yeah. Yeah, you have.

Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
Tapas like you said, temper of shrimp rolls, bamboo. It's crazy.
This entire menu is so unbelievable.

Speaker 11 (01:00:27):
You know, for the kids who also have the soft
served ice cream machine.

Speaker 8 (01:00:31):
Also, yeah, yeah, I'll just weeze the juice.

Speaker 5 (01:00:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:00:34):
Do you know the same moment on the lips forever
on the hips exactly, not during the holidays, but I
just want to This sweet potatoes is challenging that because
it's a moment on my lips forever in my front cortex.
I will never forget these sweet potatoes and what they
have done to me and my mind body and soult.

Speaker 5 (01:00:55):
Sounds like you eat therapy.

Speaker 6 (01:00:56):
I think it sounds like I just went to therapy.
But I gotta tell you, I guess it was the
sweet potato.

Speaker 5 (01:01:01):
I could eat a.

Speaker 4 (01:01:01):
Pound of this cheeseboard. Oh yeah, I could eat a
pound of this cheeseboard. The Stilton, the Amber Valley Port,
the drunken goat, cheese manchego, the Irish Porter, all of
that stuff. I would just absolutely crush that. I love
it so much.

Speaker 5 (01:01:16):
We're excited.

Speaker 11 (01:01:17):
Rows are from a local local creamies.

Speaker 5 (01:01:19):
And also, and that's awesome.

Speaker 3 (01:01:21):
Now I know that we already have sold quite a
few tickets, just a handful, just a handful. And we
say this every time with a Rosen simply because we
want you to be able to experience it. And you know,
get over there and do that, because once they start
kind of getting closer, it will fill up. A couple
of things you need to know. If you're booking a
party over six, you got to call these guys directly
so you can make sure you can do that. But
outside of that, where should they go to book their

(01:01:42):
but their spot?

Speaker 23 (01:01:43):
You can go to rosencenter dot com slash Thanksgiving and
make parties of six and under sorry under six on
the website directly. Also, if you have a time stolet
you're looking for that isn't available, don't be discouraged. We
do it for walking into the day.

Speaker 15 (01:01:56):
Up.

Speaker 4 (01:01:56):
Oh you do okay?

Speaker 26 (01:01:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:01:57):
Yeah, now, I mean and again there there are finite
amounts of seats that you have for this right there
are yes, yeah, and.

Speaker 4 (01:02:02):
We've sold you know, quite a few of those already.
So what we're trying to say is if you have
plans and you think you maybe want to be a
part of this, you probably need to make your reservations
by this weekend.

Speaker 15 (01:02:12):
YEP.

Speaker 23 (01:02:12):
Usually by this weekend we start doing confirmations next week,
so we'll know maybe about Tuesday next week when people
start falling off.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:02:18):
And we know we had a bunch of people who
go out there last year because as soon as we
got back from Thanksgiving, great people told us immediately they
went and it was just simply amazing. Matter of fact,
I think one guy took his entire family, like ten
of them out there, and they blew it out and
had a great time. And the great thing is that
they were an international family and they said they found
something on that menu for everybody in their group that
nobody will it out, but everybody has a different eating

(01:02:40):
style or something they like. That's what this is so great.
You're not limited to the eight items at home. You
have like what looks seems to be fifty items or
more on this menu that are ready to go for
people who are picky eaters. They can pick and choose
and get exactly what they want.

Speaker 2 (01:02:53):
Right.

Speaker 24 (01:02:54):
So we have the hot buffet, a cold buffet. But
there's stations also set up through the restaurant as well.
Oh really action the station, chef action stations.

Speaker 4 (01:03:00):
What's a chef action station? That will be a hand run.

Speaker 11 (01:03:05):
Maybe that will be the hand rolled sushi.

Speaker 24 (01:03:08):
We have a chef Fred that's carving the tomahawk steak
and then Chef Thos doing his bow bun.

Speaker 5 (01:03:13):
That's awesome.

Speaker 11 (01:03:14):
So it's all made to order very nice.

Speaker 4 (01:03:16):
Well, guys, I tell you man, this is going to
be a great, great opportunity for people to go out
there and really enjoy the restaurant.

Speaker 11 (01:03:21):
Then one more thing I have.

Speaker 24 (01:03:23):
Since you liked that turkey recipe so much, we you know,
we sat down at our round table and drinking coffee,
all the chefs and I yeah, and we came up
with this turkey recipe which we served you last year.
You were the first one in public that'd ever had
that gravy and you said you loved it. Now for
decades moving forward Rosen Center and will have this recipe.
So I put the recipe down for you can enjoy it.

Speaker 11 (01:03:42):
With your family radio.

Speaker 15 (01:03:45):
There.

Speaker 3 (01:03:46):
But we're having our we have our thanks Giving dinner
on Thursday. Maybe I'll make that gravy and bringing in okay, so,
but I had to. It was the for thirty gallons.

Speaker 11 (01:03:53):
So, but it's only I put it down to a
court and a half.

Speaker 1 (01:03:56):
That's for you.

Speaker 5 (01:03:57):
You're the best. Yeah, I appreciate that.

Speaker 4 (01:03:59):
That's awesome, dude, Thank you, But again, tell us how
to get reservations. You can call us.

Speaker 23 (01:04:08):
Directly at four oh seven nine nine six three nine
six nine or at rosencenter dot com slash Thanksgiving.

Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
That's the easiest way to do it, I think, because
when you get on board, you'll able to, you know,
do everything you need there. I think they even have
do you have a don't you have a little comment
thing in there as well?

Speaker 23 (01:04:21):
Yep, you can add comments party size, dietary restrictions, how
many adults, kids, babies in the party.

Speaker 3 (01:04:26):
Yeah, you can ask you a chairs, that's right, ask
all the questions you want, allergy issues, whatever the case
may be. They will give you all the information there,
and they also have people there during the day to
help direct you toward what you're looking for, like almost
like a con scared.

Speaker 23 (01:04:38):
There the staff on have our chefs and our culinary
team on anything from a dietary restriction to I don't
like this. We can have someone walking around and show
everything on the buffets.

Speaker 5 (01:04:46):
Full bar as well, full bar as well. That's right.

Speaker 4 (01:04:48):
So you have all your all your favorite cocktails.

Speaker 3 (01:04:49):
If're gonna do that, if you like your brunch items,
whether you'll be your blinies, your mimosas, your champagne, They've
got you covered there as well.

Speaker 23 (01:04:57):
It'll be a good time.

Speaker 5 (01:04:58):
Just get to sweet potatoes.

Speaker 6 (01:05:00):
Just make sure that if you're at this event, that
you double and shrimple off those sweet potatoes. Man, I
was I've never seen what it was. Oats there's they're like.

Speaker 11 (01:05:09):
There's pecan.

Speaker 5 (01:05:11):
Lord.

Speaker 4 (01:05:12):
Well, guys, thank you again. We appreciate it.

Speaker 8 (01:05:14):
Wet pants, No, don't say that.

Speaker 23 (01:05:17):
Well, she's well something with elastic was wearing elastic waistband?

Speaker 8 (01:05:22):
Okay, yes, thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:05:23):
I like what you're talking about. That Like it's like
it's a surgical need.

Speaker 8 (01:05:28):
You can't go and enjoy with buttons and zippers.

Speaker 4 (01:05:31):
Look, I'm look, I'm porky picking it. I don't care.

Speaker 8 (01:05:33):
He's comings are.

Speaker 3 (01:05:36):
You guys giving a good love for the guys. Thank
you guys as always. Uh, don't forget to make your reservations.
It's Rosencenter dot com slash Thanksgiving and uh, I think
you'll have a great time.

Speaker 4 (01:05:47):
The food is absolutely wonderful. Thanks chef.

Speaker 5 (01:05:49):
We'll see Adrian always get seeing you as well.

Speaker 3 (01:05:51):
Thanksgiving, all right, forsiving nine one six four one, text
us seven seven zero three one back in one second
with more than Jim Colbert.

Speaker 20 (01:05:56):
Show, Good Afternoon, Covid and Kelpy. It's concrete mic Man.
One of my first jobs growing up. But I lived
in upstate New York as a teenager, was working at
a price Chopper. They are the equivalent of our publics
down here.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
They were the higher end grocery store. You get to
better products, better stuff. You know, you pay a.

Speaker 20 (01:06:22):
Little bit more, just like public's down here, but you know,
give you pay for.

Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
I always believed in that.

Speaker 5 (01:06:29):
Jimmy and Crewe handpan Bjorn here. Yeah, copper pennies.

Speaker 10 (01:06:36):
It only takes eleven point three pennies to make an.

Speaker 1 (01:06:39):
Ounce of the new ones.

Speaker 10 (01:06:41):
The old ones, it's a little more than nine pennies
to make an ounce.

Speaker 5 (01:06:46):
That's nine cents right now.

Speaker 10 (01:06:48):
Copper is twenty two to twenty eight cents per ounce
the loss that I can't melt them, but we're not
gonna make any work.

Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
Can I melt them? How about that? A low?

Speaker 5 (01:06:58):
The almost at Aloha Dartey is bit? How about that?
How about that?

Speaker 1 (01:07:05):
All right?

Speaker 4 (01:07:06):
For seven nine one text us seven seven.

Speaker 5 (01:07:08):
Zero three one. Welcome back.

Speaker 3 (01:07:09):
I'm Jim, there's deb Hello. Jack is here, and so
is Sauce Daddy. So speaking of discount stories, you know,
the funny thing is, I never heard of the store before,
but they just announced today that Ovido is getting one
of these discount stores that I've never heard of. Now
we've heard of Ali's, right, yes, yeah? And what are

(01:07:30):
the other ones that that have that kind of scratching
dent kind of thing? Big Lot, Big Lots is it
is kind of But does it that they do closeouts too, right? Yeah,
that's part a big Lots thing. They'll get a close
out brand that isn't selling well or like a flavor
of something, and they'll just blow it out in the
Big Lots they will.

Speaker 4 (01:07:46):
And the one by me is no longer there, and
now we have.

Speaker 5 (01:07:48):
A price mark in its place.

Speaker 4 (01:07:50):
I don't know what a price mark is. What is
that price. Mark is a place where they fill it
with returned goods, and on Friday everything is fourteen dollars.
On Saturday it's thirteen dollars. On Sunday it's twelve dollars,
and it goes down in price until it gets to
two dollars on Thursday, and then they just reboot the
entire store and then they reloached. Now that's funny because

(01:08:14):
I think this store that's opening up in the Ovido
Mall where the Sears used to be is kind of
the same thing. Have you ever heard of a brand
called Crazy Hot Buys Crazy don't even look. They don't
have a website. That's why it's a double sketch. I've
been to that website.

Speaker 5 (01:08:30):
It's awesome.

Speaker 4 (01:08:31):
Crazy Hot Buys not Guys Ross.

Speaker 6 (01:08:35):
Well Buys Bisexually it goes back way.

Speaker 5 (01:08:38):
Joke still holds water.

Speaker 3 (01:08:39):
Okay, Now I don't know what it is, but it
says it's a new store. There is one on sand
Lake Road. It's a liquidation outlet that sells overstocked and
returned merchandise from major retailers at discount prices. Scheduled to
open Black Friday, twenty eighth. Wow that's right, and it
says details about how exactly the store will operate have

(01:09:01):
not been released. What makes it seem like a trap?
It's gonna be a near four seventeen Redbug Road, Like
I said, it's at the Ovito Mall. It's gonna be
there in the seers space. Familiar with it.

Speaker 4 (01:09:13):
But I love stores like that, I really do.

Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
There's a place out in Sandford and it's not like
a store store. It's this guy who is a marine
vet and he's young. He and his brother started buying
warehouse space out in this place in Sandford. And what
they started doing is buying those palettes, right, are buying closeouts,
and they created a retail store around that. So they
would buy the palettes. They set up a bunch of

(01:09:35):
racks and they just set this stuff up. I mean,
I'll tell you, I have a little electric pressure washer, right.

Speaker 5 (01:09:41):
It's good for almost nothing, weird clicks.

Speaker 3 (01:09:44):
I mean, you know it's not one of these you
know three thousand PSI pressure washers. It's probably like fifteen hundred.

Speaker 4 (01:09:50):
But what it does is you're around the house stuff
blowing down cobwebs.

Speaker 3 (01:09:53):
Cleaning off your walls, your pavers. That'll do all that
perfectly fine. We bought it at that place. I think
I spent literally fifty nine dollars on it because it
was out of the box and return and I think
brand new it was like two hundred and thirty dollars.
But that's the kind of prices breaks you're getting. The
problem is is you never know what's going to be there.
There is no inventory. You can't log onto the website

(01:10:15):
and see what's there. They don't even know because they're
just buying clothes outs.

Speaker 6 (01:10:18):
Yeah, it's just some more normalized and socially accepted guy
at a gas station going yep, I've got something right
here that might get.

Speaker 4 (01:10:27):
These speakers in the truck.

Speaker 5 (01:10:28):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:10:29):
The van is now just a giant old store. Yeah yeah.
My boss said, I can't bring these back. I gotta sell.

Speaker 5 (01:10:35):
My boss said, I can't bring these back.

Speaker 4 (01:10:38):
Well, Jack knows because he bought twice.

Speaker 5 (01:10:40):
Yeah exactly. Jack knows the pitch because he's the mark.

Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
No got my JBL speakers? Ye oh yeah yeah JBL.

Speaker 6 (01:10:50):
My boss, I can't bring them back. Oh man, that
was He's a hook line sinker.

Speaker 4 (01:10:55):
He's very abusive, and if I bring these back, I
get I can't sleeep I can't sleep inside tonight. Yeah,
I have to sell these speakers. Here's your boss, just
a big, ugly troll of a man, the same guy
who bought me this crappy van.

Speaker 8 (01:11:08):
And that freezer of me.

Speaker 6 (01:11:09):
Oh yeah that do you remember that? Did you ever
get hit with that line? I like, I'm so curious
on how normalized and how a ware people are of
the line of My boss told me I can't bring
these speakers back.

Speaker 8 (01:11:25):
Oh that's happened. Like when they see a ding on
your car, Hey can fix my God?

Speaker 4 (01:11:29):
Yeah, man, that scratch on your paint that's a good
one too.

Speaker 5 (01:11:33):
Yeah. God, I almost felt for that one, although.

Speaker 8 (01:11:36):
I did buy several like paintings that you'd see like
at home goods or whatever out of the trunk of
someone's car once. Oh really, you're not alone, Jack.

Speaker 4 (01:11:45):
If the art moves you, it moves you.

Speaker 5 (01:11:46):
You know what I'm saying. The art moves you, it
moves you. He's a connoisseur of art. I have some
quest trunk art.

Speaker 17 (01:11:54):
Yeah, I have some questions about the home goods art heist.

Speaker 4 (01:12:00):
Yes, they made off of thirty dollars for the stuff.

Speaker 8 (01:12:02):
Now I still have some of the paintings.

Speaker 6 (01:12:04):
Actually I love that because you know what art has,
and I would argue art needs is a good story. Yeah,
exactly the fact that did someone convince you that these
were like originals from like.

Speaker 5 (01:12:17):
Mozo or something.

Speaker 8 (01:12:19):
Oh no, that's nothing like that.

Speaker 5 (01:12:20):
But this is a climp.

