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October 28, 2025 165 mins
Tuesday - What hit movies have you not seen? Could you be an ethical carnivore? Rauce Thoughts on public bathroom etiquette. We review a video about Ed Gein for WYDTN. It’s Only Money with Scott Brown with Edgewater Family Wealth on ESOP, crypto in 401k’s and structuring a happy retirement. Plus, JCS News, the Froggers Football Follow-up, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Managements for advertisers.

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

Speaker 3 (00:15):
That's right, guys. Ever we go on a Tuesday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much for
tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every single day,
and we do have a good program for you. This afternoon.
We will get you caught up on what's happening in
the world. That will do that around three twenty with
JCS News three forty five. It's the Progers football follow up.
Somebody in the audience will when a twenty five dollars
gift card to Proger's Grill and Barth. They choose the

(00:36):
right member of the show that had the best weekend
in NFL picks four o'clock hour.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
What'd you do? That's new? Well, go over Dev's choice.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
We'll move on to Jack and find out what he
has to offer back Black Coward's Trivia. We'll ended up
with It's only money and you heard it here first
plus four opportunities for you to win one thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
To my left, my lovely and very dangerous co host,
is Deb Roberts Hello, that straight.

Speaker 4 (00:54):
Bracer Retchall Comedy Alien or Hosspage. When work feels like
home and home feels like work.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
All right for seven nine four one text us seven
seven zero three one. Find is easily on social Instagram, Facebook,
at v Jim Colbert Show on the X, Just at
Jim Golbert Show All day, every day, Jim Goolbertlove dot com.
That's where you can check us out. On YouTube get
involved with our question of the day. You could also
send us a talk back if you'd like. That's easy
and free. Grab the iHeartRadio app, Go to Real Radio
and use that mike to send your comment over. We'll

(01:23):
get you on the air. You two can be a
radio superstar.

Speaker 5 (01:26):
Superstars.

Speaker 3 (01:27):
Your three o'clock keyword is bills. That's b I L
l s. Go to Real Radio dot fm and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Guys, bills,
that's the word.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
Get that cash and pay those bills.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
Pay those bills. How you guys doing a thing? Hell yeah,
all right, great, that was traumatized before.

Speaker 6 (01:47):
It's give me the word today. Man, things are going
crazy only counting. Oh my goodness, it is just crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:52):
Out there.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
Do you know Desanta said today? Excuse me, Governor Desanta
said today, Uh, they are instituting some pumps to pump
out how many gallons of water from Lake County that
fell on Sunday night, Ross.

Speaker 6 (02:04):
What do you think? The number is two million, thirty
million gallons of water.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
All of it across State Road forty six creak.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
Thirty million gallons of water.

Speaker 5 (02:14):
Which I want to thank for that fifteen minute detour
on the way home last night, because that's what you
want to do after the end of a work day.

Speaker 4 (02:20):
Yes, that's a nice little surprise.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
My wife actually sent me a picture of dinner, which
was this beautiful hash with apples and potatoes and sweet
potatoes and onions.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Oh that's so cool with pork tenderloin. It was great.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
And when she sent me the picture, I'm like, that's awesome.
And then I hit all the detours him and then
twenty one minutes later I make it into my house
and off we go.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
What What a weekend. I know.

Speaker 5 (02:43):
By the way, I want to let you guys know
there was someone in that car, yeah, that tumbled into
Delaney Park. It turns out she works at Pizza More
and she had texted her boss after she got off
work and said, I think I messed up. I need help.
He came and got her out of her car literally
right before it tumbled over when the road cave is. Wow,

(03:03):
that's the car with the hazards. Thinking that everyone was
wondering was there someone in that car? Yes, there was.
What's cool is they had to go fund me and
from the time they posted it till right now, they've
raised over eight thousand dollars, well beyond what they were
expecting to, so that that can help her buy a
new car.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
Oof goodness, that's.

Speaker 5 (03:22):
Going to be an interesting insurance claim.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Yeah, it's national news everywhere. CBS David Muir had a
report on it today. How much waterfell? I heard today.
You know we have these when you buy insurance for
your home, you know, they give you these things Like
when we lived in Geneva, we had a little pond
in our back and we had to make sure it
was it was a what we were on what they
call a five hundred year floodplaint. In other words, there
would be an event every five hundred years that would

(03:46):
bring the water up, that would test the placement of
my house. Five hundred years every five hundred years. That's
all you had to do is avoid it once in
five hundred years, right, last or Sunday's event in Lake County,
and I guess over in Titusville. I know, for Lake County,
I'm not sure about Titusville was considered a one and
one thousand year event. It was a one and thousand

(04:08):
year event, that rainfall that we got on Sunday night
in Eustace.

Speaker 5 (04:11):
And it felt that way, and you know, I so
naively thought, oh, well, you know Donnelle hu Street where
you know most it is a major thoroughfare to get
to four forty one public's loads, you know, walgreens.

Speaker 4 (04:23):
Aw that buttoned up in no time.

Speaker 5 (04:24):
I figured, Yeah, it's gonna be closed just a couple
of months and then it's going to be reopened again. Yeah, No,
it's going to be more like two to three years.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Oh my, did you hear this?

Speaker 5 (04:33):
The first three years?

Speaker 3 (04:34):
The first estimate I heard out of that when that
story like well there there, they're probably.

Speaker 6 (04:38):
Not gonna have that done by Christmas. I'm like, yeah,
Christmas of twenty twenty.

Speaker 7 (04:41):
Eight, right, what about like Pizza Mori is right there, right.

Speaker 5 (04:44):
That's right there off of Fifth Avenue. That's the business
she was.

Speaker 4 (04:48):
Where the road was watching out.

Speaker 5 (04:49):
No, that's Fifth Ave. She was taking Donnelly Street, probably
up to four forty one to get home after getting
off of work when she drove into the standing water
and realized she'd messed up.

Speaker 4 (04:59):
Got it, you got it.

Speaker 6 (05:01):
My big question is actually for Jack, yes, or and
deb Does your partner also make fire potato apple dishes?

Speaker 4 (05:13):
Dude, I come home.

Speaker 6 (05:14):
I got broccoli steamed, steamed, not like you know, no crunchies. No,
it's not baked. I got broccoli and potatoes.

Speaker 7 (05:23):
I don't I don't know what a potato hash tomato
potato thing he is.

Speaker 3 (05:27):
Yeah, hash is just you throw a bunch of stuff
together and it's smoking potatoes.

Speaker 5 (05:31):
Sweet potatoes.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
I got a lasted for that.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
Onions and apples along with the pork denderlong with some
honey mustard sauce.

Speaker 6 (05:36):
It was delicious. Bruh, so good.

Speaker 4 (05:38):
What are all living?

Speaker 8 (05:41):
That?

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Hello? Fresh life dog? Yeah? Okay, all right, that helps.
That helps if it's like pre together yeaheah, that's a
hello fresh like that's what it's all about. Right there,
you're thinking about your wife grating.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
Potatoes for thirty minutes into that thing. You're all done.
A bunch of stuff happening today. My got almighty. Acuala
said the rain from and They was considered a one
in thousand year event, which was kind of incredible. We
talked about the most you know, we talked about this yesterday.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
Ross.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
I don't know if you get the listener to the program.
Where do you think the most entitled pedestrians are in Florida?

Speaker 4 (06:12):
In Florida villages?

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Oh that's you know that came in. That was like
the overwhelming texting service.

Speaker 7 (06:17):
Guess I guess Public's and like Public's customers, like it could.

Speaker 4 (06:22):
Be a business. We were kind of okay, narrowing down.
Oh yeah, like.

Speaker 7 (06:28):
Parking lot is the most dangerous to drive through. I'm
gonna go with Albertson's.

Speaker 4 (06:34):
Oh yeah, that's god. That's a throwback. Where do you
have an Albertson?

Speaker 3 (06:37):
Are there any last Are there any Albertsons bade Lions?
I think Public's bottom, Yeah exactly.

Speaker 4 (06:43):
I'm thinking about a different place. Yeah, yeah, the past.

Speaker 6 (06:46):
Oh man, that was guttural. I'm having a weird day.

Speaker 4 (06:49):
Yeah, it's happening. It's for sure over the day.

Speaker 6 (06:51):
Anybody else wake up every now and then in October
and thing that you died back in ninety six.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
Oh yeah, daily. Yeah, you're like, I don't even know
if this is my life, wished it. There's a whole
bunch of stuff that happens there. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
So I saw something very interesting today and I want
to ask you, guys, this is also a texting service
and a talk back thing if you want to apply
it to that. Have you ever heard of the term
ethical carnivore?

Speaker 4 (07:17):
Yeah? What is an ethical carnivor what do you think
that is?

Speaker 6 (07:21):
I don't know if I've heard it, but I can
assume what it is that like they eat everything.

Speaker 7 (07:25):
No, no, I was thinking they eat but only if
it was humanly killed, kal or kosher.

Speaker 4 (07:31):
Yeah, yeah, if you kill it.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
The ethical carnivore is a challenge that I heard about
today that challenges the person to undergo the ethical carnivore
thing and you, for one year have to only eat
meat that you either kill or a choir not by.
And some people actually do it with roadkill, like they'll

(07:55):
go by and they'll pick up an animal that's been
killed by you know, car, whatever the case may be.

Speaker 4 (07:59):
And depending on how how long it's been there.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
They will literally take it home, they will dress it,
and they'll eat it well. And I want to know
what percentage of our audience can do that, Like, could
you think you could do the ethical case?

Speaker 4 (08:09):
Now? Look in my hometown.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
I think a lot of people here in Central Florida
probably are laughing at us right now, is thinking, you know,
probably twenty you know, sixty or seventy percent of the
protein they can consume every year. Stuff They've killed deer, hogs, turkeys,
you know, whatever the case may be. Bad employees, yeah,
bad employees right, all that now I had to rule
you out here. I don't think you could do that now,
No way you could do that?