Speaker 8 (01:12:21):
They were really there was a clipt and I saw that. Yeah,
the kiss just they're really nice paintings, you know, copies
of them, like again, like what you would get in
the home goods store. But you know, pulled her up
there in the station parking lot and I was like,
I'll take that one and that one and that one.

Speaker 5 (01:12:36):
Look, man, ain't nobody above it. Trust me.

Speaker 4 (01:12:37):
I see all these people at home Goods. I know, Hey,
I'm not buying that. It's fall y'all stuff. Oh that
have you seen the Instagram thing that goes through and
it's and it's acting like they're asking people in those
stores for the stuff, And basically it's a it's a
guy and his wife and the guy goes up and
the wife acts like she's working at at one of
these stores. It says, hey, do you have a matching

(01:12:59):
blonde ducks and salt shakers? And she goes just this way,
and it's like all these really out there. Do you
have a guy that's naked but he holds towels in
the bathroom and and is it seramic? She goes right
over here, and it's just all this crazy stuff. They
get in and they sell and you don't even know
how they sell it well.

Speaker 6 (01:13:16):
And I'm still curious that they weren't like marked up
pieces of.

Speaker 8 (01:13:20):
R Oh, No, they weren't real. They weren't real pieces
of They were like replicas that you'd find hanging, you know,
in offices or homes again, like you're walking in a friend.

Speaker 6 (01:13:30):
I guess the thing that's blowing my mind is that, like,
I don't think you really got scammed.

Speaker 8 (01:13:34):
I didn't.

Speaker 6 (01:13:34):
Yeah, there was no scam. You can't really scam somebody
on a still limit.

Speaker 8 (01:13:38):
No, it was it was The frames were nice. There
were no chips, there were no tears, they had glass
over them.

Speaker 5 (01:13:43):
Jack, I say, speakers worked.

Speaker 4 (01:13:48):
They were, which is why I bought the second set.
They weren't.

Speaker 17 (01:14:00):
You know, there's a difference between these two uh trunk
operations that you guys, I don't think so retail was
a trunk, it was a van and really the boss said,
they all have to go.

Speaker 5 (01:14:15):
This boss seems very serious.

Speaker 17 (01:14:17):
Help me out with a scratch and a den on
the side of my car, and everything only cost me
twenty five hundred.

Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
I know what I'm getting rush for Christmas now?

Speaker 5 (01:14:25):
Oh man? Yea a scam artist?

Speaker 4 (01:14:27):
Yam one of the Depth's paintings.

Speaker 6 (01:14:29):
Yeah, well, I think that's hilarious as well. It's just
like the scenario of someone meeting you out in a
parking lot and go being like, hey, you look like
I caught a super of art.

Speaker 8 (01:14:41):
Got some pictures in the trunk if you want to
take a look.

Speaker 17 (01:14:43):
Yeah, And it's just like the weirdest scam vibe without
a scam artist attached to it at all.

Speaker 5 (01:14:49):
He's just trying to sell still.

Speaker 4 (01:14:51):
I gotta tell you, though, I'm looking at the Facebook
page of this crazy Hot Buys place and it shows
the line and people in there, and it looks like
it's being looted. And what because it looks it looks
because everything is taped up and everything looks mad. It
looks like a bunch of people just looting the store,
but they're in line to pay for it.

Speaker 6 (01:15:10):
Black Friday looks like the same thing, so you know,
we should take a moment and give this country's a
little pat on the back because your Black Friday, I
feel like has kind of gotten reeled back in the
last five years.

Speaker 3 (01:15:25):
How you, Oh yeah, it has, right, yeah, because there
for a minute, man, it was dangerous. Go to Black
Friday and you're like shootings and tramplings.

Speaker 4 (01:15:31):
And you were going after dinner on Thursday. Oh yeah,
oh yeah places. And then finally people started pushing back
on making people work on Thanksgiving. I have a TV
that I bought at home depot because it was Black Friday,
and I still use it to this day.

Speaker 5 (01:15:47):
At a home depot a TV, Well, you bought it
in the parking lot.

Speaker 8 (01:15:50):
Of a home day, next to the guy that was
selling about painting.

Speaker 3 (01:15:54):
Man, I'm telling you, this Facebook page is great. These
this carts are like the thoughts of a child. It's
like having a kid tell you about a dream. In
one part of it, there's a dustbuster, the other one
is a toothbrush, and then right below that is a
dog bed.

Speaker 5 (01:16:08):
Yeah, in that order.

Speaker 6 (01:16:09):
I like magic Ball, flea markets, all those things that
just have a hodgepodge of like items. It's the that's
such a fun shopping experience.

Speaker 4 (01:16:19):
It really is, because you never ever ever know what
you're gonna get. Here's an instapot. I mean they have
a bunch of stuff in there, a bunch of like
banged up like boxes of appliances, microwaves and whatnot.

Speaker 1 (01:16:29):
That's big.

Speaker 8 (01:16:29):
Here a lot of people texting in at seven seven
zero three one. I walked by Crazy Hot Biys in
Sandford and it's like one hundred tables with boxes full
of random stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:16:39):
Yep.

Speaker 8 (01:16:40):
I wouldn't even walk inside. There's one in Orange City
and it sucks. Oh really, that's what another Texter had
to say.

Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
Well, I mean, look, it's called Crazy Hot Bys and
they do not have a landing website.

Speaker 15 (01:16:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:16:51):
I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:16:51):
And the thing is, I don't know about you guys,
but if your business website is a Facebook page automatic pass.

Speaker 4 (01:16:57):
Like price mark, some of these boxes your shealed, you
don't know what's in You have to scan the QR
code and kind of look stuff up. And even then
you have to get lucky because even though it says
that's what's in there, you may open it up and
find an old ham.

Speaker 5 (01:17:10):
I mean, you don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:17:13):
I uh, god, man, I have a couple of friends
that got scammed like that with the discratching dent thing and.

Speaker 5 (01:17:21):
The speaker thing.

Speaker 6 (01:17:22):
I had a friend who, uh sorry, I got two
friends that got ripped for the speaker thing.

Speaker 5 (01:17:28):
Stop saying ripped. They were fine real quick.

Speaker 4 (01:17:31):
You still have them?

Speaker 5 (01:17:32):
No, I had them for years, though.

Speaker 4 (01:17:34):
What happened? I moved to Florida and then what you
just left them up there?

Speaker 5 (01:17:38):
No, I gave away most advice.

Speaker 4 (01:17:40):
You gave away JBL speakers.

Speaker 5 (01:17:42):
I sold them.

Speaker 6 (01:17:43):
They weren't JBL due they were j LB's. I'm telling you,
this is how this stuff works.

Speaker 5 (01:17:47):
It's j r L, but they colored in the the
R of B. It might have been JLB.

Speaker 6 (01:17:54):
I had a friend who got scoped out for a
projector with the same man.

Speaker 5 (01:18:00):
I just got too many of these.

Speaker 6 (01:18:01):
Man, my boss is going to fire me if I
bring back all these projectors. And it was a projector
and I'm pretty sure that had.

Speaker 5 (01:18:08):
A comma in it. Oh really, I.

Speaker 6 (01:18:10):
Think he dropped like one thousand dollars on the projector
that was a good like two twenty p oh. He
took it out of the box. He was like, yo,
we're plugging in the xbox. There's no place to plug
in the Xbox. It was the first red flag for me.

Speaker 5 (01:18:27):
It has like three color availabilities.

Speaker 8 (01:18:30):
Somebody else said Crazy Hot Buys is a bend store.
They just throw all the items on the tables and
let people go crazy to get the Item's only place
you can buy one shoe.

Speaker 6 (01:18:38):
I don't know about you, guys, but I like going
to stores that make me feel like I just got
hit by a hurricane.

Speaker 4 (01:18:45):
A textter says they love going to bins stores. It's
a modern day treasure hunt. It is find good items.
You just have to search through a lot of junk.
So when my wife started doing the reselling thing, when
she would go to like good Wills and stuff before
the word got out, and and now Goodwill themselves and
the other thrift stores, they pulled the good stuff and
kind of hold it back. You'll occasionally find something, but

(01:19:06):
it's fifty times as hard now as it was like
three or four years ago. Oh yeah, that same thing.

Speaker 3 (01:19:11):
They have a bend store for Goodwill out on sand Lake,
like way out there by the flour to them all,
and it is nothing but these giant like post office
bins full of clothes and stuff, and you have to
literally get in there and dig through it like you're
at the dump. But man, my wife was out there
one time and she saw a lady that pulled like
a Gucci jacket and was pulling like, you know, four

(01:19:34):
hundred dollars pair of jeans out of these bins to
resell online. But I mean you got to dig through
there for a long time to find out a good stuff.
And you could get through there and get scabies first.

Speaker 6 (01:19:43):
You know, there is nothing like buying something and then
having it increase in value.

Speaker 4 (01:19:50):
Oh yeah, there's nothing like it.

Speaker 5 (01:19:51):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (01:19:52):
It's so awesome.

Speaker 5 (01:19:53):
And I'm not talking stocks, I'm not talking at homes.

Speaker 6 (01:19:55):
I'm talking like random Like, ah, I guess that really
was limited a dish.

Speaker 8 (01:20:00):
Here's a perfect example. Someone also texted us at seven
seven zero three. When my grandmother bought a couple of
paintings out of the back of a car in the
late seventies. They turned out to be highwaymen paintings that
are anywhere between twenty five hundred and ten thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:20:16):
I just saw a big piece on the highwaymen highwaymen
just the other day.

Speaker 5 (01:20:19):
Yeah, what are you laughing at?

Speaker 6 (01:20:20):
Yeah, you just misgendered the highway people, they said, highwaymen.

Speaker 4 (01:20:25):
I tried to anyway, all right, seven seven zero three
one back in a.

Speaker 20 (01:20:29):
Second s good after morning, Coola bird camru All right.

Speaker 26 (01:20:38):
So I didn't get this thing at a goodwill or
in a bin store, but a neighbor of mine was
throwing away a fifties Coca Cola cooler.

Speaker 5 (01:20:47):
Oh man, I.

Speaker 26 (01:20:49):
Know that thing's worth about five six hundred bucks now,
and I'm just gonna hold on it and let it
keep appreciating. But also, just in case Jack didn't show you, guys,
set over a bunch of picks of Discamp, so you
guys can check all that out. And seriously, you're all
invited next time, big tee out.

Speaker 5 (01:21:04):
Thanks.

Speaker 4 (01:21:05):
See whoa ross in the Magic Mall?

Speaker 5 (01:21:07):
That's wild.

Speaker 21 (01:21:09):
I don't know if i'd go in that place, Fowers you,
I don't know, man, that places wild?

Speaker 5 (01:21:15):
Really yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:21:17):
I lived in Fine Hills for a while. The Magic
Mall was an interesting spot even back in the day.

Speaker 6 (01:21:21):
I bought an outfit that turned a lot of heads
yeah at the Magic Ball And I also when I
watch into the Magic Mall, and I myself turned a
lot of heads.

Speaker 3 (01:21:30):
Yeah, Oh yeah, what the hell? R seven seven zero
three one. Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show on
Jim devis here. Hello, Jack, yep and Ross. That's where
you can buy grills and grills. Tom and Dan in
with us tomorrow. Deb will be out doing whatever sort time.
Oh that's a big show.

Speaker 8 (01:21:49):
Yeah, going to a APPA tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (01:21:51):
Very nice.

Speaker 4 (01:21:52):
Where is that this year?

Speaker 8 (01:21:53):
Oh it's it's always at the Orange County Convention. Enough
for it, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:21:58):
And this is basically it's a convention for town cities.
It's this is the place if you were going to
buy a theme park ride, This is the place you
would go.

Speaker 8 (01:22:08):
SeaWorld is going to be there, Lego Land, Florida is
They're showing off some of their new technology. This is
where theme parks so AYAPPA stands for International Association of
Amusement Parks and Attractions, I believe is what it's. If
anybody in the industry, if you're decorating for you know,
Winter Springs, Christmas event, or you want to see what
the latest ride technology is next year for Halloween, you

(01:22:30):
go next year for Halloween. Apparently they have a huge
Halloween display. Yeah, I can't wait to check out.

Speaker 4 (01:22:35):
It's very cool, like the old carnival ride show used
to be like that. I think that's kind of was
the same thing, wasn't it.

Speaker 8 (01:22:41):
Yeah, they have rides there that you know, some theme
parks might end up picking up and actually installing on
their property.

Speaker 5 (01:22:47):
That's kind of cool. It's where the theme parks, Yeah
go to shop. Yeah, that's we're here.

Speaker 4 (01:22:51):
So that will be there tomorrow. So Tom and Dan
will be stopping by and hanging out with us for tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (01:22:56):
And yeah, that's gonna be some Mayam animal house. I know.
Who do we have in tomorrow?

Speaker 8 (01:23:02):
Kenny Tally here from the Pedalions of Great Orlando and Jack.
He'll be contacting you when he gets here.

Speaker 4 (01:23:07):
All right, and then Maxwell tomorrow too. Don't let him
be scared him Scott, Well, he'll be fine. He'll be
at his house. Here's the problem with Tom and Dan.
Here's the problem. I've known them forever, right, I've known
Tom since he was eighteen years old. Yeah, I think,
I mean I met Daniel when he was either twenty one,
twenty two or twenty three. You know, they're both in

(01:23:28):
their late forties or mid forties now, so I've known
him for damn near half their life and there's a
familiarity between us because we work together on the Monster Show.
So when they come in, it'll be like an old
catching up buddies kind of thing. And then they love
ragging on me.

Speaker 5 (01:23:43):
They love it.

Speaker 8 (01:23:44):
Well, we never do that, No, it'd be nice for
you to have a refresher.

Speaker 4 (01:23:48):
Yeah, my comparison, If anyone's listening, they hear us the
hard hard time in quotes that we give Jimmy cool,
I mean it pales in comparison. That's entry level. Yeah,
over there for sure. That's why he says this doesn't
bother him when you know, yeah, it doesn't.

Speaker 5 (01:24:06):
Trust me. By the way.

Speaker 3 (01:24:07):
That turkey is perfect. How they cook that like that,
that big bird, it's absolutely perfect. This is as good
as it you can get, as good as it gets,
by the way. Okay, so let's go to the story.
You actually sent me this last week, and I wanted
to talk about it, but never really get a chance
to put it in there. How much does it matter
what color your food is?

Speaker 5 (01:24:26):
Oh a lot?

Speaker 3 (01:24:27):
Okay, So especially if let's say you've been eating a
product for a while, right, You've been consuming a product
for a while, and then they decide they're going to
change up a couple things, and now the product doesn't
kind of look the same anymore. Does that have any
bearing on you guys at all? In that example, I

(01:24:47):
would say no. Like, let's say they're, oh, we're gonna
stop using the red dye or whatever. And if it's
something you've already been eating, then you're familiar with it.
And if it doesn't affect the taste, I'm fine.

Speaker 4 (01:25:00):
But I came home one night my wife and made
dinner and the right it was black rice on the plan.
What the hell is that? It just looked strange. It's
good though, and it's very nutty. It's a good flavor.
You gotta get over that, you know. It's like, Okay,
it's something different, different texture too.

Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:25:15):
The only problem with this is that it takes away
one of the more enjoyable parts it does.