Speaker 4 (08:30):
Brought you to you could do that?

Speaker 3 (08:31):
If you had to take care of your family and
kill even just squirrels in your in your neighborhood to
give them meat.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
Would you do it?

Speaker 9 (08:39):
Well?

Speaker 4 (08:39):
You you have vegans at home.

Speaker 6 (08:42):
Yeah, but they would have to adapt, So they would
have to adapt this apocalypse.

Speaker 4 (08:46):
Scenario that you're thrown down. Do you think you could
do it? I think I could not.

Speaker 6 (08:51):
Well, But if I've got you know, either die of
you know, hunger, you know, or kill a squirrel. I'm
willing to choke out a squirrel.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
That's not how you do it. It's a rule. You
don't know. People shoot them with the different stuff, you know. Nah,
that would ruin the meat. I don't. I don't want
no caliber in my thigh.

Speaker 6 (09:11):
That happens with turkey a lot.

Speaker 4 (09:12):
I'm trying to do it with my hands.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
Ye, yeah, Jackie, think you can do that? Kill, kill,
eat only what you kill at the whole cartimor.

Speaker 4 (09:21):
Yeah, I mean if I had to, Yeah, I don't
want to.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
But because you do it for a year is a challenge.
Like if somebody said, hey, look survivor well yeah, but
but just the same, just say that you wanted to
maybe try it, You're like you wanted to just kind
of adopt a lifestyle and at the beginning of twenty
twenty six January. First, you will only consume protein that
you either kill or acquire yourself, not from a grocery store. Dude,

(09:46):
I would think squirrel next, you could probably get four
two in each hand.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
Four lives.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
It's not a lot of Squirreling actually is a pretty
common protein up where I'm from. But yeah, I mean,
you could have chickens. I mean, the thing is is
you could just raise chickens and that would be it, right,
I mean that would that would be self sustainable.

Speaker 4 (10:04):
Yeah yeah, yeah, And I've seen that David Blaine do it.
You can just like rip their head off. Oh yeah,
that's how they do it. You just kind of wring
their neck. David Blaine.

Speaker 6 (10:12):
No, that's that was a guy named Carl out in
the woods, not even out in the woods.

Speaker 4 (10:16):
I think he told you his name was David Blaine.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
I don't know that trick there were Jack's neighborhood, but
every other person in jack neighborhood does to has chickens.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
I think I could.

Speaker 6 (10:24):
The first time I would do it, I would probably cry.
Jack would be right there next to me, Yeah, holding
me down, make sure that my emotions are in check
as I take the life of another squirrel.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
By the way, you can fish as well. Some me
just made a good point. You can catch your own
fish and eat fish if you'd like.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
By the way, the number one protein you should be
consuming is fish. By the way, I can back that
up with science. Yeah yeah, Voome told me that. Yeah,
you should be eating fish once a week minimum in
your diet. That's a week minimum. I'll be eating more rabbit.
I'm gonna I've seen this. It was a documentary with
bugs years ago.

Speaker 7 (10:59):
But there's a giant box and a stick and then
you catch them when they come under it, pull out
the stick in the box falls you got rabbit.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
Yeah, rabbits wild though. Rabbits really weird to cook because
it's such a lean meat. We're like, no fat on
it was he talking about Elmer.

Speaker 4 (11:12):
Fudd was.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
Very fund It was funnish, Yeah, no question.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
I'm not the most experimental, Like I don't go out
to find some rare meats and you know.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, but there's a lot of game
out there you can consume. I mean, just the idea
of killing it yourself about the is probably the biggest
hurdle for people. I mean, if somebody gave them a
piece of by Center EMU or something like that, they
probably taught try it. It's just the act of you know,
killing it, dressing it and things like that.

Speaker 6 (11:44):
I I haven't heard the word game used correctly maybe
ever in my life.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
Why is that?

Speaker 6 (11:50):
Because I've always heard it like, you know, we spit
in game, you got game like it's sense.

Speaker 4 (11:55):
A slangy word to actually hear it used it correctly.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
In the hunting world, eight miles inside of Orlando, it's
got a way different feel. Yeah yeah, yeah in downtown
it's one feel. Outside of downtown a totally different feel.

Speaker 10 (12:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
I would probably shoot something, cry and then eat it. Yeah,
you'd have to do that bad order.

Speaker 6 (12:11):
But then the second time I would take a life,
probably not cry.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
Have you ever caught a fish? Yes? Yeah, yeah, Jack,
you ever caught a fish? Yep?

Speaker 6 (12:19):
Deb Oh yeah, everybody you're can fish, but not with
a rod, bare hands like ninja.

Speaker 11 (12:24):
Nah.

Speaker 4 (12:25):
Spool a spool, sad spool? What is a spool? There's
a spool. It's like a rod without the rod. You
just threw a hook at their own line. He just
kind of wound it up yourself. Yeah, yeah, one of
those like a little wind them up, pick them up.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
Really.

Speaker 7 (12:39):
The guy in his neighborhood taught him, who was like
stepping in as a father figure.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
Yeah, yeah, it didn't even get me a rod. Back
to I was over two on the dads.

Speaker 6 (12:48):
Really, well you got.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
You didn't give me a rod, You only got me
a spool.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Yeah, what's the first dad thing? You're gonna teach your son,
you should take him fishing, like first thing. Just teach
him how to fish honestly throw stuff.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
Yeah, yeah, that's a good one. Just ROAs stuff at
me and then I'll throw stuff back at you. Yeah.
It's been going great.

Speaker 7 (13:05):
To me, like a good Puppy're about to skip rock,
all right?

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Four oh seven nine one six one four one text
Us at seven to seven zero three to one. New
analysis calls these the best movies ever. We'll have that
a little bit later. Singles in California are doing something
odd for a couple hundred bucks and poker scam neighbors
said they had no idea that it was going on.
I have an interesting question about that for you guys

(13:30):
a little bit later as well. Plus chat GBT is
doing something kind of unique as well. So we have
a bunch of stuff to get to today, deb what
do you get for news?

Speaker 5 (13:37):
We're going to talk about Hurricane Melissa unleashing its devastation
on Jamaica of Alusia County girl is arrested for a
kill list and have you ever driven drowsy? Well, we'll
talk about that and more coming up next during JCS News.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
You got it?

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Bill's is your three click heyword b I LS go
to Real Radio dot FM and send that off for
your chance at one thousand dollars. Back in a second
with more of the Jim Goldber Show.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Tuesday's just got mo Better with Ross Paget, presented by
just call Moo dot com.

Speaker 12 (14:10):
Hey, o'hanna, how's it going today on this Tuesday?

Speaker 5 (14:15):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (14:15):
I think you know by now me and fish yep,
I got no problem and actually do routinely harvest. I
actually don't fish for sport anymore. I fish to eat.
Grateful we can do that over here, bvard, I mean
just what's available to us, but chickens. Yeah, we used
to raise and harvest our own chicken. And Deb you

(14:37):
got an Amazon delivery Aloha, Helloha.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
I hope it's not fish.

Speaker 4 (14:45):
Okay, I get's chicken it is Bills? Is your three
like you?

Speaker 6 (14:50):
Word b I L L S.

Speaker 3 (14:51):
Slide over to Real Radio dot if eminson that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. I'm Jim, Jack
and Ross are right over there, and Deb has your news.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
It's time for JCS news.

Speaker 9 (15:06):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
This guy kind of priss name on everything.

Speaker 4 (15:08):
It's in my contract ed.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Here's the news on The Jim Colberg Show.

Speaker 5 (15:12):
And as always, JCS News is brought to you by
that mortgage guy Don. Hurricane Melissa is battering Jamaica. National
Hurricane Center Director doctor Michael Brennan says the damage on
Jamaica will be devastating.

Speaker 6 (15:26):
Catastrophic wind damage expected in the eyewall here, total building failures,
and the winds will be even higher up here in
the areas of high topography.

Speaker 4 (15:34):
Could have win gus over two hundred miles per hour.

Speaker 5 (15:37):
Storm surgeon the south coast could be nine to thirteen
feet with destructive waves. It's expected to emerge from Jamaica
and hit southeast Cuba overnight and parts of the Bahamas tomorrow.
But despite its kind of proximity to Florida, they're still
saying no impact felt here yea, even though it felt
like it on Sunday night.

Speaker 4 (15:55):
Yeah, no joke.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
Meanwhile, Tampa based Project Dynamo is preparing to deploy team
of US military veterans and first responders to Jamaica from Miami.
Volunteer James Judge says, this is what they do.

Speaker 11 (16:08):
Well, we got back from Ukraine, Hurricane Ean happened, and
we had boats in the water the morning after. And
that's kind of just continued from missions in Israel and
haitis in North Carolina with Hurricane Helene.

Speaker 5 (16:18):
So this deployment named Operation Cool Runnings. They will take
part in search and rescue, getting relief supplies to those
that need it, and extracting Americans. And if you'd like
to donate, or if you or someone you know is
concerned about someone stuck on the island during Melissa, and
there are several tourists that couldn't get out in time,
you can go to Project Dynamo dot net. Do you

(16:41):
guys know what they call the second tsunami after a
natural disaster? What that is?

Speaker 7 (16:45):
I do not know that that is for weak pardon
after wake, like after shop after wake.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
No, it's it's that wave of relief supplies that will
come home.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
Not literally a tsunami.

Speaker 5 (16:57):
No, But what it is is it ends up being
a tsunami of crap that a lot of times they
can't use. People will donate prom dresses, Halloween costumers.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Things they'd bring.

Speaker 7 (17:06):
The goodwill are like, oh, I'll just give them to
you know, this third world country because they've been devastating.

Speaker 5 (17:11):
They've been devastated. They can use it my broken mister coffee.
And then what ends up happening is like airport tarmacs
are just covered in piles and piles of these donated
clothes that have they're stained, they're ripped, they're inappropriate for
the environment.

Speaker 4 (17:29):
Games.

Speaker 5 (17:29):
Yeah, so a lot of aid organizations are like, no,
don't donate your old clothes and shoes, because that's another
disaster we have to try and sort through while we're
helping people get through the three basics, food, shelter, water.

Speaker 6 (17:42):
I heard today that the storm is so powerful that
it could actually rearrange the geographical uh uh, topography, topography
of Jamaica.

Speaker 4 (17:52):
That's how. That's how bad it is.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
It can literally rearrange the island so it wouldn't be
recognizable if you'd been there before.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
That's how.

Speaker 6 (18:00):
That's how powerful.

Speaker 7 (18:01):
The western side, that's the grill, that's the seven mile beach.

Speaker 4 (18:05):
It is a gorgeous beach.

Speaker 7 (18:06):
Montigo Bay right, well, Montego Bay is up on the top,
but it's going right over that one edge, going right
over the top. It's on the western side, west north
western side. On the southwestern side is negrill, right and
you know that's that beautiful beach.

Speaker 5 (18:21):
And once again, just like the World Trade centers that
I always thought I was going to get a chance,
you know, to go see Jamaica is the same thing.

Speaker 13 (18:27):
You know.

Speaker 5 (18:28):
I've never been to Jamaica, always wanted to go, but
now I know when I go, I'll never see the
Jamaica that you guys got.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
The two thirty radar showed the entire country under a
complete red before the I went over the left hand
side of the or the what would be the west
nd side of the island.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
Yeah, well, I.

Speaker 7 (18:45):
Would say later this winter and into the next spring,
they're going to need tourism. Yes they are to help,
but you know, and but there's so much to see
on that.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
Entire island, which is just a shame, all right. Closer
to home, the effects of the weekend rain rainstorm remains
in parts of central Florida. So in Lake County, some
montdra residents about forty folks had to be evacuated after
the ground around their homes and Waterman Village collapsed. One
man says his backyard now looks like the Grand Canyon.
It's literally a forty foot drop.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
That's ridiculous, it is. The aerials don't give it credit.

Speaker 5 (19:17):
They really don't, They really don't. And then over in Eustace,
your neck of the woods, Jimmy Andrew Brown used his
pickup truck to help people escape from a flooded parking lot.
He says it was pretty scary, but he didn't want
to leave anyone stranded. Brown tell's Channel nine. Some people
offered him money, but he didn't feel right taking money
for just doing a good deed, all right. Another news
at Jacksonville school for kids with special needs appears to

(19:40):
be the victim of the government shutdown. The Jericho School
for Children with Autism announced Sunday. Its temporary closure last
week is now permanent. Over two dozen students attended the
school on sprinkle Drive. Officials blamed the decision on the
shutdown that started October first. They say the shutdown led
to delays and insurance payments, which are vital to their operations.

(20:03):
The school first opened over thirty years ago.

Speaker 4 (20:06):
Oh wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
No flash in the pan, all right. And then you
get to Valusha County where one child's idea of a
joke has her facing criminal charges.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
Her response doesn't play anymore, No, it doesn't. You can't
say that anymore.

Speaker 5 (20:22):
The Sheriff's Office announced yesterday eleven year old Arianna Reid
was arrested for making a written threat to kill. Deputies
say she had four names on a kill list at
her desk at the Riverview Learning Center in Ormond Beach.
Read apparently told investigator she was just playing.

Speaker 4 (20:38):
I'm just playing.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
I'm just playing. There's nothing to see here. Now. What's
interesting to me is besides the second degree felony she's facing,
she's also accused of violating her probation.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
Oh, she was on probation.

Speaker 5 (20:50):
Not something you expect to say about an eleven year old,
twenty probation. It's twenty twenty five people. There's nothing to
see here.

Speaker 4 (20:58):
What was the probations?

Speaker 14 (20:59):
Boy?

Speaker 5 (21:00):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (21:01):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
A key witness in the case against Marcos Lopez is
facing criminal charges of his own.

Speaker 4 (21:07):
Lopez.

Speaker 5 (21:09):
Krishna Kumar di Ocaran, was a resident three weeks ago
Lake County jim for money laundry.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
Christian Carlo.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
He pleaded not guilty and was released on bond. Di
o Karan is also accused of owning and operating a
legal casinos Lopez used allegedly for his gambling operation while
he was sheriff in Osciola County. Investigators say Krishna admitted
to paying Lopez at least six hundred thousand dollars in

(21:46):
casino profits.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
I feel some tax evasion coming. I feel some tax
evasion coming.

Speaker 5 (21:55):
All right, A Kentucky man, to be clear, County sheriff
is not a low paying job.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
No, no, no, it's over one hundred thousand dollars job.
He had a good gig. Yeah, he's had a good gig.

Speaker 4 (22:06):
He just wanted more. Yeah, he's wanted more.

Speaker 5 (22:08):
Jagon But what's so interesting is for him to want
to go back to Ostiola County because he's hoping that
those years as sheriff are going to get him a
more favorable jury than say, in Lake County.

Speaker 4 (22:20):
All Right, the blue put it on rid.

Speaker 5 (22:26):
A Kentucky man who served seven years for assault after
being found not guilty by reason of insanity and the
death of a six year old boy is on his
way back to the Bluegrass state. Marion County Sheriff Billy
Woods says forty two year old Ronald Exantis shouldn't have
moved to Florida after getting out of prison in the
first place.

Speaker 15 (22:44):
Because of some stupid obscure law in which Kentucky has
that murderer came here.

Speaker 4 (22:51):
That was his mistake.

Speaker 5 (22:53):
Add Billy Woods to my list of sheriffs in Florida.
I like hearing sound clips.

Speaker 4 (22:56):
He obviously went to the Grady Judge School of pres Conference.

Speaker 7 (23:00):
Yeah, his mistake or is it Kentucky with this stupid
obscure law?

Speaker 5 (23:04):
Exactly?

Speaker 4 (23:06):
I love those guys are like by state, so damn dumb.

Speaker 6 (23:10):
Wait a minute, I'm happy that he took a break
through from chasing down them hazard boys.

Speaker 5 (23:17):
Exantus was convicted on other accounts in the attack on
the family of Logan Tipton, who which injured the boy's sister.
He moved into a Marion County location earlier this month
that was only a few yards away from the entrance
of a school. Oh man, all right, The state of
Florida is getting ready to execute it's fifteenth death row

(23:37):
inmate of twenty twenty five, Norman Merle Grimm, Junior, is
set to die today by lethal injection. He was convicted
of raping and brutally murdering his next door neighbor in
nineteen ninety eight. She came out front a broken window
at five o'clock in the morning. He offered her a
cup of coffee at his place after she filled out
her police report. Florida already leads the nation in the

(23:58):
number of executions this year, and after today's it will
start to it will still have two more to carry out.
Both of those are scheduled for November. All right, in
South Florida, a Miami jury is hearing opening statements in
the Pillowcase rapist second trial. The States case hinges on
a DNA match, and prosecutor Laura Adams says Robert Kohler's

(24:20):
is extremely rare. Here is how rare it is a.

Speaker 15 (24:25):
Likelihood of finding another DNA profile just like his one
in three hundred fifteen point eight quad drillion.

Speaker 4 (24:34):
Well you'll see that the DNA in this case is
not some smoking gun. It's just another question mark.

Speaker 5 (24:39):
Well, in the absence just sotal that guy said that
DNA match was a question mark. Well, that's his defense attorney, Jimmy,
that's his job. They're like, listen, the only evidence you
have is the DNA. It happens to be so rare
that you know.

Speaker 3 (24:53):
I don't know that there are that many. I don't
know that there are that many grains of sand. I
mean the idea of quadrillion, right, exactly, it's a thousand trillion.

Speaker 5 (25:03):
Oh, do not look at me if you're asking a
math question.

Speaker 4 (25:06):
Ew, dude, that's a whole bunch.

Speaker 5 (25:07):
That's a whole bunch. Now, in the absence of fingerprints
at the scene. Defense attorney Alex Klayman, that was the
one you heard question the viability of forty year old
DNA evidence. Is he aware they've been cracking cold cases
left and right with even older Kohler is already serving
seventeen years for another rape and is charged with rape
with a deadly weapon and kidnapping in this case. But

(25:28):
I see no prior record that would lead anyone to believe.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
Yeah, I mean when you when you read a guy's
case and you say rape like six.

Speaker 5 (25:34):
Times, right, yeah, and you're already in prison, you know.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
All right.

Speaker 5 (25:39):
RV City officially open in Jacksonville ahead of Saturday's Florida
Georgia football game. Oh, imagine what that's going to be like.

Speaker 6 (25:48):
That is redundant. Jacksonville is RV City.

Speaker 5 (25:53):
Well, Fans lined up for days to claim their spots,
kicking off a week of tailgating and tradition. This year's
matchup will be the last in Jacksonville until twenty twenty eight,
as the game moves to Atlanta and Tampa during stadium renovations.
Kickoff is set for three thirty pm Saturday at EverBank Stadium.
Is it just me or wouldn't it have been just

(26:14):
as convenient to stop in Orlando versus Tampa.

Speaker 4 (26:17):
I don't understand that.

Speaker 5 (26:18):
I don't mean either.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
I guess maybe just because it's a pro football team
and it's kind of set up to do that or whatever.

Speaker 5 (26:23):
Two college games Florida, Georgia.

Speaker 6 (26:25):
Why couldn't they play at the Orlando.

Speaker 5 (26:27):
Yeah, instead of going to Tampa.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
Another ten thousand people or so in the stands.