Speaker 3 (01:25:23):
It does Pepsi COO announced Thursday of last week that
It's Cheetos and Dorito's brands will be offering colorless alternatives
no cheatle so that means that it'll be made without
artificial dyes. Jack was talking about dubbing them as simply NKD.
So now you're gonna get your simply NKD. In other words,

(01:25:44):
naked Doritos and Cheetos. And they have a picture here
of the Dorrito's the way that they're powder flavored. Now,
by the way, this is the NBC News dot com story, Jack,
if you want to check it out. And then right
beside them, they have the new simply Nkd's and it
does not look the same. They do not even and
the Cheetos are even more like It looks pale like

(01:26:05):
the Cheetos.

Speaker 4 (01:26:06):
Instead of being that flaming.

Speaker 3 (01:26:07):
Hot color, that bright orangish, you know, like borderlining on red,
now they look like.

Speaker 5 (01:26:13):
They're just like potato chips.

Speaker 4 (01:26:14):
There is no question I am so much more likely
to eat than naked Cheetos as opposed to the most
serious that dust rings Jim.

Speaker 3 (01:26:25):
Coulpert Live dot com. Right now, Jack has the photograph
up of the Cheeto's side by side. They don't even
look like the same product. The product on the left
looks like Cheetos. The product on the right looks like
cheese curds.

Speaker 8 (01:26:35):
It looks like it hasn't the Cheeto hasn't gone through
the final process right step yet, which is to add
on all of them.

Speaker 4 (01:26:42):
Tell you what it looks healthier.

Speaker 26 (01:26:45):
It is.

Speaker 5 (01:26:45):
How can you even say that. I'm just saying it
looks healthier. How do you know that you're looks healthy?
How can you even say it looks healthier?

Speaker 8 (01:26:53):
Does?

Speaker 5 (01:26:53):
It makes no sense?

Speaker 8 (01:26:54):
I don't think it looks healthier because it breaks it
down to like its nasty shape.

Speaker 6 (01:27:01):
Not only does it look healthier, it's objectively healthier.

Speaker 5 (01:27:05):
I don't even know what you're talking about. You're saying
it's not healthier. Leave the dies in the food. You're
telling me a little cheeto die is going to change
your life.

Speaker 6 (01:27:18):
I'm saying that red dye forty is like one of
the trendiest talking points for crunchy parents all around the world.

Speaker 8 (01:27:28):
No question, crunchy parents crunchy like they's.

Speaker 6 (01:27:33):
Yeah, but like you'll it's hard for me to defind crunchy.
But this is crunchy. This is for crunchy parents. And
I think there's a balance to everything. I think the
argument of like maybe we shouldn't just eat stuff that
has die solely for esthetic reasons, I think there is
a cause and effect possibly to that.

Speaker 4 (01:27:54):
I am more interested in the naked dorinos over the original.

Speaker 5 (01:27:58):
You're not telling the truth. You are not. I don't
know that crap on my hands.

Speaker 6 (01:28:03):
You can't handle the truth because.

Speaker 5 (01:28:05):
I'm with Jack. It's right cigarette, the colorful chips. They
are lying to you.

Speaker 8 (01:28:15):
Oh god, so bad?

Speaker 4 (01:28:19):
Are we in unison? Are you and I own team?
Team not naked?

Speaker 15 (01:28:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:28:22):
Well you know what it does. It's gonna make sure
that I am not going to eat those chips.

Speaker 4 (01:28:26):
Yeah, there's no right a chance.

Speaker 8 (01:28:28):
Well, because they've stripped everything off of it.

Speaker 5 (01:28:30):
They've stripped it of its integrity.

Speaker 8 (01:28:32):
Not its integrity. But now you're going like, good for you.
It's like eating Taco Bell. You're like, man, this isn't food.

Speaker 4 (01:28:38):
Okay, clear pepsi you drink?

Speaker 19 (01:28:40):
It?

Speaker 7 (01:28:41):
Is?

Speaker 5 (01:28:41):
It is that die in ninety four? If it died?
That's my point.

Speaker 4 (01:28:47):
Is it different when you when you look at a
clear pepsi next to a regular pepsi?

Speaker 3 (01:28:52):
Do you think, oh, man, I've got to have that
one on the right because it looks just like water.
It doesn't even look like a pepsi. But that's what
that looks like. It doesn't even look like real Cheetos's ginos,
that's Faco's.

Speaker 5 (01:29:01):
Doritos in its nature are fake, checkmate, They're not. It's corn.

Speaker 6 (01:29:05):
It's a real product, and a whole bunch of oxides
and idioms on those ingredients too. It's a damn Latin
spell on the back of these things.

Speaker 5 (01:29:15):
It's Harry curse. It's that's one of those too. Well.

Speaker 6 (01:29:21):
So these are the same seasoning for the doritos, correct.

Speaker 4 (01:29:25):
I think it is.

Speaker 8 (01:29:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:29:27):
That's the argument that I want to say that's being made,
is that if it's the same seasoning and they're just
taking out the coloring, I think this is a win
across the board.

Speaker 8 (01:29:37):
Got but I don't know because that a win, I
do even if it's a natural spice. The natural spice,
like paprika, has its own natural hue. So if you're
still using the spices, I don't see why the chips
would look so colorless.

Speaker 6 (01:29:50):
I think, call me crazy here, they're paprika that they're
using is fabrica.

Speaker 5 (01:29:56):
I think it's what is wrong?

Speaker 8 (01:30:00):
Do you understand how anything could have seasoning and look
that bland?

Speaker 4 (01:30:05):
It says here.

Speaker 3 (01:30:06):
The company says in a press release that the new
snack products will be made without artificial flavors or dies,
dubbing them as simply NKD no color, no artificial flavors
same intensity. Dorito's and Cheetos are pioneering a snacking revolution
or a renaissance, if you will.

Speaker 5 (01:30:22):
That's what they're saying.

Speaker 3 (01:30:23):
We're reinventing our iconic, most famous brands to deliver options
with bold flavors that fans know and love, now reimagined
without any colors or artificial flavors.

Speaker 5 (01:30:36):
I think I'm on board.

Speaker 6 (01:30:38):
I mean, if you give me the options of do
you want the artificial flavors and.

Speaker 5 (01:30:42):
The fake coloring, you guys are so much better than
or the same thing without.

Speaker 4 (01:30:45):
It's not you're so much better than. This is a
virtue thing. This is what they're doing.

Speaker 5 (01:30:51):
This is a virtual this is what they do.

Speaker 6 (01:30:53):
If you give me the option, you know, it reminds
me of like when commercials came out. We're like, hey,
guess what breaking news made with real cheese, and you're like,
in these last ten years, man and I will always
at the very least appreciate the borderline confession times when

(01:31:13):
Corporate America has them. If they give me the option of, like, hey,
if you want, we hear that. You guys kind of
got in on the trick of we make things look
more delicious than they actually are to sell product aka
food dies and all of those other things, because I
agree the psychology of you eating with your eyes that

(01:31:34):
is a thing.

Speaker 4 (01:31:35):
That's what you do first, that's what they teach you
when you start cooking. You know at a high level
that you got to remember. You know, something in tastes great,
but it doesn't look good. It won't be as appetizing
for some odd reason.

Speaker 6 (01:31:45):
And it's true, and there's a and I like that
thought in a restaurant. I like that thought in a
in a in a small Italian restaurant. I start to
get a little dodgy on that thinking when you're talking
about no.

Speaker 3 (01:32:00):
Let me ask, are barbecue chips now going to be
just a regular It's gonna look like a regular chip,
and it's gonna be barbecue. But you're not gonna be
able to tell it's barbecue because there's no color to
indicate that it's barbecue.

Speaker 6 (01:32:11):
Maybe there will be a great way to find out
which chip is using real barbecue.

Speaker 3 (01:32:16):
Well, you don't even know that they're using real barbecue.
It's just spices to make it taste like that. It's
brown sugar, it's like paprika, it's like brown sugar, so
it's like paprika.

Speaker 5 (01:32:27):
So and you're right, you don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:32:30):
So at least there's a like some sort of chip
offer that's going like.

Speaker 5 (01:32:34):
Hey, we're not lying anymore. This is more. This is
what they actually look like.

Speaker 3 (01:32:40):
So when you put out a snack tray for your
super Bowl party coming up this year, and everything looks
exactly the same because there are no colorings or dyes,
it's all the same fried color or whatever the hell
that is that pale yellow.

Speaker 5 (01:32:53):
An honest color? Yeah, they time out? What what?

Speaker 15 (01:32:55):
What?

Speaker 5 (01:32:56):
How are you gonna separate your everything is gonna look
the same.

Speaker 8 (01:32:59):
Where is the why you just tell people that are
at Long John Silver's.

Speaker 4 (01:33:04):
The dot natural Doritos, they look like every other tortilla
chip that's already on the market.

Speaker 5 (01:33:11):
You're one hundred percent correct.

Speaker 4 (01:33:13):
How are you gonna separate the flaming cots from those?
Then you're just gonna put it on the bag flaming hot,
and you gonna put those beside each other, and somebody
who doesn't like flame hunt's gonna grab a flaming hot
because they don't think it's a flaming on. Then you
get a lossuit on your hand. See we already have
legal issues. I have people said a release before they
come to exactly.

Speaker 6 (01:33:34):
I will always respect and listen. I think you still
get the what is it called? Just wasn't that what
it's called? Cheetle cheetle cheesy feet? Back in the day
you cheese dust?

Speaker 5 (01:33:46):
Yeah, I thought it.

Speaker 8 (01:33:47):
Was just chet dust.

Speaker 5 (01:33:50):
That sounds terrible.

Speaker 8 (01:33:54):
That's advertising.

Speaker 5 (01:33:55):
That sounds like.

Speaker 4 (01:33:56):
Something you get when you push too hard, so it
happens when you sit on the toilet for too long.

Speaker 5 (01:34:03):
That sweet just but like you'll still get that. It
will just look like ghostly.

Speaker 8 (01:34:09):
But listen for someone A Texter did text us at
seven seven zero three one. And I've had this experience,
been around with my nephews that their daughter has ADHD
and when she has anything with red dye number forty
in it, the same seasoning for the Dodo kind of
makes her go crazy. Really, it's fascinating. You don't understand
how many chemicals we take in with our food and

(01:34:31):
drink until you see someone who has a severe reaction
to it and you realize, damn, we eat a lot
of crap.

Speaker 4 (01:34:38):
And that's why I love this naked idea. This is
a really good idea four oh seven nine four one
text us at seven to seven zero three one back
in one sec to talk more about the attributes of
not having fake stuff in your food.

Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
That's next today is Mobit with Ross Page sponsored by
Jos Coolmo or Landosi Injury Attorneys. Still the common sense
financial advice you need It's only money with Scott Brown
today at six twenty on the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 22 (01:35:13):
Happy Tuesday, Colbert Crew, up beat ubs here. So here's
a fun radio bit idea. When the colorless snacks come out,
you guys should do a blindfold taste test to see
if you can tell the difference between the colored Cheetos
and the uncolored Cheetos. Same with Dorito's just a thought,

(01:35:36):
all right, you'll have.

Speaker 12 (01:35:37):
A going Hey JCS crew, this comments about the Dorrito coloring.
I use the coloring to find out which chips are
the best and has the most flavor in the bag.
If they're all bland looking, how can I tell which
chip has the most seasoning on it? Can I wreck
up my whole system? Have a good day everyone, Thanks buddy.

Speaker 25 (01:35:55):
Hey friends, Danny Meyring here, my son and I are
listening to you on the way home, and I wanted
to let you know that I am on the camp
of wanting these natural foods. I never would have believed
that the artificial coloring affected us as much as it did,
but I have seen with my son firsthand how the
artificial coloring uh changes things and changes his behavior self.

Speaker 8 (01:36:19):
I'm a I'm a part time hippy.

Speaker 5 (01:36:21):
I'm all about the natural, like that part time hippie,
she says.

Speaker 8 (01:36:25):
One of my nephews, Ones, dipped his fingers and pickle
juice sucked down his fingers. Didn't sleep for two days.
There are real physiological consequences, but because our bodies process
those chemicals so much better, we don't know it because
it doesn't affect us that way.

Speaker 4 (01:36:43):
But what's in.

Speaker 8 (01:36:47):
I think some of the brind whatever they put in
the bronx, and you usually find it out because it
just happens. Oh hell, I had no idea that was
going to be a cause.

Speaker 5 (01:36:58):
Or it's like a parent stash.

Speaker 18 (01:37:00):
I want.

Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
That's really keep their vodka, all right. Welcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show. I'm Jim Devi's here, Jack and
saw us Daddy. Yeah, we have some thoughts here. About
half an hour trivia coming up in a minute, and
of course in the six o'clock hour, it's only money
with everybody. Scott Brown, We're gonna hear about his trip
to Antarctica for sure. Today I texted him, I said,
I want to hear all about this trip. We got
a couple of pictures in the in the beginning, a
couple of pictures when they got there, and then nothing

(01:37:23):
from there. So dying you hear all about that. We'll
do that a little bit later, for sure. So deb
actually had this story in the news today, but if
you miss that, I'll get a little repeat. I have
a question about this. This goes back to almost like
the female prisons kind of thing. It's just like, I
don't know the answer to this question, but I kind
of want to find out. It's nothing serious. But this

(01:37:43):
Marion County teen who made up this kidnapping story is
now on house arrest. This guy, Cayden speed Or Spite spite,
he's seventeen years old. He texts his mom in September
to sab and kidnapped and shot. Turns out he shot himself.
The family is gonna have to pay twenty five thousand
dollars in rest to and he is. He went he

(01:38:04):
was on house arrest, but he did go to jail
initially when they busted him. Now his sentences house arrest,
you know, because he did really nothing to anybody else
except cost time and efforts away from the police department
there as they searched for him.

Speaker 4 (01:38:17):
That's why they got to pay a twenty five k.

Speaker 8 (01:38:19):
Yeah, Amber alert went around the whole state because they
you know, he'd said he'd been kidnapped.

Speaker 3 (01:38:23):
Yeah, he's got to do one hundred hours of community service,
take a firearm safety class, received counseling. His driver's license,
like Deb said, has been suspended for six months, you know,
among other things. Here's my question in the hierarchy of jail,
Like when you go to jail, right, we know there
are crimes that are bad. Right, if you are a

(01:38:44):
Choe Mo in jail, it's going to be a bad,
bad day for you, you know, child molester.

Speaker 5 (01:38:50):
Okay.

Speaker 8 (01:38:51):
I was like, is he talking cho Tho?

Speaker 5 (01:38:54):
Yeah, Mex.

Speaker 3 (01:38:56):
I follow this guy on Instagram who did time and
he built an entire Instagram following around telling people about
what it's like being in prison, like busting some of
those myths thing. You know, what are the worst words
you can use in prison is I'm sure it's not
great for radio either. It's perfect. I can I could
say every one of them. That's what the that's what
the because prison has the craziest rules. You can't If

(01:39:19):
you call somebody a punk in prison, you might as
well have called them a bitch or or you know,
might as well have called them like soft.

Speaker 6 (01:39:27):
I see, it's Marty McFly rules. You can't even call
them chicken.

Speaker 3 (01:39:30):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you call somebody a punk in prison.
Apparently it's on site, like it's going down right there, right,
no problem whatsoever.

Speaker 5 (01:39:36):
I know he's laughing at him, So.

Speaker 4 (01:39:40):
Sorry, I shouldn't be proud of So the reason I
ask is this, like, what is the hierarchy of crime
in jail and in prison? In other words, if you
kidnap yourself and then shoot yourself, where does that stand
in prison? Do you get respect for that in jail?
Or do you get mocked in jail for that? I
don't think you get to be angry once some one
calls you a punk. No, no, And you're not with

(01:40:03):
this guy's size, I mean obviously he and he wouldn't
do really well in jail.