Speaker 6 (26:33):
James's closer to Tampa though, right, Yeah, Gainsvill's closer, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (26:38):
All right. Frontier Airlines is expanding service from Florida to
New Orleans for Marty grass season. The airline will offer
NonStop service from cities including Tampa and Miami, with flights
three times a week between February twelfth and the twenty second.
Daily flights from Orlando are also being added to meet demand.
Frontier says the goal is to make Marty Graus travel

(27:00):
easier and more affordable for Floridians and something else that's
really cool for travel. Have you guys ever wanted to
go to, like, I don't know, Japan.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
Yeah, I just saw that today.

Speaker 5 (27:10):
Have you ever wanted to go to Japan?

Speaker 4 (27:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (27:12):
Same here? But of course the flights you got to
fly to California or maybe Hawaii.

Speaker 7 (27:17):
Well, the first I don't know how good they're English
is going to be. I'm worried.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
Easy.

Speaker 5 (27:21):
The first ever direct flights between Orlando and Tokyo have
been announced. Orlando International Airport will offer NonStop flights with
zip Air Tokyo. They'll be offered in February and March.
The NonStop flights create a direct route between two popular destinations.
Can you guess what they are?

Speaker 4 (27:40):
Orlando and Japan?

Speaker 5 (27:41):
Tokyo, Disneyland, oh and Walt Disney World Resort.

Speaker 4 (27:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (27:45):
How long can somebody google and see what a direct
flight from Orlando to Tokyo would be?

Speaker 4 (27:50):
You mean time wise? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (27:51):
I think it's it's NonStop.

Speaker 4 (27:53):
I think it's like twelve hours.

Speaker 5 (27:54):
That's what I'm It's going to be twelve to sixteen.

Speaker 4 (27:57):
Brother, it's going to be more than twelve.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
Thing's gonna bite you or landed to Tokyo flight time
seventeen hours thirteen minutes.

Speaker 5 (28:06):
Because ross, how long was your flight to Hawaii?

Speaker 6 (28:09):
Like eleven ten and that's two like five hour flights,
one to California, one to I think.

Speaker 7 (28:16):
Two and a half hours is max for you. Yeah, yeah, yeah, one, Mondy,
I'll tell you for one movie.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
I'm not far from that, man. I sort you know.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
The thing is when you get on the plane, you
get settled in, you're like, Okay, this is gonna be
a long flight. It's gonna be nice, really looking forward
to this destination. Four and a half hours in you
are literally scratching at the windows.

Speaker 5 (28:33):
No, I mean it. So it is double the flight
of going to Europe, and that kind of flight you'd
have to like booking, Like when you're gonna get up
and walk around, you'd have to make sure you're wearing
compression socks because you don't want that deep bane thrombosis,
which I think would be a bigger issue on those
long haul flight.

Speaker 3 (28:50):
My daughter's fun back and forth to South Africa a
number of times, and that, my friends, is a fun ride.
Oh that's another that's like seventeen plus hours and my
other daughter went to SOUDI your that's another fun one.

Speaker 5 (29:01):
Yeah, exactly, all right. Well, a new study shows how
many US adults admit to driving drowsy to the point
where they say it impacted their ability to stay safe
on the road.

Speaker 6 (29:13):
I think the real question is how many adults responded
to that question with you said drowsy? Right, drowsy, just drowsy.
There's not a U after that. Dr right, drusy?

Speaker 4 (29:27):
I do the man. I think that's probably quite a percentage,
just a number, right.

Speaker 5 (29:31):
No, it is a percentage, percentage, a percentage. This percentage
of US adults say they've driven.

Speaker 6 (29:36):
Five sixty.

Speaker 5 (29:38):
Forty. Yeah, okay, you guys figure it out. Yeah. The
new study of four and ten adults has admitted driving
drowsy to the point where they say it impacted their
ability to stay safe on the road. The study was
done by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Triple A.
Of course, estimates about one in six deadly crashes involves
a drowsy driver. And we've all heard that experts worn

(30:00):
it could be just as dangerous as driving drunk. Experts
say to avoid the risk of drowsy driving, drowsy, try
to not drive for long stretches alone, pull over and
take a nap and switch drivers on road trips.

Speaker 6 (30:14):
Yeah yeah, man, that's and it's not that late at
night that will get you, at least.

Speaker 5 (30:19):
The monotoness of the road. The monotony.

Speaker 4 (30:21):
For me, it's that three four o'clock. That first time of.

Speaker 6 (30:26):
Getting tired yep in a day is when I am
like I should not be on the road.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
And when I would do in the morning show. You know,
we get up early, weld do the show. It's a
five hour show.

Speaker 6 (30:37):
The monsters do five hours, so you know, after the show,
you do whatever work you have to do, and then
you go to leave and go home.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
And even though I live right around the corner from there, man,
i'd get it to stop light sometimes and just feel
myself nodding off. I got a stoplight, just just dipping
my head because you know, again you get up at
four point thirty in the morning, you work and blah
blah blah blah, and you just getting tired.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Man.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
I don't know who it did.

Speaker 5 (30:55):
I remember when I used to do bar gigs when
I worked at Excel, and of course doing the morning show,
I would let the rumble strips on the side of
I four gently remind me to wake back up. Almost
else month. Oh okay, I am still behind the way.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
We need that road.

Speaker 6 (31:11):
Hypnotist hypnosis Have you ever had that?

Speaker 5 (31:13):
That is the worst. You cannot clear your eyes. There's
nothing you can do.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Like driving through the o'kallan Huschel forest years and years ago,
Like in the middle of the night coming back from
Palacta to Orlando. You know, you know, we squeezing every
moment out be driving through the forest like one o'clock
in the morning. There's nobody. It's a fifty mile run
with nobody. But the road was freshly paved. That means
the lines were like brand new yellow Man. You start
ripping through those things. Next thing you know, you've gone
thirty five miles. You don't remember anything. You don't remember,

(31:39):
not even.

Speaker 4 (31:40):
An ench of it.

Speaker 5 (31:40):
That was just an next thing.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
You know, you're in the next city.

Speaker 6 (31:43):
Yeah, that's always scary. It's the closest we'll get to teleporting. Yeah,
it is very dangerous.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
And that concludes your JCS news.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
All right, guys, load them up. We're gonna do the
Froggers football follow up. We have a twenty five dollars
gift card to Froggers Grilling Bar. If you can choose
the member of the show that had the best weekend
and NFL picks, load them up right now.

Speaker 6 (32:10):
We'll do that next.

Speaker 1 (32:12):
The Bruggers Bob follow up is next call.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Now for your chancet to we have four oh seven
nine one one four one show.

Speaker 3 (32:27):
This is where we go around the room and find
out exactly who had the best pick weekend for the
NFL Actionally, we have people on the line right now.
Some of one of those people persons is going to
win a twenty five dollars gift card to Froggers Gilling Bar.

Speaker 6 (32:40):
That's right, and it's good at any one of the
four area Frogers locations. It might be o Veto Mount Dora,
a Popka or Altamont Springs. That is where we enjoy
our Froggers food from Frogers Grill and Bar.

Speaker 4 (32:54):
And whenever the.

Speaker 7 (32:55):
Game is on, whatever game it is, you can watch
it at the Froggers. They got plenty of big screen
key and that fresh never frozen food and some drinks
too you might enjoy just drink responsibly. Froggers dot Com
for the froggers near you. Here's the deal, all right, Jim,

(33:15):
We're all rooting for you. It's become sad at this
point that you going into this week you.

Speaker 4 (33:23):
Have been in last place.

Speaker 7 (33:24):
You have not won a single week yet with the picks. However,
each week is a new opportunity to win.

Speaker 4 (33:34):
And let's see what happened this week. You got a
standings for the year. Real quick. Ross is doing quite well.

Speaker 7 (33:41):
Hey, and he and Deb I believe we're tied for
first place. I was in the second and Jim, as
we have grossly pointed out that way, bringing up the rear.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
Wait, I'm looking at my overall number here, I'm trying
to figure out where overall I'm in thirty ninth out
of forty eight people.

Speaker 7 (33:59):
Yeah, last results are not indicative of future perform or so.

Speaker 6 (34:03):
Each and every week is a week. That's right, you
could be the win, that's right. There could be an
outlier any week. You never never know.

Speaker 4 (34:10):
Deb one, two, three, four or five.

Speaker 5 (34:13):
Let's see what's your what number do you prefer? Lucky Jim,
Let's go with number two.

Speaker 4 (34:19):
Number two. It's Jimmy, Jimmy, how you doing? Oh wow,
you didn't even pick a number.

Speaker 3 (34:25):
How you doing today, Buddy're right, Yeah, I'm doing great.
How are you all doing wonderful?

Speaker 9 (34:30):
Well?

Speaker 3 (34:30):
Buddy, listen, you're on the line. You were the first chosen.
What member of the show do you believe had the
best pick weekend in the NFL?

Speaker 11 (34:39):
You know this.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
Weekend had a couple upsets.

Speaker 12 (34:43):
I know.

Speaker 6 (34:45):
That.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
Being all said and done, I gotta go with my
boy Ross because we kicked it back two years ago.

Speaker 16 (34:54):
So Ross, I got you.

Speaker 7 (34:56):
Two years ago. You picked Ross and Wine and you
are home. That holds true today.

Speaker 13 (35:03):
Yeah, we won a couple of times two years ago.

Speaker 4 (35:05):
Well, then this sounds like you're playing too often, sir.
It was two years ago, Jack, way too often. Yeah,
I agree, he said a couple of times. Now he's
on my.

Speaker 7 (35:14):
Nerves, right because guess the way the feds are listening
to your phone? Yeah yeah, yeah, he won a gag.

Speaker 3 (35:19):
Yeah, shot, Jimmy, you are a winner. Jimmy, I'm gonna
put you on hold. Jack will hook you up with
a twenty five dollars gift card to Frugger's Drilling bar.

Speaker 4 (35:30):
Ross destroyed it.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
Not only did he win our weekend like our little
thing here, he won the entire thing this week. That's right,
eleven correct picks, and last night he was tied with
our boy Tom Van. You canna hear him every day
at seven to nine with Tom and Dan. He tied
for Tom Dan going in and then by two points,
by two points, forty five to forty seven. Ross was

(35:51):
the victor and took down the winner, took down the
winnings this week.

Speaker 6 (35:54):
And the good news is the biggest news out of
this victory is that I finally have a gym that
likes me, and you are welcome. Always select me, always
pick Ross. I always feel confident overall season.

Speaker 4 (36:10):
I'll die on the silk. Here's the thing. It's a
blessing and a curse.

Speaker 6 (36:14):
It's a blessing to be blessed with the passion of
being a sports fan. But it's a curse to look
the way that I do. Let me tell you something,
I look like a twink.

Speaker 3 (36:23):
This radio show is destroying this NFL pick thing this year. Yeah,
I mean Ross comes in first, deb comes in fourth
with you have ten correct or eleven shit ten correct?
And then Jack also had ten correct, so we came
in first, fourth and seventh. That was all points and

(36:43):
then we go down to the meet and I came
in like thirty sixth with eight correct this week. So
although only three games off the first I mean, you know,
one hundred people had eight right. But man, what a
week and nobody's even close. The guys are with the
sports station, no idea what they're doing.

Speaker 4 (37:00):
You can maybe give him some tips for next week.

Speaker 5 (37:02):
I offered to let him, you know, cheat off of
my picks.

Speaker 4 (37:05):
But what you just said is a nuke.

Speaker 3 (37:11):
Privut only got six right Beyonki and Kravitz together, I
think barely.

Speaker 4 (37:14):
I didn't even get as many as Rosted.

Speaker 6 (37:16):
Wow.

Speaker 8 (37:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (37:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (37:18):
If you guys remember the last time we were talking football,
I basically no, I did. I guaranteed a Baltimore Ravens win.

Speaker 4 (37:26):
Oh yeah, yeah they won. I also walked that talk
with my own money.

Speaker 5 (37:30):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 14 (37:31):
You know what.

Speaker 4 (37:31):
The funny thing is, I forgot. I meant to change
that game and forgot to. So I lost because the
changing your name out the air. But you already had
your other pick in.

Speaker 3 (37:40):
Yeah, but I could, I could have changed the fact
is I just didn't go. I totally forgot about it
and went and did not do that.

Speaker 6 (37:46):
Uh, the one match that everyone got wrong. Houston versus
forty nine ers.

Speaker 4 (37:51):
Yeah, yeah, nobody saw. And that was a coin flip
if I remember correctly.

Speaker 6 (37:56):
The odds coming out of that game was straight up basically.

Speaker 3 (37:59):
Also nobody. I did you see Miami playing as well?
As they were gonna blow Miami beats Atlanta. We thought
Atlanta was gonna be okay.

Speaker 6 (38:05):
I had a five team parlay going in the Sunday.
It was a hardy one because your boys last couple
of bets was looking good.

Speaker 4 (38:12):
So I kind of threw a little bit more mustard
on that thing.

Speaker 6 (38:15):
I went four out of five, Atlanta broke the parlay?

Speaker 5 (38:18):
Wow?

Speaker 4 (38:19):
How much was that worth?

Speaker 6 (38:20):
Not crazy amount? Because they were all the dominant teams
at home. I say dominant, but good teams at home
against bad teams, And that was my recipe for the parlay,
and it did not work. I was so close. Wow,
I say close. It was a blowout. What the hell happened?
And now I'm still.

Speaker 3 (38:38):
And the crazy thing is is like going into that game,
so when when you bet the parlays right, so you
picked four game, four or five games right, and you
picked them to win. So when you get to that
fourth game and it's only the last game left. You
can actually put more money on that last game to
up the value of the bet.

Speaker 6 (38:54):
I mean, you could. You can bet on anything at
any time. You could even cash out that bet if
it was you had a five team parlay and you're
going into that last one but you're like, I don't
like it anymore.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
Offers you a payout so you don't. If so, let's
say the hit is two K, they will offer you
like maybe six or seven hundred to take that so
in case you win.

Speaker 7 (39:13):
But yeah, back in the day the game started, all
bets were off.

Speaker 4 (39:17):
It's like a roulette, you know. You know, once there's
no more bets.

Speaker 7 (39:21):
Okay, But now with a I and the judge odds
adjusting on everything happening in the game, you can can
you can bet continuously throughout the game. As events unfold
on the game, the odds change, and if you are
doing very well in the bet, it will offer you
the hard dragon will offer you to buy you out

(39:42):
of your vet bet. It'll say, hey, you can cash
out now for this amount.

Speaker 4 (39:47):
Wow. Wow, that's cool. I had a good gambling weekend.
Well good for you, dude. Yeah, yeah, I think if
that's what any new dad should be doing.

Speaker 6 (39:56):
Yea, yeah, so especially the ones that just bought their wife.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
Oh oh, we forgot to get something from Jimmy.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
Can we bring Jimmy back?

Speaker 3 (40:04):
Yeah, Jimmy was online two got Jimmy.

Speaker 4 (40:09):
You just want a Froggers gift card? Anything you want
to say?

Speaker 11 (40:12):
Oh, you know it all.

Speaker 6 (40:17):
It's three rivets for three times winning this game with Ross.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
There you go that hold all I accidentally hung up
on your all right, well, thanks Rogers, we appreciate that.
Frogger's yllin Bar. Of course, Thursday will do the Froggers
Football forecast. That's where we'll make our choices, and then
of course next Tuesday will award get another twenty five
dollars gift card to Froggers Gillin Bar. Let's take a
little break back in a second.

Speaker 4 (40:38):
What'd you do? That's new in depths choice of ed Gean,
the real Life leather.

Speaker 5 (40:41):
Face and Joy.

Speaker 1 (40:44):
This has been the Froggers football follow up.

Speaker 2 (40:46):
Find the Froggers near you with Froggers dot com.

Speaker 4 (41:02):
Hey guys, I hope you guys doing well.

Speaker 17 (41:03):
So the fight back home to East Africa Tanzania is
twenty two hours so you got to come up with
a different plan. You gotta fly out from here somewhere
in Europe, spend a couple of days, and then fly
back home and do the same thing in return. There
is no way you're sitting in a plane for twenty
two hours and still be saying thanks bye bye.

Speaker 18 (41:21):
I never heard the term ethical carnivore, but it's interesting
you bring that up. I've been a vegetarian for twenty
something years now. I don't eat red meat, fish, or chicken,
but I do eat eggs and dairy. But I've always
said that I don't eat meat because I don't have to.
You know, I can just go to the grocery store
and buy whatever I need. Now, if my only choice
for eating that night was to get naked and pounce

(41:41):
on a deer and rip its throat out to eat,
you bet your bippy, I do it. You bet your biffy, bitby,
bet your bippy.

Speaker 4 (41:51):
I've not heard that before. Really, I don't know what
a biffy is. Oh, you give me back that you
said it wrong again.

Speaker 3 (41:59):
Bunny, by the way, is your four o'clock keyword? That's
m O n e y. Just slide over to real radio.
Dot FM and send that on for your chance in
a thousand bucks. Guys, Remember, if you're playing the game,
got to turn your phone on. Uh, you got to
turn it up so you can hear it. And I
don't care what it says when it calls no caller
ID a number you don't recognize. You got to pick
it up. That's how they tell you you've won money.
Is the four o'clock keyword good luck. We hope you

(42:21):
win for sure. Welcome back on Jim, There's deb Hell,
l Jack and Ross.

Speaker 4 (42:24):
It's true. Let's do what you do that you need?

Speaker 9 (42:31):
What did you do?

Speaker 12 (42:31):
That's what you do?

Speaker 4 (42:33):
That's what I need.

Speaker 5 (42:41):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
Closman Law k L A U S m A in
law dot com office is right there on winter Park
four oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen car crash
called Klausman. We'll talk to Glynn on Thursday for Colbert Court.
What you do That's new. Every Tuesday here on the
show at four o'clock, one of the members of this
show will choose something for the other members to watch,
read or listen to. We will do that, we will
reconvene discussed that and then move on to the next member.

(43:03):
It is Deb's choice. This Deb's choice this week, and
we'll find out what Jack has to offer here in
one second.

Speaker 5 (43:09):
Yeah, well, I know it's a Netflix show that's on
right now about ed Gean.

Speaker 6 (43:14):
More of a dramatization than it's like a mini series
kind of thing in that in that documentary, it is
a dramatization. Yeah, dramatization dark Fargo, Yeah, Argo, dude.

Speaker 5 (43:24):
But as it turns out, his story is a lot
darker that I wouldn't want to extend it into anything
over the nineteen minutes that really I assigned. So it's
ed Gean the real life leather Face. It's a little
over nineteen minute video on YouTube that gives really the
background into ed Gen's story, how he became where, how
he became the monster that he became. What I thought

(43:45):
was interesting was that such a diminutive mousey man ended
up inspiring three of the biggest horror films of generations.
You could say, you're.

Speaker 3 (43:57):
Right they were generationally. They were Psycho first in the sixties,
then you had a Chainsaw Masker in the seventies, and
then Silent of the Lambs in the nineties, or Silence
of the Lambs in the nineties.

Speaker 5 (44:07):
And what I didn't realize is that Psycho was written
by millwa like a what did they call him, a
pulp fiction writer. Yeah, yeah, yeah, from Milwaukee who had
been following the ed Gen story. I've always just given,
you know, a credit to Hitchcock for Psycho, not realizing
it was a book first it was. Yeah, I did
not realize for that book call Psycho. Yeah, I did

(44:29):
not realize that. And I also did not realize it
was someone who was, you know, tied to the Edgeen story,
who had followed it from the beginning, and that truly
he was the inspiration for that character.