Speaker 5 (01:40:07):
He's a little fella. How old is he?

Speaker 4 (01:40:09):
Seventeen years old?

Speaker 6 (01:40:10):
Yeah, which is, by the way, why I'm going to
give this individual as much grace as I possibly can,
because young people do dumb stuff and this is a
very dumb thing.

Speaker 3 (01:40:18):
And my question doesn't even really have anything to do
with him. He just happens to have committed this crime.
And I'm interested if you.

Speaker 4 (01:40:23):
Go to jail, because this Joe's making a joke is
made all the time.

Speaker 5 (01:40:25):
Right, what are you in for?

Speaker 15 (01:40:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:40:27):
Yo, yeah, for doing something stupid and it makes.

Speaker 5 (01:40:29):
You but I'm innocent.

Speaker 3 (01:40:30):
Yeah, But if you're in jail, right, that's where you
meet more innocent people than ever. But if you're in
jail outside of like you know, you don't want to
say that murder is that crime that gets you the
most respect or whatever, But what crimes do you believe
in jail that are looked at like other criminals.

Speaker 5 (01:40:44):
As a cop killer? You think?

Speaker 4 (01:40:47):
So, you think a cop killer has more respect?

Speaker 8 (01:40:50):
Yes, I've read and heard that. Yeah, you're like already
upper echelon.

Speaker 4 (01:40:54):
See, I would think it would be somebody who ran
a scam, like I would think there would be somebody
who ran a really successful scam and made a bunch
of money and got to live that way for a while.

Speaker 3 (01:41:03):
Than in jail, they would be like legend. I wouldn't
see the thing is with murder for me. I think
that's like you set yourself up for the for the
hardest of heart. I'm actually kind of just talking about
jail here.

Speaker 8 (01:41:14):
I Oh, then you're talking two different hierarchies. I think
so in jail, I don't even know if they would
have that culture because you're really not.

Speaker 4 (01:41:21):
You're there for a year.

Speaker 5 (01:41:22):
That's the most you can spend exactly.

Speaker 8 (01:41:23):
So it's I would imagine that the prison culture is
definitely more entrenched because you've got a lifer there.

Speaker 3 (01:41:29):
But if you went to jail and somebody said, hey, man,
would you do I said, oh, man, I tried to
kidnap myself and then I shot myself because I was
trying to get this insurance settlement.

Speaker 5 (01:41:36):
Or whatever the case may be. Is that looked at
as cool.

Speaker 4 (01:41:40):
I know it chose respect. It shows commitment, like I've
looked at this and shoot yourself.

Speaker 3 (01:41:46):
Like, I think this kid probably gets a little respect
in jail, you know. I mean if you tell another
perp and they're like, hey, man, I tried to I
kidnap myself, you know with the you know, I don't
know if the money thing is right, but I mean
you probably make that part up so it doesn't seem
like you're completely crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:41:59):
Where do you shoot himself and the leg?

Speaker 6 (01:42:02):
Of course, dude, just like eight mile man, I'm telling you, yeah,
jedder Bob, Yeah, cheddar Bob took his leg, shot himself
from the leg. That was an accident, wasn't on purpose,
but then he put it in the rhyme. Then he
put it in the rhyme. I albut him win a
rat battle. Maybe that he's playing the long name. He's
trying to win a rat battle for a friend.

Speaker 3 (01:42:20):
Like if I went to jail, I would I would
want like I would want to go in there for
like you know, winning a gang fight or like doing
something like that, or running something. I wonder what like
when you walk in and people go, man, that dude
did this, there's an automatic respect for people who do that.

Speaker 4 (01:42:36):
And I'm telling you, I think like running scams, maybe
it well I'm not a hundred on that. The hierarchy
is based on toughness, right, Yeah, that to me would
so I don't think running the sam necessarily equates to
being tough. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:42:50):
But the thing is, I believe that when you go
to jail that like with OJ like or a bunch
of these celebrities, you can run this scam like, you know, hey,
you know when I get out of here, because I'm
so smart, I ran the scam. You know when I
get out here, we can run these scams together, and
it's just going to use that to skape through jail.

Speaker 8 (01:43:05):
Well, we've had a lot of people text us earlier
saying that they had spent time in prison, so please
feel free to let us know what that what the
true hierarchy is seven seven zero three one. And they
could also leave a talkback, right Jack.

Speaker 5 (01:43:16):
So he can so he said, like bank robbery, I
would think that too.

Speaker 4 (01:43:19):
There's a certain romance about that, isn't there?

Speaker 5 (01:43:21):
Brazen Yeah that I'm reading.

Speaker 6 (01:43:24):
I've got four little categories of things that get treated
with some social hierarchy inside the prison. You're talking gang
related crimes. So that's always because once you walk in,
you're basically walking into home field advanced.

Speaker 4 (01:43:39):
Yeah, so that's going to be celebrated.

Speaker 6 (01:43:41):
Drug trafficking for a gang, yeah, yeah, yeah, because you're
also not narking, you're not padding out anybody. That's going
to be your ePass fast pass of getting the most
respect in prison kids.

Speaker 4 (01:43:52):
Those are both great, one hundred percent.

Speaker 6 (01:43:55):
When it comes to violent offenses, let's go with number two. Murder, attempted, murder, arm,
draw Those are things just because if you attempt that,
even the attempt, that's danger. That also brings some sort
of social status also in prison. Yeah yeah, and I
mean think about this, This still makes me feel weird
and to use this as an example, but Maengioni Luigi. Yeah,

(01:44:15):
that whole thing was odd. Yeah, should be jarring to
everyone when you saw the end result of it.

Speaker 4 (01:44:23):
That should be a study, Like there should be probably
a college class teaching the reaction to that, because I've
never seen anything like it.

Speaker 3 (01:44:29):
Yeah, Like people held this up like a hero. They
were gonna take tattoos this dude.

Speaker 6 (01:44:33):
And I mean, I'm not sure if he was getting
love and admiration in prison, but I know what he
was getting out of it. Yeah, yeah, and he was
getting love and admiration if he's ugly, you know, but
not as much.

Speaker 4 (01:44:47):
But it was an overwhelming sentiment against like feeling that
the insurance companies and the higher ups are our enemies. Yeah, yeah, right,
And then there's also the appeal of this guy that
many people were gravitated was pulled towards Do you guys
remember that one mug shot guy, this is probably about five, six,

(01:45:07):
seven years ago whatever, his mugshot on viral because he
was so good looking, became a model. He became a
model and became like super successful. Yeah, and I don't
think his crime is all that bad.

Speaker 8 (01:45:17):
Well, listen, there's a reason why Deborah le Fay, the teacher,
one of the first teachers we ever heard of, having
sex with her students, and her lawyer literally said in court,
she is too pretty for prison. Yeah, and she'd never
served a day in prison at least.

Speaker 5 (01:45:30):
Yeah, what happened to her?

Speaker 12 (01:45:31):
Man?

Speaker 5 (01:45:31):
That's a name I haven't heard a while.

Speaker 6 (01:45:33):
And I think it's very telling though, that we know
that that guy got famous through a mug shot and
that we know that he's actually doing really well.

Speaker 5 (01:45:40):
They turned a career out of it. But we couldn't
tell you the crime. No, we could not. I couldn't. Yeah, yeah,
no idea.

Speaker 4 (01:45:46):
And you know Michelle Parker's I guess stories coming back
up in the news now too.

Speaker 5 (01:45:50):
Well, they fourteen years.

Speaker 8 (01:45:51):
They just marked fourteen years of her disappearance after going on.

Speaker 5 (01:45:54):
The people's court.

Speaker 4 (01:45:56):
Yeah, yeah, people's court, right, yeah, over a wedding ring
thing or ora ring.

Speaker 6 (01:46:01):
Real fast, though, Jim, high level drug trafficking. Like the
bigger the operation, the more Johnny Dept.

Speaker 5 (01:46:07):
Blow you are.

Speaker 6 (01:46:09):
That is allegedly supposed to give you some respect and
major fraud or yeah, white collar crimes is what you
were talking about.

Speaker 3 (01:46:16):
That's exactly what I thought, man, because again, you get
credit for being smart. I mean, just think about Shawshank, right,
I mean, he got immediate respect because he you know,
he was one thing. He was supposed to be a killer.
But once he got in there, you know, people found
out he was smart and they gave him respect for
being smart, and he became like the leader of the prisoners.

Speaker 8 (01:46:34):
I because he did their taxes.

Speaker 6 (01:46:36):
I'm also reading, though, that's only in lower security or
federal facilities, where big money fraudsters sometimes will get respect
for being smart, and higher security prisons, it doesn't really
it's murdered.

Speaker 5 (01:46:48):
Yeah, let's move right to it. It's murder.

Speaker 4 (01:46:51):
The more people, the more, the more attached you got,
the better go ahead.

Speaker 8 (01:46:55):
Jeremy Ray Meets is the guy you're talking about is
an American fashion model, act and convicted felon. A former
member of the Cryps Street gang, Meeks was arrested in
twenty fourteen during a gang sweep called Operation Ceasefire and Stockton, California.

Speaker 4 (01:47:11):
Every damn, I have an update on Deborah la Faveh.
It was two thousand and five she pled guilty to
Luden Lascivius involving a fourteen year old student Central Florida
middle school teacher, so never served a day. She actually
had three years of house arrests, seven years probation, and

(01:47:31):
with a lifetime registration as a sex offender, permanently revoked
her teaching certificate. She became subject to media scrutiny. She
over the years worked low profile jobs including retail auto
parts store, and changed her name to Deborah Jean Williams.
After remarrying. Had a brief public reappearance in twenty fourteen after.

Speaker 5 (01:47:52):
A d Wyers. Oh man, that's tough. That's tough.

Speaker 4 (01:47:57):
But nothing news in the Passolae in years.

Speaker 5 (01:48:00):
She's laying low. Yeah, I think you marry a.

Speaker 4 (01:48:03):
Girl who's had sex with a fourteen year old if
she was fourteen, no, you'd only marry or if she
was fourteen.

Speaker 5 (01:48:11):
No, no, no, I know you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (01:48:13):
Yeah, yeah, don't put that on not in twenty twenty five, man,
like just even jokes.

Speaker 4 (01:48:21):
Yeah, it's weird. Yeah, you can't do that. Yeah, it doesn't,
it doesn't track.

Speaker 6 (01:48:25):
That's why I was thrown off when you said como
and I was like, it's chow mom sorry, yeah, child lesser.

Speaker 5 (01:48:30):
Yeah yeah. I was like I didn't know there was
slang for it.

Speaker 4 (01:48:33):
Oh yeah, man, there's all kinds of slang in prison.
I'm telling you. I'll show you this guy that following Instagram.
He's fascinating, fascinating dude.

Speaker 3 (01:48:39):
All right four oh seven nine one six four one
text us at seven seven zero three one. There's a
chat GPT story and a toy maker that I want
to get to, but we only have a few minutes here.

Speaker 4 (01:48:50):
I may save this tomorrow. This is another one of
those toys.

Speaker 5 (01:48:53):
Let's do it now.

Speaker 3 (01:48:54):
It's this is an another one of these toys where
they add AI to it and it's a Teddy Bear.
Let's go to the children's toymaker. Folo toy was giving
on instructions on how to.

Speaker 5 (01:49:07):
Hack mainframes.

Speaker 3 (01:49:10):
It's more it really, when it comes down to it,
it's way more dangerous than that. This Teddy Bear tried
to teach kids how.

Speaker 12 (01:49:16):
To do this.

Speaker 5 (01:49:17):
Steal your parents' car pack into their phone light matches.

Speaker 8 (01:49:23):
And that's why year after year a lot of consumer
safety advocates are saying, do not get these connected toys
for your children. Yeah, we've heard stories of strangers getting
access through the Teddy Bears or the room monitors, and
it's just you don't know if they're hallucinating what they're
telling your children.

Speaker 3 (01:49:42):
Yeah, this bear was built for kids between three and
twelve years old. Well, the fire starting aida, it says,
the first major strike telling tots how to locate matches.
Didn't like them how to locate match Yeah, it says, quote,
let me tell you safety first. Little buddy matches are
for grown ups to use carefully. Here's how they do it.

Speaker 5 (01:50:00):
It says.

Speaker 3 (01:50:01):
It says, blow it out when done, puff like a
birthday candle. But it said the most alarming conversations veered
into a sexual territory.

Speaker 5 (01:50:12):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (01:50:12):
It found that it was bizarrely willing to discuss kinks
with children, explaining fetishes like bondage and teacher student role play.

Speaker 5 (01:50:22):
Now that you have your candle, light a candle, it says.

Speaker 3 (01:50:26):
At one point, the Teddy Bear inquired, after explaining the kinks,
what do you think would be the most fun to explore?

Speaker 5 (01:50:33):
Good Lord?

Speaker 3 (01:50:36):
Could you imagine getting your kid on the city Bears?
And they fired that thing up at the Christmas dinner table,
and it's asking about bondage?

Speaker 4 (01:50:42):
How do you like your ass smacked?

Speaker 6 (01:50:45):
I don't want my kids toys hooked up to the Internet.
I don't want any of my kids toys.

Speaker 5 (01:50:52):
Smart in or around my search history. No, that all right?

Speaker 4 (01:51:00):
Seven seven zero three one. Let's lad them up for
MEAs next.

Speaker 1 (01:51:05):
Do you want to play a game? Good Jim Colbert
showed trivia is not. Next call down four.

Speaker 7 (01:51:18):
I went into one of the Goodwill Bend stores and
bought two lamps. At the time, I think they were
charging ninety nine cents if it had a plug. Any
electronic item.

Speaker 17 (01:51:30):
Was ninety nine cents.

Speaker 7 (01:51:32):
Those two lamps. They were modline sixties mid century lamps.
I gned up selling eight hundred dollars a piece. That's
sixteen hundred dollars off of my dollars ninety eight purchase sweet.

Speaker 3 (01:51:46):
That's why I do it because a lot of people
just simply don't understand what they have. And if you
have knowledge going into these rod sales or estate sales
or bend stores, and you know that there's a market
for certain stuff in mid century, anything is big.

Speaker 5 (01:51:58):
Right now. You can make money.

Speaker 3 (01:52:00):
You can buy an end table for twenty dollars and
sell it to somebody in the Pacific Northwest for five
hundred because they've been looking for it for tenure and
they're dumb.

Speaker 1 (01:52:10):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:52:10):
Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show, Roe Radio one
four point one. I'm Jimner's deb Hello, Jack, yep and Ross.
I bought this thing for twenty bucks.

Speaker 4 (01:52:17):
And Jack has the Jackie sack.

Speaker 5 (01:52:19):
What's in there? Buddy? All the board, chack at, chack
at two, look at look at it glack. Here we go.
We have a pair of prizes.

Speaker 4 (01:52:26):
The winner gets to choose at which they like. Would
like it might be a pair of tickets to see
comedian Charlie Berens at the Plaza Live on December sixth.
It's the Lost in Pound Tour. You can get tickets
at Plazalive Orlando dot Org. That's Charlie Berens, the comedian.
Also in the Jackie Sack a pair of tickets to
see Cheap Trick. Hey, they're playing the hard Rock Live

(01:52:49):
on March eleventh. Tickets go on sale this Friday at Ticketmaster.
You can actually win them before you can buy them.
You can also get tickets at the hard Rock Live
box office again. Tickets on sale Friday. But Cheap Trick
in they're coming March eleventh to the hard Rock Live Orlando.

Speaker 5 (01:53:06):
Those are the prizes in the Jackie Sack. So back
to you at Callickity Clash.

Speaker 15 (01:53:10):
You bet man.

Speaker 4 (01:53:10):
Cheap Tricks will puts on a good show. By the way,
we saw them in Jacksonville opening up for Poison Years,
probably about three or four years ago. And they still
do it good man. They still still fun band, still
sounds amazing. I saw him at hard Rock Orlando a
few years back. It was fun, very nice. All right,
we need two more players, by the way, one, two
or five.

Speaker 8 (01:53:28):
Let's go one.

Speaker 5 (01:53:29):
Let's go to one.

Speaker 15 (01:53:29):
Rob.

Speaker 4 (01:53:30):
How are you doing Rob good?

Speaker 5 (01:53:32):
How are you guys doing good? Buddy?

Speaker 4 (01:53:33):
Want to play a little game with us? Absolutely, let's
do it.

Speaker 3 (01:53:40):
Show RII Rob, this is a real easy game here.
But I get a question here for you have four answers.
One of these answers is not true, Rob, What but
if you find it, I will send you over to
Jack and Jack will get something nice. Are you ready, yes, sir,
Here we go, Buddy. On this day in nineteen sixty eight,
actor Academy Award nominated writer has a famous brother, works

(01:54:03):
with Ben Stiller a lot.

Speaker 4 (01:54:07):
Oh my guess, nose doesn't look.

Speaker 5 (01:54:09):
Like a nose.

Speaker 4 (01:54:10):
Owen Wilson is the answer.

Speaker 5 (01:54:12):
That's right. Owen Wilson born on this day. Wow, Wow,
that's right.

Speaker 3 (01:54:16):
Here are three fun facts about Owen and one lie
that wants to meet your parents.

Speaker 5 (01:54:20):
Wait all right, nobody, all right, very good, all right,
Budy eat the parents.

Speaker 4 (01:54:23):
We're talking about Owen Wilson. Which one of these is untrue?

Speaker 3 (01:54:26):
Number one he collects sunglasses and said in interviews that
he owes over owns over six hundred bear. Number two
his father was the PBS executive that introduced America to
Monty ply Python's Flying Circus. Number three, he got expelled
from high school at fifteen years old for cheating. He
finished school at the New Mexico Military institute. Or lastly,

(01:54:49):
he grew up in a house with no television. Which
of those is a lie?

Speaker 5 (01:54:54):
I'm gonna go with three.

Speaker 4 (01:54:55):
No, that's absolutely true.

Speaker 3 (01:54:57):
He did get expelled from high school of fifteen years
old for cheating on a geometry test, but that was
just a bit of the problems he had, and his
dad pulled him out of there and sent him as
to a military institute.

Speaker 5 (01:55:07):
Wow, it's just absolutely unreal. I don't even understand why
we're all here. It's just so nice.

Speaker 4 (01:55:13):
All right, two, three, four or five, let's go to dude,
is Sean Sean, how you doing doing great?

Speaker 3 (01:55:20):
Glad to hear that, buddy, we're talking about Owen Wilson.
Which one of these is not true? Number one he
collects sunglasses and has said in interviews that he owns
over six hundred pair. Number two his father was the
PBS executive that introduced America to Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Or lastly, he grew up in a house with no television.

Speaker 1 (01:55:38):
Let's say Number one.

Speaker 4 (01:55:39):
That's the one many.

Speaker 5 (01:55:43):
Winner.

Speaker 3 (01:55:44):
His father was the PBS executive that decided to air
Monty Python's Flying Circus for the very first time in America.
He brought that programming to the country, which is crazy.
That is absolutely And the thing that's the nuttiest he
grew up in a house. They did not have TVs
in their house. All the TV in any movie that
he saw he saw at friend's houses just absolutely spectacular.

(01:56:05):
And when you consider his best friend was like Wes Anderson,
and they made that movie Bottle Rocket at a.

Speaker 5 (01:56:12):
Really young age. He's a very good friend.

Speaker 3 (01:56:14):
Yeah, a couple of things you may not know about
Owen Wilson before we get to the top of the
hour and get some ross thoughts coming your way in
a second. In his first movie, Bottle Rocket, if it
didn't make it, he had planned to do this. He
dropped instruct He dropped out of college and not far
from getting an English degree, by the way, and he
went with his buddy Wes Anderson. They made this movie,
Bottle Rocket, and he told himself, if this movie doesn't

(01:56:36):
do anything, I'm doing this.

Speaker 5 (01:56:38):
I was going to be a cobbler.

Speaker 4 (01:56:40):
No, he's not going to be a cobbler, a writer,
no insurance. He's gonna go to the Marines. Oh wow,
the Marine.

Speaker 8 (01:56:46):
They did already do a military academy.

Speaker 4 (01:56:48):
He loves to serf. That's one of his things.

Speaker 3 (01:56:50):
He was considered for the role of Obi Wan Kenobi
in a Phantom Menace, the role that eventually went to
Ewan mcgregregor.

Speaker 5 (01:56:57):
I'm just saying, I just think that, like there's the
four with just worn.

Speaker 4 (01:57:00):
How many movies did he do with Ben Stiller? How
many movies has he been in with Ben Stiller?

Speaker 3 (01:57:06):
Five eleven, thirteen, thirteen movies with one dude? And then lastly,
his full name is Owen Cunningham Wilson. There you go,
Owen Wilson.

Speaker 8 (01:57:18):
He did.

Speaker 6 (01:57:20):
Yeah, like he's the only person that really deserves the
middle name cunning Ham.

Speaker 5 (01:57:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:57:27):
He's got three daughters or three kids from three different women,
and all within a really like close proximity. I think
within three years he had three or four years he
had three kids with three different women. I don't think
he married any of them. There you go, which you
gotta coming.

Speaker 5 (01:57:42):
Up from the solid guy man.

Speaker 6 (01:57:44):
We recorded an episode of Good Sauce this morning and
we had such a blast talking about something simple.

Speaker 4 (01:57:53):
It's always something simple.

Speaker 5 (01:57:54):
The fashion police are here, that's right.

Speaker 6 (01:57:57):
Are you curious to hear about Jim's dudes and don'ts
when it comes to the world of fashion.

Speaker 3 (01:58:05):
I'm the least fascinating person when it comes to that,
But I will tell you who is the most fascinating person.

Speaker 4 (01:58:12):
Oh, we're gonna get the bottom sketch your media over
there of the Curious Case.

Speaker 5 (01:58:17):
Come on of Jackman button over here? Oh come on, man.

Speaker 4 (01:58:22):
But I had so much.

Speaker 6 (01:58:24):
Fun talking about everyone's preferences when it comes to fashion,
whether you like it or not. If you have clothes,
that means you made a choice, maybe years ago, maybe
a month ago, about what you want to wear, what
you want people to look at when they see you.
And it's sometimes, especially for men, it can be very
uncomfortable talking about fashion because we want to look cool

(01:58:46):
and what looks cool is a lack of effort. I
can look at Nirvana. I'll use Nirvana as a you know,
as an image of that exact thing that I'm talking about.
But fashion is important, and man, there are some people
Jack who really needs this second.

Speaker 5 (01:59:06):
I didn't say anything. It's definitely about Jack.

Speaker 6 (01:59:09):
But we're trying to get at is If you have
any fashion concerns or any fashion questions, I'm pretty sure
we can help you out. If it's something that you're
uncomfortable with We're about to shatter that after the break,
how rude.

Speaker 4 (01:59:24):
I wasn't talking about Jack. I want two words for Jack.
Kirkland jeans. He I don't want Kirkland jeans. Kirkland jeans.
You definitely have Kirkland jeans.

Speaker 5 (01:59:42):
Hey, guess I hope you guys are doing well.

Speaker 14 (01:59:43):
So I think, in my opinion that the highest hierarchy
that you get for being in jail is Bobby an
attorney held by contempt of court by the judge.

Speaker 4 (01:59:52):
Thanks by no, I don't think you'd want to do that.
I can't tell you what you did get you more
respect in jail.

Speaker 5 (02:00:00):
Oh, your skill set does.

Speaker 15 (02:00:01):
I had to spend the night in thirty third over
a suspended license in a room of twenty guys and
I'm holding cell. These guys got to fight, rip the
phone off the wall and broke the wires.

Speaker 5 (02:00:12):
Damn.

Speaker 15 (02:00:12):
I ended up using my teeth to splice the wires
and toilet paper in between so they didn't touch fix
the phone, And that next morning I got plenty of
extra those little tiny chocolate heart donut don't.

Speaker 4 (02:00:25):
Even know about that, world, don't want to know about
the chocolate heart donut world.

Speaker 3 (02:00:29):
I want to keep that in mystery for your boy.
All right, to welcome back down to Jim, deb Jack
and Roth. Sorry here, well, I don't.

Speaker 5 (02:00:36):
Want to know any man.

Speaker 4 (02:00:37):
Knowing Chomo is way different than knowing about the chocolate
art donut. That's a way different machine altogether. All right,
let's do Roths thoughts.

Speaker 2 (02:00:49):
It's weird, fast, it's funny, it's happening sometimes, it's all
around us.

Speaker 1 (02:00:55):
It's ross spelled like sauce. It's raw.

Speaker 5 (02:01:00):
Rostos has brought to you by personal injury attorney Mo
de Witt.

Speaker 6 (02:01:05):
Injured on the go, just call Mo. It's not just
a fun limerick. It also is a complete sentence and
a free piece of advice. If you're injured on the go,
just call MoU.

Speaker 5 (02:01:16):
Fashion. How important do you think it is? I think
it's pretty important. I mean, you know, I mean up
to a certain you know level or whatever.

Speaker 15 (02:01:24):
I mean.

Speaker 4 (02:01:25):
You know, I don't think I have to be wearing
you know, anything from the.

Speaker 5 (02:01:30):
You know, the hottest Psycho.

Speaker 3 (02:01:32):
Yeah, I don't need that Dior suit to make myself
look good. I mean I don't, you know, I don't
I don't know. When you say fashion, is it like
how much you're spending your look? Is that what you're
talking just your look? It doesn't matter how you make that, right.

Speaker 5 (02:01:41):
If fashion isn't your look, honey, then what are we
talking about? Okay?

Speaker 19 (02:01:44):
All right?

Speaker 4 (02:01:45):
I mean, I guess it's kind of important.

Speaker 5 (02:01:47):
You know, extremely important.

Speaker 6 (02:01:49):
And the older I get, the more I realize how
many bad outfits I wore too big of shirts, but
I like the little graphic design on the front, so
I would wear clothes that don't fit. And uh, and
my wife has helped out and you know what, I'm
just a quick moment to all wives. They men don't

(02:02:10):
thank you enough.

Speaker 3 (02:02:11):
Yeah, because we would all like Adam Sandler, we would
all look. I mean, that's exactly what every dude would
look like. Jim shorts, T shirts, tennis shoes. We never
and we would never leave that. That's exactly what most
dudes would be in, or their favorite pair of jeans,
their favorite you know, beer T shirt.

Speaker 5 (02:02:26):
And that's it. And dep I'm curious.

Speaker 6 (02:02:28):
Is it safe to say that fashion seems to make
a little bit more sense towards the female gender than
it does men.

Speaker 8 (02:02:39):
No, it's catered to more, but I think it's equally
I mean because you can get some really dapper tailored
suits just like Ray Trendley comes in oh or his
pocket square matches the inside liner and the cuffs are
French cuffs.

Speaker 6 (02:02:54):
I guess, uh, I get. Maybe the question is like
if for me it's easy for me to I know
it's a judge and judging half of humanity, But it
just seems that women, generally speaking, are just better at fashion.

Speaker 5 (02:03:09):
They care more, like there's we're required more.

Speaker 3 (02:03:14):
As well as that. That's exactly what I was about
to say. It's not like, you know, women don't really
have a choice. As a woman. When you go out
in public, you have to make yourself presentable or you
will get all about or.

Speaker 5 (02:03:24):
You're gonna get judged. I mean, you know, people gonna
come at you, you know, I mean, are you okay?

Speaker 3 (02:03:29):
Well, if you're a Sunday afternoon you're sliding out to
publics and your sweatpants, everybody kind of understands that. But
if you roll into work in sweatpants and a who
far to T shirt, everybody's gonna kind of wonder what's
going on with your life?

Speaker 5 (02:03:39):
But dudes, canna do that?

Speaker 6 (02:03:40):
I never have this thought before, So don't kill me.
On the Texan Service. But I wonder if that's because, like,
if there were men out there that would just absolutely
destroy in the world of fashion to the point where
they are setting trends for other men. I just don't
see that happening in the male community. Hit me with

(02:04:01):
that again, though, I don't see a trendsetter for men's
fashion the same way that I see a trendsetter for
women's fashion, like Kardashian. I know that's the best example,
but arguably maybe the biggest example, at least in my lifetime. Like,
I don't see someone Whenever I see Timothy shallow May
wear his crazy stuff, I'm like, yeah, dude, I am

(02:04:24):
not a Hollywood act.

Speaker 8 (02:04:26):
What's the hairy Harry styles? Harry styles with his sweaters
and his pearl parls. Oh, and he's already so skinny
in little Yeah, he looks like fifteen years old by
the ankles. Somebody dipped him in his mom's closet.

Speaker 6 (02:04:38):
I'm not proud of this, and I probably shouldn't share this,
but I recently kind of got bullied, not bullied, but
someone made fun of me.

Speaker 5 (02:04:46):
And that person was wearing a pearl necklace. It was
a dude, really and he bullied you. Yeah, and it's
stung more because he was wearing a pearl necklace.

Speaker 2 (02:04:53):
Yea.

Speaker 5 (02:04:56):
And it was a good one. And I think my
comeback was like, well you were right.

Speaker 4 (02:05:01):
Yeah, that's like losing a slap fight.

Speaker 5 (02:05:02):
Yeah, it's not good. Texter has a fashion question. Well,
we have all the fashion answers.

Speaker 4 (02:05:07):
Okay, a man in his thirties, most of his nicer
wear is collared Sixers Eagles Flyers shirts or a Philly
jersey with a sweater vest over it. Is he doing
too much by making a social statement with all his
clothes being sports oriented?

Speaker 5 (02:05:27):
I got it.

Speaker 6 (02:05:27):
We got to introduce this introduce this guy to the
smaller logo Philadelphia offering.

Speaker 4 (02:05:32):
Yeah, because that all comes from the line called sex repellent.

Speaker 8 (02:05:35):
Yes, yeah, like wearing your socks when you're having Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:05:40):
Yeah, yeah, that's a weird sex repellent because you're actually
still having sex. But it's just really bad. Yeah, no
one wants it at that point. Just take off the
fruit of the loose.

Speaker 4 (02:05:50):
Another Texter says they're currently wearing a Ross Comedy shirt
on their way to a little league game.

Speaker 5 (02:05:55):
Is that good? That's perfect? That's fine. You're on a
T shirt at a little league games. See.

Speaker 3 (02:06:00):
I love dressing up, but usually my thing is a
nice pair of jeans, a sport coat, and a nice
a blazer whatever, a nice collar shirt. And I don't
like my shirts to be too big. I actually get
them fitted now so they fit well around my uh
my mid section. What were you about to call it belly?