Speaker 13 (44:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
Yeah, So I thought it would be the most palatable
way to ingest anything of ed Gen, would be no
more than nineteen minutes.

Speaker 7 (44:46):
Yeah, yeah, I'm not a fan of too much of
this stuff, but I agree with you, dad, it was.
I think it's worthwhile because understanding where so much pop
culture has been derived from, and especially with the new
Netflix series, to kind of just get a encapsulation of
who this guy was.

Speaker 4 (45:03):
I didn't know.

Speaker 7 (45:04):
And oh my god, his mother got away with everything
she did that she could unleash this, whether it's unwittingly
unleash this into the world, but go up, you know,
throughout her life and then just move on to the
next plane without any connection to the horrors that would follow.

Speaker 5 (45:27):
And it's so interesting because her religious fanaticism was all
in a way of trying to save her sons from
the evils of the world, and instead she ended up
creating in the world.

Speaker 4 (45:37):
Amazing.

Speaker 3 (45:38):
Yeah, he was he And the thing that was really
scary about ed Deen is like when you watch any
of the footage from the early court covers, because they
did do some of it when he was leaving coming in,
he was a complete psycho, like he is a He
was completely checked out psychosis, did not understand what was
going on, didn't understand an agent. I mean, he was,
of course of considered insane. They wouldn't even put him

(46:01):
on Troy they did, but you know, he was considered insane.

Speaker 5 (46:04):
In the state of Wisconsin. Said yeah, yeah, yeah, we're
good with that.

Speaker 3 (46:06):
Yeah yeah, yeah, because he was just that guy who
did the most egregiously awful stuff and would have no
reaction to it. I mean, no remorse, no nothing. Matter
of fact, I think they stopped him at one point.
From now, I didn't see this in this thing. But
they when they were in court, they stopped him one
time from looking at the photos because the judge realized
he was getting aroused.

Speaker 4 (46:28):
That part watching the crime photos, that.

Speaker 5 (46:30):
Part I didn't know that. The big takeaway for me
is that one of the lead investigators, Shlay I believe
it was his name, beat ed Dean's head up against
a brick wall, something you wouldn't hear about, you know,
until he confessed and then died several months later of
a heart attack that his friends had always attributed to
the horrors that he had seen. Because again we're looking

(46:51):
at this from the lens of twenty twenty five, but
back in the nineteen fifties, there wasn't a place in
pop culture culture of any kind, right, or someone of
your neighbors who didn't look like Satan to be doing
these kinds of acts.

Speaker 3 (47:04):
And this is fewer than ten years outside of World
War Two. And I heard a number of people that
would that that looked at this case said that the
stuff reminded them like what was happening to bodies, The
mutilation was what they saw in war.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
Because it was being done they thought.

Speaker 7 (47:17):
They go into the house, thought it was an animal
dressed hanging from the beam, and they realized it was
a headless woman.

Speaker 6 (47:23):
Yeah, it was the It was actually the mother of
one of the detectives, was it not.

Speaker 5 (47:27):
It was one of the sherif's deputies who would stopped
by his mother's hardware store, and that she wasn't there.
It was it was him going hmmm, this is interesting
to make that first phone call that ended up just
unraveling the whole case, and for him to die really
in obscurity just goes to show the.

Speaker 4 (47:43):
Eighties, by the way, in the eighties was in the
eighties four.

Speaker 5 (47:46):
Which goes to show that it's like, Okay, we already
got your character. We don't need to learn about you anymore.
We've already got Psycho, leather Face and Buffalo Bill.

Speaker 3 (47:54):
And something the guy said at the end of this
I found very fascinating. He talked about the psychology of
why people like that become heroes or become.

Speaker 5 (48:01):
Like these well, which it's the fascination and.

Speaker 3 (48:04):
The victims get lost, Like he robbed forty graves all
over the entire state. Forty graves he robbed, So he
dragged forty women, children, women, whatever, out of their graves
back to his house and that's why he had a
multitude of body parts around his house.

Speaker 4 (48:20):
And you know, of course furniture made from the skin
and bones of women.

Speaker 5 (48:24):
Yeah, so he was trying to make his.

Speaker 4 (48:25):
Own suit of a woman because his mom.

Speaker 5 (48:27):
Wanted to become his mom. Yeah, a la psycho, you know,
right up there with you know, sealing off his mother's
room and leaving it exactly as she had left it,
and again, you know, killing his brother. And you guys
think about that. His brother is found with a blow
to the back of his head, but the coroner still
rules its smoke in elation.

Speaker 4 (48:46):
And we don't know that it was in debt. It
doesn't feel like it was.

Speaker 5 (48:50):
Yeah, I'm gonna say forensically.

Speaker 6 (48:52):
So yeah, I've always found the fascination not the fascination,
but like the it's not celebrating, but it's a morbid
curiosity that turns out legit forever and infamous pieces of
cinema and content. Uh having, Like, do you guys know
what inspired Freddy Krueger. It was a it was a

(49:14):
news story about Asian people dying in the middle of
their sleep.

Speaker 10 (49:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (49:18):
Wow, so like to see just to find out the
inspiration of basically every cornerstone of the horror genre that
we know it today, at the very least, you know
the slasher genre. It's so cool and fascinating to find
out the origin.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
Yeah, you're right, and you know you you watch Texas
Chainsaw right, and the guy who played the guy was
the six foot six, three hundred pound monster of a dude, right,
and he's like, you know, running crazy killing people with
meat hooks and chainsaws, and the real guys five to
five about fifty.

Speaker 5 (49:53):
Right on a good day, a little bitty dude, Yeah, exactly.
I mean the kind of guy you'd see what looking
around town and you'd assume, you know, probably got his
butt beat in school, and then find out he was
bullied so bad that once he graduated high school, he
ran back to mommy and never socialized again.

Speaker 4 (50:12):
That's right.

Speaker 5 (50:13):
Think about what that means at age eighteen until you're
forty nine fifty and you've never socialized again.

Speaker 4 (50:19):
But then dropped out and he becomes a handyman.

Speaker 7 (50:23):
Yeah, and he actually you know, starts working, so he
did have to interact with people later on, but in
person he did that.

Speaker 5 (50:29):
They said he was even kind. Someone just texted us
at seven seven zero three one and said their grandfather
lived in Plainfield. Honestly, no joke. It made for a
really odd Thanksgiving dinner in family reunions.

Speaker 7 (50:40):
I wonder if his is where that is is still
around Yeah.

Speaker 5 (50:44):
Oh yeah, he's looking at Plainfield.

Speaker 6 (50:46):
Yeah, well he's looking at the bird in the middle
of the table, going yeah, I remember that.

Speaker 3 (50:51):
Uh No, I'm talking about like, obviously the house isn't
going to be there anymore, but the area of where
it is, I wonder if that's been developed over.

Speaker 5 (50:57):
Plainfield has a current population of nine and twenty four people,
So I'm going to go out on a lemon say no.

Speaker 4 (51:03):
It's probably still there.

Speaker 5 (51:04):
It is still there, the town of plain Field is.

Speaker 19 (51:06):
Well.

Speaker 3 (51:07):
The interesting thing, we were watching this BTK thing the
other night, right, the BTK killer's daughter did a documentary, right,
and she goes back to where the house is where
she grew up and where you know, where they live
while this was going on, and it's been bulldozed, right,
And as she's there driving by, you know, and filming
this spot, two of the neighbors come out and start
screaming at her, going, you know, I'm sure this is

(51:30):
great for your movie, but You don't have to live
with this every day. You don't have to live with
people driving by our house every day, getting out, blocking
the road, taking pictures, going onto the property and trespassing.
We live with this every day of our life. Where
you were and once your old man did, don't drive
back here as a to make your little movie and
then haul ass and then have us in the entire

(51:52):
neighborhood have to deal with the history of your old man,
and then by making the movie, bringing more publicity into
it and only increasing the amount of tame.

Speaker 5 (52:00):
And yet it's egregious that when she has this this
meeting with him, the first meeting since his arrest, and
he realizes that she's trying to find out, you know
what other grizzly things have you left behind, and he
accuses her of using him to get fame. It's like, no,
I've already been famous thanks to you, and I never
asked for that same. Yeah, So it's interesting too. At
the end, I thought of you, Jack, when the guy

(52:22):
and you two ross, when he brought up the fact
of you know, it's a shame that we have to
be fascinated with the people who perpetrate the worst acts
among us because most of us, to be honest, we
wouldn't see a biography about one of the victims.

Speaker 3 (52:35):
I'll say something cold. I mean, this is cold but truping.
But the victims have no story. Their story is they're
a victim. I mean the you know, the person taking
life or doing the deed, right, you know, doing some
of those horrible things. And by the way, also the
nature of the crimes, like, yeah, you can, you can
also romanticize a bank robber. We've done that before with
John Dilloner and Pretty Boy Floyd and stuff like that.
But those are just crimes against an institution. These are

(52:57):
crimes against other people and the worst of that. I
think that's what also drives some of that morbid curiosity.

Speaker 7 (53:03):
A woman owning a hardware store is not outside the norm, right, yeah,
you know, a guy.

Speaker 4 (53:12):
Right SAMs outside the norm, which makes it interesting.

Speaker 5 (53:14):
Right exactly. And I think the victims, you know, I
agree with you, Jimmy, they don't have the same story.
They do have a story. But the fascination I think
with humanity remains in what in you broke? What in
you can we study? What in you can we try
to avoid in the future. I think that's the fascination.
They're so far outside of humanity that they almost become.