Speaker 4 (02:06:21):
There?

Speaker 5 (02:06:22):
You were about to take a shot at yourself, and
then you went midsex.

Speaker 4 (02:06:25):
Yeah, I said mid section because I don't want to
say belly, because belly makes you It seems like you're
fat and I'm fat.

Speaker 5 (02:06:31):
No, No, I'm not. No, it's not too bad. You're
you're too bad.

Speaker 4 (02:06:36):
I had that dad thing. I think I have the
dad couple of beers during the weekend belly thing that I.

Speaker 5 (02:06:40):
Can't get up rid of. What are so?

Speaker 4 (02:06:42):
That means skinny jeans are a bad thing for my age?

Speaker 6 (02:06:45):
Right now, if you lift, if you put both hands up, yeah,
are we seeing middrift?

Speaker 5 (02:06:51):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (02:06:53):
Oh yeah, wait, do that again?

Speaker 5 (02:06:56):
Do it again again?

Speaker 15 (02:06:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (02:06:58):
Yeah, but it's not on cam. If I had to
shake them, he can show mid Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:07:05):
Yeah, I just showed you the bottom ab the entry
abb that's an entry.

Speaker 5 (02:07:10):
AB. That's the basement app Yeah, yeah, that's the first step. AB.

Speaker 4 (02:07:14):
Crawl those steps right, have to love.

Speaker 6 (02:07:15):
Those abs or is that a stoopid it's both. It's
so my question though, and this is so good. I'll
go first. Give me your commandments of fashion. Here's right now.
Cargo pants. No, hammer loop, No, you can't burn them.

Speaker 5 (02:07:35):
They're done.

Speaker 4 (02:07:35):
Yeah, they're done.

Speaker 5 (02:07:36):
You put those stephen berries away, Jack.

Speaker 4 (02:07:39):
We just got rid of your second.

Speaker 5 (02:07:40):
Drawer, in your chest of drawers, I only have one
pair with a hammer loop though.

Speaker 4 (02:07:45):
Yeah hammer loop. No, dude, you just wore hammer loop
shorts to the ball Gill not even two years ago.
That's shorts. He's talking about pants.

Speaker 6 (02:07:53):
I got problem man jorts with a hammer falls underneath
this category here, Jack, I'm here to help you.

Speaker 5 (02:08:01):
We can't do that anymore.

Speaker 4 (02:08:03):
Let me give an example, Jack, I'll give you like
for your hammer shorts.

Speaker 3 (02:08:07):
It's my skinny jeans. When's the last time you wear
see me wear my skinny jeans? Because I had no, no, no, no,
I have a pair of like skin tight you can see,
you know, you can see if I'm Jewish or not. Yeah, yeah,
skinny jeans.

Speaker 6 (02:08:20):
Every time I see I know what pants are talking about.
And just like skinny jeans with you just makes you
look top heavy, it does almighty makes you look pushable.

Speaker 5 (02:08:30):
Yeah, and you're a very sturdy person.

Speaker 11 (02:08:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:08:33):
Yeah, they're a teeter.

Speaker 1 (02:08:34):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:08:36):
Is he drunk? No, not really.

Speaker 19 (02:08:38):
There's not a lot of leeway in the left leg
right there, right now, the stove pipe leg is in
so oh yeah yeah, bo cargo, shorts, cargo. What's in
stove pipe leg? That really wide leg up?

Speaker 5 (02:08:50):
For women?

Speaker 22 (02:08:51):
It is?

Speaker 5 (02:08:51):
Yeah, my wife?

Speaker 4 (02:08:52):
Is it not for dudes though?

Speaker 15 (02:08:53):
Right?

Speaker 8 (02:08:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:08:54):
Yeah, I think women are because a lot of young
girls are wearing those bigger jeans out.

Speaker 5 (02:08:57):
Yeah all right, Jim, give me a concrete. You can't
do it, just don't do it. I will, I'll go.

Speaker 6 (02:09:04):
Here's another one. Black shoes, white socks, Get out of here.

Speaker 5 (02:09:09):
You can't do that. You make sure your belt matches
your shoes.

Speaker 6 (02:09:12):
Hey, you're gonna you're gonna be looking like Billy Jean
everywhere with black shoes, white socks. And if their tubes
stand up, get back down, stand up.

Speaker 5 (02:09:19):
Get on out.

Speaker 3 (02:09:19):
And I'm gonna tell you my wife told me you
always have a nice pair of nice crisp white slip
on sneakers like I have now, and those go with anything.
And you can stop wearing your dress shoes with your jeans,
because I'm not really into that. I have casual brown
leather shoes on now. But when you wear dress.

Speaker 5 (02:09:35):
Shoes with jeans, dress shoes with jeans, Jack Gottle, mighty Jack.

Speaker 8 (02:09:41):
All right, let's see your midsection, Jack, dress shoes.

Speaker 5 (02:09:44):
You can't stay and put them up on.

Speaker 8 (02:09:45):
The chair for us jest, Jack passed it. That is
a casual loafer. That is a dress shoes. A dress
shoe would require laces. That is a casual loaf. That
is a leather loafer. That is not no, it's it's
a loafer, you guys. Those are not. So you're saying

(02:10:07):
wear that to a five star restaurant. They have they
should have laces.

Speaker 6 (02:10:11):
I mean, it would look like I'm faking it at
the five star restaurant, but it looks like I'm still trying.

Speaker 4 (02:10:16):
Jack just flex does echo loafer for the echo loafer
two hundred dollars by the way, Oh black socks.

Speaker 5 (02:10:24):
Oh see, that's good.

Speaker 4 (02:10:26):
I'm doing one right now. I actually have a faux
pall on right now.

Speaker 8 (02:10:29):
Is your belt doesn't match your shoes.

Speaker 4 (02:10:30):
No, my belt does match my shoes.

Speaker 5 (02:10:32):
Black belt.

Speaker 4 (02:10:33):
But I have on golf socks with my dress shoes.

Speaker 5 (02:10:36):
Oh oh no, that's not a flood.

Speaker 8 (02:10:39):
Joy carefully, you're gonna tip your ass back again.

Speaker 21 (02:10:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (02:10:45):
No, you should be able to see it. No, you
shouldn't see it.

Speaker 4 (02:10:47):
These are the most comfortable socks in the world. That's
why I wear them all the time.

Speaker 6 (02:10:50):
So you are so what is another one of your
concrete nose. Oh you're saying no golf socks with dresses.
You're saying no, nothing baggy. I like nothing at all.
I would rather fit a little bit too snug than
too big. Okay, nothing, because it makes you feel dumpy.
It makes you look dumpy and.

Speaker 8 (02:11:07):
Not enough men wear t shirts underneath their dress shits,
and you should never be able to see a man's
nipples through his shirt.

Speaker 1 (02:11:14):
Got huge.

Speaker 8 (02:11:15):
That is huge, and you do not see it enough.

Speaker 3 (02:11:18):
It's weird because when I go out sometimes I actually
iced mine beforehand, you.

Speaker 8 (02:11:21):
Know, ex Usually the first thing that walks in the
studio and that's with me next year.

Speaker 6 (02:11:29):
It is weird that you ice them. They look like
two analog controllers. I see two deep pants staring back
at me.

Speaker 4 (02:11:40):
It looks like two suction darts without the dart, but
dead that is a must.

Speaker 8 (02:11:47):
My grandfather never ever wore a pair of shorts, a
pair of jeans, and he never left the house without
an undershirt on.

Speaker 4 (02:11:54):
Well, it's crazy. My uncle is the same way. My
unael Bobby was.

Speaker 5 (02:11:56):
He wore undershirts under He would wear undershirt under his undershirt.
And now do you have any more kung cree?

Speaker 6 (02:12:02):
Especially for dudes, because I think dudes need the most
fashioned help.

Speaker 4 (02:12:06):
We should have got brown in on this.

Speaker 8 (02:12:07):
It's different on you, like in Florida than no white
after Labor Day doesn't really apply because we're in a
completely different environment than we're up north. It gets cold
and white is kind of out of place. About Corduroys
is that no, no Corterways are actually coming back.

Speaker 5 (02:12:21):
I think they're making a comeback. It's time for that
thigh friction.

Speaker 8 (02:12:25):
Hated that part.

Speaker 3 (02:12:26):
How about like band T shirts? I mean, is there
a T shirt that you can get away with that
is a nicer T shirt?

Speaker 6 (02:12:32):
So there's this weird rule that I haven't heard before,
and I'm making up right now.

Speaker 5 (02:12:37):
But you gotta know some of the songs.

Speaker 6 (02:12:41):
You can't get caught empty handed on music knowledge for
the band that you're.

Speaker 8 (02:12:45):
Wearing, giving that to our promotions department.

Speaker 4 (02:12:48):
Yeah, you can be twenty five and a public enemy
shirt you just and.

Speaker 6 (02:12:51):
That's fine, but you gotta know some songs, a handful
of lyrics. At least know their importance. If you wear
a lad Zeppelin shirt just because it was on sale
at Target, then just listen to how the West was won.
Learn something about the band that you're rocking. And that
goes with any company that you ever wear. If you're
going to do the advertising for them, at least find

(02:13:13):
out what you're exactly adverted.

Speaker 4 (02:13:15):
Or make up a great story that has nothing to
do with it that seems really cool.

Speaker 6 (02:13:18):
I have my uncle, Yeah, Jimmy Page. Yeah, now here
comes the moment that I think we've all.

Speaker 5 (02:13:24):
Been dying for Jack. Why waking a guy up off
the couch?

Speaker 17 (02:13:30):
What?

Speaker 8 (02:13:31):
I know?

Speaker 4 (02:13:31):
What Jack says? And he's not doing it today, but
he's bad at it, but today he's got it under control.

Speaker 3 (02:13:38):
Jack wears golf shirts that have the buttons, and he
never buttons any of the buttons. They fly way ass open.
Today's buttons are buttoned but usually with his golf shirts
or his polo shirts, he keeps it s almost oh man,
he keeps him all open.

Speaker 4 (02:13:55):
It just flies open. I can see his chest.

Speaker 8 (02:13:57):
H Does it tempt you?

Speaker 25 (02:13:58):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:13:59):
No, there's always one button.

Speaker 5 (02:14:01):
Yeah, I don't know. I went to today.

Speaker 4 (02:14:03):
I'm a little more conservative, but it looks better when
it comes.

Speaker 5 (02:14:05):
To golf shirts.

Speaker 6 (02:14:06):
You should, if you ask me, always go two out
of three. And if there's two buttons, you go one.

Speaker 5 (02:14:11):
Yeah. You never go with that top button. And that
was a thing for a minute. But that is not cool.
It's not cool, never will be, won't be. But what
are your massive don'ts? Jack?

Speaker 6 (02:14:22):
If you could tell people what to not what not
to do in the world of fashion, what would you do?
You're the king of fashion?

Speaker 5 (02:14:31):
What say you don't talk fashion with ross? How rude?

Speaker 8 (02:14:37):
Let's see, well, don't fart.

Speaker 5 (02:14:41):
I have no rules.

Speaker 4 (02:14:42):
Yeah, obviously, hasn't it listens? I go, uh, black shoes,
black belt, dark socks, not blue, but black or gray.

Speaker 5 (02:14:54):
It's got to be in the same like color.

Speaker 4 (02:14:57):
What about you, numb nuts? You haven't said any yourself,
I mean you have. Let me get you come in
here looking like a I mean literally you come in
here looking kind of strain sometimes, dude.

Speaker 5 (02:15:07):
Yeah, it's called fashion. Oh is it really?

Speaker 8 (02:15:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (02:15:10):
And also.

Speaker 4 (02:15:13):
I'm gonna walk along.

Speaker 6 (02:15:14):
You were a Freddy Krueger sweater two weeks ago. That's
just called red and darker red. Hey, and uh, I
would say, here's a fashion.

Speaker 5 (02:15:24):
I've seen you do this. Jack, talk to me. What
what shorts and tube socks? Oh, you can't do that,
although they are doing that. Listen, listen.

Speaker 4 (02:15:34):
If you're wearing sneakers, I'm not wearing sneakers without socks.
And if have socks, pushing them all the way down, you.

Speaker 5 (02:15:40):
Know, we're low boys.

Speaker 4 (02:15:41):
You gotta get the socks that only cover it, and
they go under your shoes barefoot.

Speaker 8 (02:15:46):
Like l a street gang style. Get some khaki shorts
and pull those all the way up to your kneecaps.

Speaker 4 (02:15:51):
I scrunch them down, but those low socks and then
they like slip under your heel and I hate that.

Speaker 1 (02:15:58):
You don't get it.

Speaker 5 (02:15:59):
Here's the thing.

Speaker 6 (02:15:59):
If you have to scrunch him down, that's a bad look.
If you pulled those all the way up, that's a
bad look. And the reason why is because they're blank
whites or they're if you're gonna pull them up, you
go all black or this is where you find bread
meating butter.

Speaker 5 (02:16:13):
You get a design, you get something fun, something fun.
Is that an omelet on your sock? And you're like, actually,
yeah it is. Thanks for watching. It's amazing.

Speaker 4 (02:16:22):
Those are your security guard at the Key Center called
me out on my sick. Oh my god, he was
calling out everyone sneaker game, all right, And he's like,
oh that.

Speaker 5 (02:16:34):
He was just announcing what every guy was wearing.

Speaker 4 (02:16:37):
And he got to me and I, oh he's got
You got Classic Rebox too bad? You got Puma socks on?

Speaker 5 (02:16:42):
Oh this guy?

Speaker 4 (02:16:43):
Oh my god, fire this guy meet.

Speaker 5 (02:16:44):
Make sure your socks match your shoes. Those are your
ross thoughts.

Speaker 4 (02:16:48):
I'm out piece all right? Four O seven nine four one.
It's only money with Scott Brown is up next here
on the Jim Gilbert Show.

Speaker 7 (02:17:06):
I APPA is a lot of fun guys. We go
every year as a amusement operator. If you want any
cheap games, buy them up for because none of those
companies want to shift that stuff back to wherever they
came from.

Speaker 3 (02:17:27):
Welcome back to the Jim Pober Show. Roll Radio one
oh four point one. Thanks for tuning in today. We
appreciate that, as we do every single day. Give us
a like on the or give us a follow on
that iHeartRadio app. Make us your number one pre set.

Speaker 8 (02:17:38):
Pretty please, pretty pretty please?

Speaker 4 (02:17:40):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 3 (02:17:40):
There's deb and that check is here as well. So
is sau Saddy fashion. Let's do its only money, oh pletty.

Speaker 1 (02:17:47):
People passionate about planning for their future. Rise above investment
myths to build real Isn't that really just common sense
financial advice?

Speaker 5 (02:17:59):
Who oh, okay, dude's all little money.

Speaker 10 (02:18:04):
Wiscott Brown from Family Goodlow brobody, Scott Brown.

Speaker 3 (02:18:11):
That's what our Familywealth dot com. A fiduciary in town
for thirty eight years, making sure you make good decisions
on your portfolio that can make you nice and comfortable
for the remainder of your existence.

Speaker 4 (02:18:23):
That's a specialty. How you done, buddy?

Speaker 5 (02:18:25):
I am fantastic. You are a fantastic thought out Now.