Speaker 4 (53:36):
Yeah, and the scary objects of fascination and the scary.

Speaker 3 (53:39):
Partner's no answer. We have a bunch of these people
we've studied, there's no answer. There's no way to predict
what they're going to do.

Speaker 5 (53:45):
Well, I mean, in some ways animal killing. I mean,
thankfully they're able to see serial killer the habits that
start from when their children and Jeffrey Dahmer, you know
what he did in his parents thought well that's kind
of weird.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
Yeah, But I mean he targeted a certain group of people,
and they're differently than John Wayne Gasey. What I'm saying
is is you don't know that. I mean, he may
show all the science, peeing, the bed, killing animals, starting fires.
Those are all signs that you could have somebody with
that sociopathic serial killer gene. But what I'm saying is
is the nature of doing that doesn't direct you to
what kind of victims are going to happen until they

(54:16):
start happening. But you, whether it be Dahmer, Gacy, whomever.

Speaker 7 (54:19):
You also need someone to identify the signs and then
seek to correct that by getting help as opposed to
his mother in at Gean's mother, which was she was
just on her own mission and she it was more
like adding fuel to the fire it was already burning
in this guy.

Speaker 3 (54:40):
Well, a good pick. It was a lot of very interesting.
I don't think get wrapped up pretty well nineteen minutes.
I'd read a lot about Gan before this. I thought
it was pretty pretty comprehensive.

Speaker 5 (54:48):
It was interesting. This is actually the first deep dive
into Edgeen I've ever done.

Speaker 4 (54:52):
Have you seen the Netflix show?

Speaker 5 (54:53):
I haven't, Oh yeah, I haven't. And this was the
other reason why I signed this, because you guys have
talked about it being kind of a dreams amatization, and
he's kind of, you know, portrayed a little bit more
generously than what he really was in life. And I
think if you really want to see what the red
real ed Geen was like, watch these documentary clips instead
of the Netflix.

Speaker 6 (55:11):
Of those dead blue eyes.

Speaker 4 (55:12):
He never blinks.

Speaker 6 (55:13):
I'm throwing this out here, saying anything about ed Geen
in the Netflix show being as generous, that's a stretch
for me because they paint him like a weird out.

Speaker 3 (55:22):
Yeah, but he never has conversation with girls or any
of that stuff that never happened. No, but like him,
even the idea of him having a normal conversation with
any human being outside of his mother would be completely
out of realm. Like he couldn't go, he wouldn't go
on a date, He would not do that, he would
not socialized.

Speaker 6 (55:37):
He never did that even then. Like it's just like
anybody's wearing skin in a show. I'm like, they're giving him,
They're giving him too nice.

Speaker 4 (55:46):
Of a treatment. All right, Jack, what do you have
first next week?

Speaker 13 (55:48):
Uh?

Speaker 7 (55:48):
Well, recently this past week and opening weekend for the
Springsteen Deliver Me from Nowhere film.

Speaker 4 (55:55):
I went to see it.

Speaker 7 (55:56):
I absolutely loved it, and I'd love for you guys
to go see it. But that's a big ass Yeah. Instead,
is it bombed?

Speaker 4 (56:04):
It did not bomb. It was made nine millions.

Speaker 5 (56:08):
Did you realize that the lead character who's from the
Bear did not know how to sing correct, did not
know how to play the guitar?

Speaker 4 (56:18):
It bombed?

Speaker 5 (56:19):
So no, I mean, have you seen him sing?

Speaker 4 (56:21):
Yeah? No, I heard the whole thing.

Speaker 5 (56:22):
Literally, I saw a clip of it. I'm like, oh,
so they dubbed in Bruce Springston and he's lip sinking
and then when I heard him say no, In fact,
I didn't know I wanted to take the project project
because I didn't know how to do any of those things.

Speaker 7 (56:33):
In fact, that was why. Oh and now now I
should go for the longer one because Jim's being a.

Speaker 4 (56:38):
Dick about it.

Speaker 5 (56:38):
No, don't punish the rest of us being a.

Speaker 4 (56:40):
Dick about it bombing. Yes, it's just fact. It's just fact.
So we should have dropped that movie on Hiroshima.

Speaker 7 (56:47):
It performed less than anticipated, does not refer to the
quality of the film at hand, and you cannot judge
that until you see a film. All right, Oh you can.
I think you're kind of judging, very judging. Yeah, anyway,
So what I have.

Speaker 6 (57:03):
Assigned is a fifteen minute I believe it's fifteen minutes yep,
fifteen minutes fifty seconds interview with the BBC Radio two
where they interview both Springsteen and Jeremy Allen White in
the same they even talk about his singing and wondering
like who is it? But you get a little Springsteen's pass,
a little about the movie, and a little about Jeremy

(57:24):
Allen White.

Speaker 4 (57:25):
So it was kind of a nice way to encompass
all three topics.

Speaker 5 (57:29):
Right, nice, I learned that was their first meeting ever.
Which one in London? Wasn't Springsteen performing?

Speaker 7 (57:36):
Well, that's the first time he saw him play live
and it was in front of ninety thousand people. Yeah
at Wembley yep, yeah that's not biggie Yeah yeah, just
opening gig.

Speaker 4 (57:47):
You know what he didn't do, He didn't bomb all right, nine.

Speaker 3 (57:50):
One six, one four to one. Text us at seven
seven zero three one back in a second More than
Jim Colvert.

Speaker 6 (57:55):
Show US proudly sponsored since day one by Glenn Klausmanlosmanlaw
dot com. Hi.

Speaker 2 (58:12):
Tuesday's just got Mo Better with Ross Had presented by
just call mo dot com.

Speaker 9 (58:24):
May I make a suggestion, please, sure, when you're talking
about about things in the middle of the day, what
you do, which you're so interesting, You talk, you know,
for quite a while about him, but you don't intersperse
what you're talking about. So those of us who enter
your show in the middle don't know what you're talking about.
Could you kind of try to intersperse the what you're

(58:46):
talking about conversations?

Speaker 4 (58:49):
Appreciate that.

Speaker 3 (58:52):
So there's this guy named Ed Gee yeah g e
I n emphasis on the yeah that segment What did
you do That's new? Is you know one of the
members will choose something first all to watch. Deb chose
a nineteen minute YouTube short about ed Gean and him

(59:12):
being the inspiration for the movie, or the character leather
Face and the Texas Chainsaw movies, plus other characters and
movies Psycho and Silence of the Lamps.

Speaker 4 (59:21):
Yeah, that's what we're talking about. And so each week
we've reviewed something that one of us will suggest and hey,
have that conversation.

Speaker 7 (59:30):
That's right, by the way, Sorry, Jimmy, someone email about
the link itself. All of them are listed at Jim
Culbert live dot com. Click on what you do That's New?
There is a list with links for everything we've reviewed
since twenty eighteen.

Speaker 3 (59:46):
Yeah, for sure, some crazy stuff. Yeah, like yeah, just
Ross's Choices alone. Yeah, just we'll get out there. Yeah,
that shouldn't be legal.

Speaker 4 (59:54):
We let get a little weird. I'm still shook man,
Yeah about what substance? That movie won't leave you. I
told my wife about it, we were gonna watch it,
and then said it did I watched Weapons last night.
Is that the first time you've seen it?

Speaker 5 (01:00:12):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:00:12):
By the way, welcome back. I'm Jim, there's deb Jack
and Roster here as well your four o'clock.

Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
He word his money.

Speaker 13 (01:00:17):
M O n E.

Speaker 6 (01:00:17):
Y watched Weapons last night.

Speaker 4 (01:00:19):
What did you think? I thought it was great? Yeah,
really good? Right, really good.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
Wow, that's it's a room divider, though there are no
great area people for Weapons.

Speaker 4 (01:00:28):
They either hate it or they love.

Speaker 6 (01:00:29):
It really liked it, loved it, loved the vehicle, loved
how it storted told its story.

Speaker 4 (01:00:35):
But there here's a thing.

Speaker 6 (01:00:37):
If I would have watched Weapons before I saw the
movie The Substance, I would have been kind of a
little sweaty.

Speaker 4 (01:00:44):
Yeah, would have been on the edge of my seat. Yeah,
what's gonna happen?

Speaker 3 (01:00:47):
The one with the parents. All of the scenes, Yeah,
all of the scenes that was brutal.

Speaker 6 (01:00:53):
What I'm trying to say is is that I would
have gotten shook by the movie Weapons if I hadn't
seen the movie The Substance before it. No image will
ever make me so easy. It prepped you for that, dude,
Is it really that bad? Now I'm a different person.

Speaker 7 (01:01:09):
Yeah, he wanted to show me something. He goes, Yeah,
I want to show you something from the Substance. I'm like,
don't because I plan on watching it. He's like, Oh,
you shouldn't watch it.

Speaker 4 (01:01:19):
Are you trying to protect us?

Speaker 6 (01:01:20):
All?

Speaker 4 (01:01:20):
Dad understand what's happening with him in this movie.

Speaker 6 (01:01:24):
It's it feels you guys, remember the movie The Ring
When you watch that video of that girl going out
of the well and then seven days later you died,
YEA yeah, yeah, I feel like this is the real
The Ring video.

Speaker 4 (01:01:37):
You're going to die seven days afterwards.

Speaker 14 (01:01:40):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (01:01:41):
And also I want to point out to all the
people who saw the movie the substance, how my friend
just brought this up to me. How much can you
stomach art imitating life when you know that Demi Moore,
who got nominated for the Oscar lost to the younger actress.

Speaker 4 (01:01:55):
Ooh girl, don't get me started. Really, gods, Jack.

Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
I think it was the first time in like ninety
years or something that a horror movie had been nominated.

Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
For for Horror Picture.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
Well, I think Best Picture Silence of the Lambs. Oh
I swept in ninety one. First Timent one Yeah, yeah,
that was the first time of horror one.