Speaker 27 (02:18:28):
Although I was listening to that fashion discussion, I found
that quite fascinating, did you.

Speaker 4 (02:18:33):
I said? I said, we should bring Brown in you. Yeah, yeah,
because you make some good fashion tice.

Speaker 27 (02:18:37):
You're a fashionable dude, I was. I'll tell you, I'm
gonna tell you this right now. I was best dressed
in high school?

Speaker 1 (02:18:42):
Were you really?

Speaker 4 (02:18:43):
Yeah, that does not shock me.

Speaker 5 (02:18:45):
Yeah, I was. You know, I'll tell you what you
pull off quite well. What's right?

Speaker 4 (02:18:49):
You pull off casual professional very well?

Speaker 5 (02:18:52):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (02:18:52):
I saw you walking through publics or a store or whatever.
I would think that you're successful even though you had
on like jeans and maybe a pull over something like that,
because you just look you care about how it fits.

Speaker 1 (02:19:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 27 (02:19:04):
I'm not a you know, I'm not a I do
wear suits obviously in my business enough, but it's not
my favorite thing.

Speaker 5 (02:19:11):
I don't love.

Speaker 27 (02:19:12):
It's not it's not a look. I think I pull
off better than casual. I think I'm more of a
casual person.

Speaker 12 (02:19:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:19:17):
Yeah, I don't know if that makes any sense whatsoever.
It actually makes perfect It's a better fact. You came
in after a day where you had your suit on.
I think you had your dress shirt and your slacks on,
and you looked odd to me.

Speaker 1 (02:19:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:19:27):
Yeah, because I'm so you know, I get it. I'm
so you scree you in your casual wear that you
and professional wear.

Speaker 27 (02:19:34):
Yeah, and it's I've gotten to a state, you know,
when you're young in this business or any business. I
guess if you're a white collar quote unquote professional, you're
expected when you're specially because I tell the young guys
like I'll walk in in my polo and I have
we have really nice polos, and I'm wearing my doctors
or whatever I'm wearing.

Speaker 4 (02:19:49):
And then I see the next day all the young
guys doing it. I'm like, no, no, no, no, new new, new,
new new. Let me explain check the business.

Speaker 27 (02:19:56):
You have to do what I did when your early twenties,
and in my case, wear the same blue suit every day.

Speaker 5 (02:20:00):
Yeah right, exactly. I only had one different tie, different
had one blue suit. Scott, do you have a super
big fashion No no, no, no no. You know I
was listening to all your no no no, no nos.

Speaker 27 (02:20:15):
The one I I would say is I don't love
the old man uniform, which is the baggy shirt like
they got.

Speaker 5 (02:20:23):
It's kind of form fitting at the top a little.

Speaker 27 (02:20:26):
Bit and then it gives it, but it gives the
belly like it's like becomes a tent of some kinds
over the guy's belly.

Speaker 4 (02:20:31):
It's like they sewed it on you and then when
it got just blow your boobs.

Speaker 5 (02:20:34):
That look down and said I'm out.

Speaker 4 (02:20:35):
Yeah, it's like I'm not. I'm not gonna stick around
for this bottom part of the story. I don't want
to be here for that.

Speaker 27 (02:20:40):
Yeah, it just it becomes a tenth like you feel
like if it rained, you would just get up under there,
and the.

Speaker 3 (02:20:45):
Big dudes don't want it fitting down by their stuff.
You can see how big their belly button is. Right,
especially in Florida, it's a catch two and twenty.

Speaker 5 (02:20:53):
Two for sure. For sure.

Speaker 27 (02:20:55):
Yeah, so no, I thought I thought you guys did
a good job on the on the don'ts. I mean,
the other thing I don't like is the kind of
fifty is sixty year old guy whose you know, his
shape isn't really what it used to be, but he's
got the tight form fitting like athletic wear on you.

Speaker 4 (02:21:09):
Still look like yeah yeah, or that wasn't or that
shirt where he's asking a lot of the buttons. Yes, yes,
you're about to give up when the buttons start to
zig zag.

Speaker 5 (02:21:21):
I was talking about off and shooting you in the eyes.

Speaker 19 (02:21:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:21:25):
Good.

Speaker 3 (02:21:25):
Well it's interesting because you have n't been here for
a couple of weeks. Your sun Bratcher was in and
I did a great job, by the way, what a
wonderful young man.

Speaker 1 (02:21:32):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (02:21:33):
But you took a really interesting trip. Your daughter graduated
from college, she did, and she wanted to go to Antarctica.

Speaker 5 (02:21:40):
She did, so we went.

Speaker 27 (02:21:43):
We were there, I mean the trip was about two
thirteen days in total. We were probably in Antarctica proper,
uh for about nine or ten days, and it was
it was crazy. It's like the closest you can get,
I think, based on my travels to another planet.

Speaker 15 (02:21:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:21:57):
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:21:58):
Matter of fact, you and I were switching text and
forth right when you got there, because I said, hey,
whatever you.

Speaker 4 (02:22:02):
Do, just send me a couple of texts.

Speaker 5 (02:22:03):
You let me know.

Speaker 4 (02:22:03):
Because you got to fly to Miami.

Speaker 3 (02:22:05):
From Miami down to Buenos Aires, yeah, and then from
there you get on a boat.

Speaker 27 (02:22:08):
Well you got to go from there to Yushuaia, which
is another three hour flight. So you you gotta want
it like coming to you, like you know, hey, like
you know, you get on Port Canaveral and three hours
later you're in Antarctica.

Speaker 5 (02:22:21):
Don't quite work like that? Sip in a nice market? Yeah, yeah,
like that.

Speaker 3 (02:22:25):
Okay, So can you give us the explanation of why
this was a thing for her. I mean, most young
ladies would do that trip to Europe and said they'd
go to Greece and Rome and all those other things.
What why, I mean, why Antarctica of all places she
could go.

Speaker 5 (02:22:39):
She's weird for starters.

Speaker 4 (02:22:41):
Yeah, she's my child.

Speaker 27 (02:22:43):
Yeah, she's always been an adventurous sort, like, she likes
to travel. She she'll jump on a plane and go
literally anywhere if she can. And she she told me this,
she says, she told me this when she was four.
I don't remember that part, but I remember her graduating
from high school. It's whatever, eighteen years old, and she said, Dad,
when I graduate, she's off to Florida. When I graduate

(02:23:03):
from Florida, I want to go to Antarctica. And I thought, sure,
she never remember that, She's not gonna want to do that.
And no, we went to Antarctica.

Speaker 5 (02:23:11):
So, yeah, that was her thing.

Speaker 27 (02:23:14):
She wanted to see. She had read about it. She's
a peg she's an animal person show. She likes penguins
and she wanted to see all and she got to
see lots and lots of very very smelly penguins.

Speaker 8 (02:23:24):
Yeah smelly.

Speaker 5 (02:23:26):
Yeah, Well, they eat fish. The worst breath in the world.

Speaker 27 (02:23:29):
They have and you're not supposed to like they keep
you from them, like they're you can see them, but
if one's coming towards you, you have to back up
to keep ten or twenty feet away from them, because
the last they're going to want to do is interrupt
what's going on in their arctica for the animals.

Speaker 4 (02:23:42):
And in the while, you could smell them because I
know at Sea World and the Penguin Encounter, you're in
a room and so this smell is is trapped there,
but you can still smell them out.

Speaker 5 (02:23:52):
Oh my goodness. Yeah, there's because you might be in
a colony.

Speaker 27 (02:23:55):
I don't know what they call them, they call them
something else, but you would be in a bunch of
penguins that it would be one hundred of them there,
one hundred and fifty of them, and they're and the
weird thing is they're so good in the water, and
that's what they're built for. They're awful on I mean,
they're like like drunk old men constantly tipping over each other.

Speaker 4 (02:24:11):
Penguins.

Speaker 5 (02:24:11):
I know. Yeah, yeah, they're not they're not good at
the walking thing?

Speaker 13 (02:24:14):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (02:24:15):
Is it ay a colony a rookery? I think that's right,
A rookery, says, A rookery a wattle of penguins. I
heard a group of penguins on land.

Speaker 5 (02:24:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:24:25):
Rookery is a colony they raise where one penguin nests
and raise their young.

Speaker 5 (02:24:31):
So they had a bunch of nesting going on. It
was starting.

Speaker 3 (02:24:34):
They had begun that thing where they they get together
in a group and they and people. The penguins will
move towards the center as they cycle them around. That's
called a crash c r E c h E.

Speaker 4 (02:24:45):
So we're learning.

Speaker 27 (02:24:46):
Okay, I'm gonna tell you no matter what you call it,
it stinks. And so what northern lights did you see
northern lights that we did not see? We saw whales,
minky whales. We saw seals, We saw crab seals. Okay,
uh and we saw one leopard seal.

Speaker 4 (02:25:04):
Oh that's cool.

Speaker 5 (02:25:05):
Yeah, and they're the they're the badasses of of the
seal popular.

Speaker 19 (02:25:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:25:09):
Yeah, they will eat you.

Speaker 5 (02:25:10):
Yeah they got to human beings killed by those things,
no way, really yeah for really, yeah, I just saw it.

Speaker 3 (02:25:14):
There's a video that went viral of a small one
hopping on a boat to get away from two orcas
or a team of orcas. Looking for it, but I
did want to ask also, So you go down there,
and you and I were exchanging text and you know,
actually just right before we came on the air, one
of the things that we were talking about during the
text is and you said, you know, you said, you
just feel small and kind of insignificant because there's there's

(02:25:36):
nothing to measure too, because it's so vast and there's
nothing down there. And I was telling you a story
about going to the top of the UH when we
went to Colorado one year. We went to the UH
what they call the Summon House out there in Aspen
and in June even there's snow up there, and we
went when you go out to that back porch, you
go to the back and you look out on the
rockies and there's nothing, no houses, no nothing, and you
actually it makes you feel odd inside because it's there's

(02:26:00):
so much space.

Speaker 5 (02:26:01):
Yeah, it feels weird.

Speaker 4 (02:26:03):
Is that the same kind of thing?

Speaker 27 (02:26:04):
Yeah, you almost feel vulnerable, like you just you're kind
of like I'm in this, like I'm I've landed on
the moon. Basically because none of them, especially to a
Florida boy, yea, yeah, like it doesn't doesn't even look
make any sense. You've got eight six story icebergs floating
by that are bigger than your boat.

Speaker 5 (02:26:19):
You're and I'm on a six hundred foot long boat,
I mean, and it's just it's just bizarre.

Speaker 27 (02:26:25):
And like you said, if you you look out across
a cove and you think is that one hundred yards
away or five miles away?

Speaker 3 (02:26:32):
And then how far do you have to go across that?
Humanity again? Oh yeah, six thousand.

Speaker 5 (02:26:36):
Miles or yeah.

Speaker 27 (02:26:38):
Yeah, it's a fascinating and it's a place, you know,
I look, like I told my daughter, it's a place
where ninety nine point nine nine nine percent of the
population will never say that, right.

Speaker 5 (02:26:46):
Yeah, it's just an amazing.

Speaker 8 (02:26:47):
Which is actually kind of good.

Speaker 5 (02:26:49):
Yeah, it's good for them.

Speaker 27 (02:26:50):
And the other thing I learned about Antarctica that I
didn't know is there not that call it whatever you want,
global change, climate change, whatever you want to call it
on some man an email, it's not occurring there. It's
because of the way the water, not yet, because of
the way the water circulates and keeps it cool. They
do not have the destruction of their ice there that
they have up in the Arctic. I'll be down because

(02:27:11):
the arctics land bound and therefore the melting is occurring
at a considerably rapid more rapid and I didn't know
that he had there was a naturalist to Yeah, explain
it to me.

Speaker 4 (02:27:20):
That's amazing that either you would think that would be
everywhere around. Yeah, I still have the picture of you up.
It's a funny you sit in the last picture of
you and it was a the boat with an iceberg
floating next to it. Yeah, it's just insane. How you
guys even got up there.

Speaker 5 (02:27:33):
Yeah, no, it was.

Speaker 27 (02:27:34):
I mean it's like, like I said you, if I
were to do it again, I would spend more time
in Argentina, which was cool.

Speaker 4 (02:27:39):
I only got to spend two days there. But uh
oh yeah, they're fresh with a bunch of money.

Speaker 5 (02:27:43):
Now you're good. Yeah, that's what I got. Twenty million
that just landed in their lap. Not sure how that happened.

Speaker 4 (02:27:48):
All right, let's actually talk about some some stuff.

Speaker 3 (02:27:50):
You're here for the utility of money at the beginning
of retirement or even the end of your working year.
It's not really sure what you mean there.

Speaker 27 (02:27:56):
Well, I think this is a good segue from what
I did. So I turned sixty a few days ago.
It was a shameless plug for my birthday, So you know,
And the way I think about this is like a
lot of people say, well, I have five hundred thousand
I've saved or whatever it is, and me and me
and the wife or me and the husband, we have
this much money, and we're gonna spend five percent of

(02:28:18):
that five hundred thousand, which is twenty five thousand a year,
and we need to spend that till where eighty five
or eighty seven or whenever we pass away. But statistically,
we know physically people begin to kind of go downhill
where they can't walk stairs, they can't get on and
off a bus or whatever they need to do to travel,
and that's about seventy eight. We know that's about the
median age where we slow down physically if we're fortunate
enough to live that long. And I think people need

(02:28:40):
to think more about the beginning years of their retirement.
So like, again, I'm sixty one, I'm not retired yet,
but I know there is a chance that sixty three
might not come, or sixty eight might not come, or
seventy two could be a problem. I hope that's not
the case, and I try to take care of myself,
but it could happen to me. So I think the
utility of money is there's more utility and your retirement

(02:29:01):
dollars early from say I'll just make this up, but
I'd say from age sixty to seventy two, seventy three,
seventy four, I think you and rather than spend twenty
five thousand a year till you're eighty five, why not say, well,
we're gonna spend thirty five thousand from sixty to seventy
two because we know we can do more. We know
we're gonna be more physically able. Because what I find

(02:29:21):
with my clients is what they whatever that age is,
let's call it seventy eight, once they get to that age,
the spending drops way off because now they're just they're
physically unable.

Speaker 5 (02:29:31):
To go do go, go, get on. What I did.

Speaker 27 (02:29:33):
I traveled for twenty seven hours. Yeah, and I'm not
doing that at eighty No, no way, I'm doing that right.
And I think the other thing to think about is
if you're still working. There's a lot of people that
come in my office and they're like, yeah, I'm gonna
retire in a year or two. I'm not taking any
vacation time because I want the money. You know, sometimes
you get paid off for your vacation days and I'm like, well,

(02:29:53):
you know, you got three or four weeks of vacation,
you're healthy, you do have the money.

Speaker 5 (02:29:58):
Why wouldn't you go now? But why are you saving
that for what?

Speaker 27 (02:30:01):
Eighty nine? When you're ninety you're going to do this?
So I think one of the things we try to be,
you know, responsible, and I think that's fair, but I
think sometimes we're overly thoughtful about spreading the money out
over our lifetimes rather than maximizing the utility, say in
those first ten or twelve years you're retired.

Speaker 3 (02:30:18):
You know, it's interesting talking to you because you and
I have had a number of conversations over the last
couple of years that we've spoken to each other. And
one of the things I do really enjoy about your
message when it comes to the way that you save
and talk about it is you talk about the quality
of life a lot. You talk about the quality of
what you plan on doing as a human being a lot,
rather than just stockpiling money and turning it into this
giant nest egg that you never wind up spending almost

(02:30:40):
as if it's a bragging point.

Speaker 5 (02:30:41):
Or an ego thing.

Speaker 3 (02:30:43):
What you're trying to tell people is, you know, while
you have mobility, while you have the ability to live
your life at the fullest, do that and then we
can figure out the other stuff when it gets to
be where you can't do that down the road. I
think that's a wonderful way to look at it, because
I don't know that financial advisors really do that.

Speaker 4 (02:30:57):
They really just talk about stockpiling cash, stockpiling wealth and
don't really give you an idea of what you should
be doing with that or how to live your life
with it.

Speaker 5 (02:31:04):
Or it's yeah, more, more and more and more and more.
Well why why exactly why? What is the utility?

Speaker 27 (02:31:09):
Like if you're if you're seventy and you're thinking, oh,
I don't really want to go on the trip because
you know, I have four hundred grand and I wanted
to stay four hundre gand because if it's not four
hunder grand, then that's somehow bad Your kids, if they
have half a brain or the half a little bit
of decency, that could care less if you leave them
three fifty or four hundred, Right, Why are you saying
I don't want to take you know, I had.

Speaker 5 (02:31:29):
I hope he's not listening.

Speaker 27 (02:31:29):
But one of my favorite clients came in today and
I was on him because he's taking a long flight
and he's flying you know, he's trying to get bulkhead,
and I'm like, why aren't you flying first class? Because
he can afford to fly first class, and he's like,
I can't do it.

Speaker 4 (02:31:43):
What do you why dude, what do you just want?

Speaker 5 (02:31:45):
As a feel like he deserves it?

Speaker 27 (02:31:46):
No, he just it's well, first of all, it's ingrained
in him. He's a great savor. He's a very responsible,
successful human being. And I think there's a little bit
of weird obsessiveness that goes into that. And what I
tell people, yeah, it's definitely a.

Speaker 5 (02:32:00):
Fear, but it's here.

Speaker 4 (02:32:01):
You definitely, if you've ever not had money, you definitely
don't want to be there again.

Speaker 5 (02:32:06):
I get it.

Speaker 27 (02:32:06):
But I arm wrestle with these clients sometimes to say, look,
you know, well you know Scott or maybe in a
few years I'll do.

Speaker 5 (02:32:13):
Well, you're seventy three.

Speaker 27 (02:32:15):
You might not get you know, remember that don't buy
green Banana's joke you always make.

Speaker 4 (02:32:19):
So keep that in mind when you're trying to measure
the utility of your existing dollars. And remember, anytime you
want good advice or you want to start a relationship
with them, it's Edgewater Familywealth dot com. You can actually
go right there to the pull down bar and the menu,
make yourself a consultation, or even call these guys. I'll
have a short conversation with you and kind of give
you an idea of If you can give them an
idea of what you need, they can give you a

(02:32:39):
bit of a plan of what can happen.

Speaker 8 (02:32:41):
Well, somebody just texted as Scout wondering if you would
be the person to talk to after inheriting some money
and looking to buy a house. Is it you a realtor,
a bank. I would say start with you, but I
don't know.

Speaker 27 (02:32:53):
I think that's fair. I think that ultimately whatever you
inherited you may use for the house. But it's good
to talk to an advice of any kind. Obviously, we'd
be happy to talk to you to find out how
much I'll make this up. Let's say, inherited one hundred grand.
Do I put the whole hundred down? Do I put
fifty over here? Do I put some in an ira?
Do I fund to call it?

Speaker 15 (02:33:13):
You know?

Speaker 27 (02:33:13):
That's those are the kind of questions a financial advisor
will answer. Obviously when it comes to purchasing real estate
and doing contract work on real estate that you want
a real estate professional for a resolutely.

Speaker 8 (02:33:21):
But with that first chunk of change, you want to
be able to see how you should divvy up the pie.

Speaker 27 (02:33:26):
Yeah, I mean we can build out examples and hypotheticals
and spreadsheets and all that kind of stuff. That that's
what financial advisors do to say this makes sense, this
doesn't make sense.

Speaker 15 (02:33:35):
Do more?

Speaker 5 (02:33:35):
Do less?

Speaker 27 (02:33:35):
If you put seventy five grand instead of one hundred down,
this is what that looks like. If you put fifty
grand down and invest fifty grand, this is what that
looks like. At least you'll have an understanding. When you
leave that moment with that financial advisor, you say, okay,
well now I know what the potential outcome is.

Speaker 4 (02:33:49):
Oh yeah, all right, And you guys have new episodes
of Aftermath coming out.

Speaker 17 (02:33:52):
We do?

Speaker 5 (02:33:52):
We have three new episodes Aftermath, do we not?

Speaker 1 (02:33:55):
Rossiausy do.

Speaker 6 (02:33:56):
I'm very excited also for another recording says that's this Thursday.
I am pumped, man, I've learned so much about money,
it's already given given me plenty of new thoughts and
new goals. To be honest with you, I'm the one
who's winning now doing aftermath.

Speaker 3 (02:34:11):
And for the record, let me tell you something. People
my age fifty eight, as we're looking at retirement a
few years, what if the case? You should certainly listen
to Scott. But I'm telling you the message that you
delivered to young people like Ross and people even younger
about starting now and not being afraid, I think is
the most important message that we deliver with your segment
is that people that are listening that are, like you know,
in that thirty to thirty five year range, and they

(02:34:32):
think that, oh, I've waited too long. My friends have
already been saving for four or five years. Why am
I even worrying about this now? I think that your
message gives hope to those people that they're not too
far behind. There's still time to save enough money to
really have a nice retirement and get yourself in a
good position financially.

Speaker 5 (02:34:47):
I think that's the super important message we deliver here.

Speaker 27 (02:34:50):
Yeah, and I'm and that's hogwash. I mean, if you're
in your thirties or forties and you're a couple of
years behind. It's you're fine, Yeah, you can fix that.

Speaker 6 (02:34:55):
You certainly don't let money conversations be like forgetting that
one co workers name, and after like two weeks they're like,
I give up.

Speaker 5 (02:35:02):
I'm just never this is money. You can still do it,
all right. What do we have for news?

Speaker 8 (02:35:07):
Well, we're gonna talk about the Senate votes on the
release of the Epstein files. Sorry about this, Scott, another
reason to eat the rich.

Speaker 4 (02:35:15):
Oh yeah, okay, don't look at me.

Speaker 8 (02:35:17):
And a new way to carry your passport. We'll talk
about that next during you heard it here first, all.

Speaker 4 (02:35:22):
Right, say little break, We'll come back and get Deb's news.
Get the hell out of here. On a Tuesday, Hey,
boys and girls, it's time to look ahead. Our friends
at TK law always want to remind us to look ahead.
Looking Ahead on real Radio tomorrow a Wednesday edition of
The Monsters in the morning. That means Attorney Ray Trendly
will be in on the Monsters. Plus they got some

(02:35:42):
cool giveaways, including some Jeff Dunham tickets. That happens tomorrow
on the Wednesday edition of The Monsters. When it comes
time to looking ahead, for you, and your family's future.
Look ahead with the team at TK Law. To plan
your family's future. Visit one firm for life dot com.

Speaker 8 (02:36:06):
Jim Cobot o'hana, how's it going on a Tuesday?

Speaker 18 (02:36:10):
Oh man, I'm gonna laugh forever about Jack's story twice
buying speakers out of the van. I sure hope you
put that segment in storage for a best of last
week talking about all the stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:36:22):
That you bought into.

Speaker 5 (02:36:23):
Yeah, it's funny, man, it happens.

Speaker 11 (02:36:26):
But would never take you for that guy anyway.

Speaker 1 (02:36:31):
Great show you guys, always love you.

Speaker 5 (02:36:33):
Helloh hello, Ra my favorite segment.

Speaker 4 (02:36:35):
I'll be reminded about any time I have to replay
it for a.

Speaker 3 (02:36:38):
Best stuff all right four seven nine one text us
seven seven zero three one.

Speaker 5 (02:36:42):
Welcome back.

Speaker 4 (02:36:42):
I'm Jim deb is right there. Jack is here, so
is Ross every buddy.

Speaker 3 (02:36:46):
Scott Brown from Edgewarter Familywealth again at Edgwarterfamilywealth dot com.

Speaker 4 (02:36:50):
Go there and make yourself a consultation. Get one of
his books. They're free. You can download it right there.

Speaker 27 (02:36:55):
Yeah, I never made anybody rich. Is one you can download.
And I got a guy which is a guy using
a financial agent.

Speaker 4 (02:37:01):
Absolutely for sure, and of course you can check out
the podcast Aftermath as well. Deb What do we have
for news?

Speaker 1 (02:37:07):
Good time for You heard it here first on the
Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 8 (02:37:11):
All Right, the Senate has passed a measure allowing for
the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files without a vote.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer successfully passed quote a unanimous
consent end quote, which means the bill will automatically pass
once it's delivered to the Senate from the House.

Speaker 22 (02:37:28):
Senate has now passed the Epstein Bill as soon as
it comes over from the House.

Speaker 8 (02:37:35):
So earlier today, the House passed the bill to force
the DOJ to release all of the Epstein files by
a four hundred and twenty seven to one vote. President
Trump recently said he'll sign the measure if it passes
the Senate, meaning the bill could become law as soon
as tonight.

Speaker 1 (02:37:50):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (02:37:51):
Yeah, Well, a.

Speaker 6 (02:37:52):
Little ironic that it's called the Epstein Bill, right, Yeah,
it's just me all right.

Speaker 12 (02:37:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (02:37:57):
Prosecutors in Italy are looking into claims Italian tourists paid
to be able to shoot at civilians in war torn
Sarajevo in the early nineteen nineties.

Speaker 5 (02:38:09):
Oh my, Yeah, Yeah, it's not good.

Speaker 8 (02:38:11):
A Milan based writers says, quote very wealthy people end
quote with a passion for weapons, quote, paid to be
able to kill defenseless civilians end quote. In the city
during the Bosnian War, the writer says, different rates were
charged to kill men, women, and children.

Speaker 5 (02:38:30):
I don't want to know that.

Speaker 8 (02:38:31):
Wow, the wealthiest tourists went on so called sniper safaris
in Sarajevo.

Speaker 4 (02:38:38):
They would walk through the cities. I read that story
a week ago and decided enough to talk about it
because it was so gd miserable that it was like,
you know, it was just one of those things. It's
so dystopian. It's so dystopian.

Speaker 8 (02:38:50):
Is there a point where you get to have so
much money that I mean, can we give them.

Speaker 5 (02:38:53):
A list of hobbies?

Speaker 4 (02:38:54):
I thought the Hostel? Is that that's what that movie
is about?

Speaker 5 (02:38:56):
I mean yeah.

Speaker 8 (02:38:58):
And then a new Apple feature, which I really don't understand,
will allow users to carry their US passports on their phones.

Speaker 4 (02:39:05):
Yeah, you can keep it in your wallet now it didn't.

Speaker 5 (02:39:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (02:39:07):
The tech company says the digital ID for iPhones and
Apple watches is being rolled out at TSA checkpoints at
over two hundred and fifty airports across the US for
use when traveling within the country. Now it adds, however,
that digital ID does not replace a physical passport and
can't be used for international travel or crossing borders. So
to me, that seems like such a big security risk

(02:39:28):
to have your passport on your phone if you can't
really use it for the international.

Speaker 5 (02:39:32):
Travel it's made for.

Speaker 8 (02:39:33):
Yeah, right, where do you need your passport when you're
traveling beside Georgia South Carolina?

Speaker 4 (02:39:38):
I think it could be used for identification, But the
phone is very secure. Your phone is secure. If you
secure your phone, the phone itself is secure. I also
heard that when you go from Massachusetts to Arkansas, that's
critical just for the culture shot.

Speaker 5 (02:39:53):
Yeah there, make sure you get to stay up.

Speaker 8 (02:39:55):
How about just coming to Florida.

Speaker 6 (02:39:57):
Yeah, you getting like stuck out in center goal because
their phone died no charger.

Speaker 8 (02:40:03):
Oh and you heard it here first on the Jim
Colbert Shaw you deb But who do we have to
think today? We have such a long list of thank
you starting with Scott Brown with Edgewater Family Wealth Today.
Just in case you missed his recap of his trip
and his financial advice. This podcast has literally already been
posted at the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 21 (02:40:23):
All right.

Speaker 8 (02:40:23):
I also want to thank you Tourny Mo de Witt
for saucing up our Tuesdays Frogger's Grilling Bar for that
twenty five dollars gift card to Dan. Congratulations.

Speaker 6 (02:40:31):
Dan.

Speaker 8 (02:40:31):
Also want to thank executive chef Michael McMullen and Adrian
from the Rosen Center Hotel. Don't forget to get your
tickets for their Thanksgiving Day feast alix their kitchen and
bar as well. And then last but never leave, Sam
Bowen and Candice Rich for running our YouTube.

Speaker 3 (02:40:46):
Chat absolutely Jack question of today, Yeah, are you in
favor of removing artificial coloring from foods? I mean, I
think most people will say eighty five percent say yes,
eighty four percent say yes.

Speaker 8 (02:40:57):
Really wait, you got it right on the money.

Speaker 4 (02:41:00):
You want to say, and he was actually off in
his original Nobody cares, pro nobody cares.

Speaker 3 (02:41:06):
It's your opinion's done. It's all done is aftermath two words. Yeah,
people said they were having a little bit of a artime.

Speaker 5 (02:41:14):
It's hard to find. We're working on trying to make
it a little more searchable. It is a problem. But
if you get to the iHeart Radio app.

Speaker 15 (02:41:18):
Is it there?

Speaker 5 (02:41:19):
No on iHeart you just where you if you go
to Spotify or whatever you go.

Speaker 1 (02:41:22):
You just got to dig for it.

Speaker 5 (02:41:24):
Get it on I Heart.

Speaker 4 (02:41:25):
It's free, so yeah, you can put it on iHeart.

Speaker 5 (02:41:29):
Can't get another for another Ross will have to figure
that out.

Speaker 8 (02:41:32):
I want to put that phrase on a T shirt.

Speaker 5 (02:41:34):
You gotta want it. Friday and Saturday.

Speaker 6 (02:41:38):
Funny Bone Comedy Club opening up for mister Wayne's Junior.

Speaker 4 (02:41:42):
Get your tickets for sure at Rosscomedy dot com. By
the way, you can check out all his dates there.

Speaker 3 (02:41:46):
Don't forget Edgewater Familywealth dot com for that pull down bar,
go and make yourself a consultation or download one of
the book Scott good teing you buddy.

Speaker 4 (02:41:52):
Likewise, I'll be I'll be able to get Jack Ross
and Scott.

Speaker 5 (02:41:56):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 4 (02:41:57):
We follow the new Trunkie. They follow the monsters in
the morning, and for us it's Tom and dam with
the corporate time and our friends from real Laughs.

Speaker 3 (02:42:02):
We'll see tomorrow at three for more of the Jim
Colburt Show. Until then, have yourself a fantastic Tuesday evening.

Speaker 8 (02:42:07):
Bye.

Speaker 5 (02:42:10):
Yep, you've got it.

Speaker 16 (02:42:11):
Toyota.

Speaker 2 (02:42:13):
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 1 (02:42:20):
Both are available for free on the iHeartRadio app.
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