Speaker 4 (01:02:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:02:15):
That was actually one of only five or six movies
in history to win every major award. It's a perfect movie.
I have, and I agree it's perfect. Silence of the
Lambs is a perfect movie.

Speaker 4 (01:02:24):
I have a hard time calling it a horror film.

Speaker 3 (01:02:27):
Why because you think it's a thriller, Because it does
when the bad guy's a real dude.

Speaker 4 (01:02:31):
Is that why?

Speaker 6 (01:02:32):
No, it just feels more like a heavy detective crime thriller,
you know, more so than than what is getting thumped
out his day.

Speaker 4 (01:02:41):
Silence of the Lambs. Yeah, I agree, you don't think
it's a horror movie. There's weird.

Speaker 7 (01:02:45):
There's a lot of movies like I recently watched The
Devil's Advocate, and that's like that's considered horror.

Speaker 5 (01:02:51):
Well, did you not see like current times? In The
Devil's Advocate when Keanu Reeves asks, you know, his dad
why the law, and Pacino answers the laws and everything? Right,
you know, you yes, the laws and everything. If the
Devil We're going to get into any industry, you'd become
a lawyer.

Speaker 4 (01:03:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:03:09):
And so it's just that, you know, it's their horror
and they're suspense, and that's more of a thriller suspense.
You know, it's it's dark topics, but it's not that
slash them up.

Speaker 4 (01:03:23):
It's horror. Right that I associate with horror.

Speaker 5 (01:03:27):
Psychologically, they call it.

Speaker 3 (01:03:28):
Body horror is what they call that. I mean, it
actually has a turn, like like if you saw The Fly,
you know, with Jeff Goldbloom, that's considered body horror because
of what happens to the body. Like it's it's not
necessarily a horror movie, but it is. I mean, yeah,
the Fly is kind of a bad guy, but not
really a bad guy. It's not built to be that way.

Speaker 4 (01:03:47):
I guess I could put it, at least.

Speaker 6 (01:03:50):
For me, if someone were to ask me to define
the two between just a horror film and a body
horror film. A horror film, I'll get scared by seeing
the blood hit.

Speaker 4 (01:03:59):
The wall out of nowhere.

Speaker 6 (01:04:00):
A body horror film will just show what caused the
blood and not cut away and it zooms in and
it starts to slowly zoom in and you see every
thing just cut away.

Speaker 4 (01:04:15):
Please. Yeah, that's body horror. I just went and looked
at this up.

Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
According to Wikipedia, horror is a film genre that seeks
to elicit physical or psychological fear and its viewers. Horror
films often explore dark subject matter and may deal with
transgressive topics or themes. Broad elements of the genre include monsters, slashers,
and the supernatural.

Speaker 4 (01:04:39):
So I think the monster part of it.

Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
I mean, if it's a human monster, if it's not
your Freddie or Jason or or Michael Myers, that that's
the horror.

Speaker 4 (01:04:47):
That's horror as I see it. And I kind of
I agree, though, I.

Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
Mean, I would still considered Silence of the Lambs a
horror movie, even though you're right, it probably doesn't apply
that it's probably a psychological thriller.

Speaker 4 (01:04:57):
I'll say this, it's got horror elements.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Night vision scene, Oh my god, one of the one
of the greatest ever that that's very horror movie esque
to me. That I don't know that I've ever had
more anxiety in a single moment during a film than
I did during that scene when the lights go out
he puts on the glasses. That is one of the
greatest of all sounds. Oh yeah, sounds of the threty

(01:05:21):
year old movie.

Speaker 6 (01:05:22):
You haven't seen that, isn't that one of great one
of life's great presence?

Speaker 4 (01:05:29):
You haven't seen Passion of the Christ? You have seen
men black? I have what's the worst of those? Like
what if it got one?

Speaker 19 (01:05:40):
There?

Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
With you.

Speaker 6 (01:05:43):
Is there a universal movie that I don't care who
you are or where you're from, will elicit that you do.

Speaker 14 (01:05:51):
I think it is.

Speaker 3 (01:05:51):
I think it's Forrest Gump. You can see Forrest Golf.
You haven't seen Forrest Gump. It's almost anti American Back
to the Future.

Speaker 4 (01:05:57):
Those were others.

Speaker 5 (01:05:58):
I'm sorry, you've got one on there that you've ever
seen that's pretty American.

Speaker 4 (01:06:01):
You're one hundred percent right?

Speaker 5 (01:06:02):
Which one?

Speaker 4 (01:06:03):
Titanic?

Speaker 5 (01:06:04):
No, Apollo thirteen?

Speaker 4 (01:06:05):
Oh wait, wait, you never say that.

Speaker 6 (01:06:08):
Just keep guessing because Titanic, right, yeah, that's actually Apollo.

Speaker 5 (01:06:13):
That wasn't it a ship that sailed from? Yet Irish ship?

Speaker 4 (01:06:17):
What else sailed from? And you haven't seen Titanic?

Speaker 5 (01:06:20):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:06:21):
I was bit you watching Homistage just a different era.
There's one similarity. If there's a boat, what is that?

Speaker 3 (01:06:31):
What is the number one movie that if you haven't seen,
people will look at you like you're completely nuts.

Speaker 4 (01:06:36):
I think you just said it Titanic right now?

Speaker 6 (01:06:39):
In twenty twenty five, no way, the movies came out
like five separate times in the last twenty five years.

Speaker 4 (01:06:45):
They re released one of the big things.

Speaker 3 (01:06:46):
They re released it in the theaters they're actually about
to do that to another movie for Halloween.

Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
I give remember what it is. They're putting that back
into the theaters. Are the Sinners?

Speaker 6 (01:06:54):
Oh yeah, Center Centers is coming back into the movies.
And you saw that Centers a great Yeah, that's a
very old time. Yeah, that's a fun watch, easy watch.
Everything will be an easy watch for the rest of
my life. After watching The Substance.

Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
Have you seen the That's not necessarily the truth? Have
you seen the Terrifier movies? Yes, I see of them.

Speaker 6 (01:07:13):
I saw the first one, dude, and they are Yes,
are they gory and grotesque and they are like borderline
snuff films.

Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
But it's like cartoonish. That's why you get away with it.
That's how I get away with it.

Speaker 6 (01:07:24):
This one really is wrapped up in a real story,
and it's how it's shot.

Speaker 4 (01:07:27):
It's how it's shot.

Speaker 6 (01:07:29):
And then the movie does this magic trick where you
start to lean into the story and you love the
message that it's giving you, and then it just please
cut away.

Speaker 4 (01:07:38):
Stop showing that. Stop. But one of the best movies
I've ever seen. Don't watch it, okay, Jim? Have you
seen Avatar?

Speaker 7 (01:07:46):
Yes, that is the worldwide gross two thousand and nine movie,
the biggest grossing movie of all time. I thought it
was great and that was almost three billion. Yeah, yeah,
I thought it was really really good. Okay, Avengers Endgame.

Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
Yeah, I've seen that. Yeah, Avengers Endgame for sure. The
second Avatar, The Way of Water, I have not seen that, neither.
That came in third. Yeah, then it's Titanic.

Speaker 4 (01:08:12):
No, I haven't seen that.

Speaker 7 (01:08:14):
James Cameron has three of the top four highest grossing
movies of all time. Got a boat, right, It's hard
to tell by those words.

Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
I don't know. Star Wars The Force Awakens two billions.
That is that part of the original three? Guess what?

Speaker 7 (01:08:30):
Yeah, I think we'd all have a hard time identifying
which one that was.

Speaker 4 (01:08:34):
Yeah, if it's not part of the original three, I
haven't seen it.

Speaker 6 (01:08:37):
Yeah, yeah, it was the newest old one. That didn't help,
it did not. I love the fact that you knew
how dumb that was. You're like, that didn't help anybody.

Speaker 4 (01:08:50):
I meant to say, it's the it really, it's the
oldest new one. It's the first last one.

Speaker 11 (01:08:55):
All right?

Speaker 4 (01:08:56):
God still Episode seven is just Star Wars. I gonna
tell you. Avengers movie Spider Man, No Way Home. I
haven't seen that? Is that the cartoon? I don't even know?
Two billion dollars, you know. I also stumbled across looking
what about the Go Ahead?

Speaker 8 (01:09:14):
No?

Speaker 6 (01:09:14):
Looking for a really interesting list, trying to figure out
what is the number one movie.

Speaker 4 (01:09:19):
I have figured it out. I'm not going to be
on that list.

Speaker 6 (01:09:23):
Jack is looking at box office numbers. I am looking
at I asked AI, what is the most seen movie
of all time? The most watched movie of all times?
So that's streaming. That's about of Bang about a Bone? JACKA,
is that it there?

Speaker 19 (01:09:43):
It is.

Speaker 4 (01:09:45):
The most seen movie.

Speaker 6 (01:09:46):
If you have not seen Wizard of Oz, you should
expect that you haven't seen.

Speaker 2 (01:09:52):
That.

Speaker 7 (01:09:53):
Definitely is one, and you figure it's something they put
on TV and they play it every year. That's why
I just for exposure, I figured that might be it.

Speaker 4 (01:10:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
Well this list just really is my Yahoo says the
the best movies this, this says, let me see how
they put this together?

Speaker 4 (01:10:08):
Number two, by the way, Titanic. Oh really, yeah, it says.

Speaker 3 (01:10:11):
A recent analysis seeking to determine the best movie of
all time attempts to answer a few of these questions.
Perhaps others The analysis, conducted by pop culture website pixel Parade,
utilized several metrics to rank the fifty greatest films ever made.
They included award nominations, award wins, inflation, ingested box office tallies,
critical reception, and audience reception. All of that put together,

(01:10:34):
they thought the best film ever made was it's already
been said today. Ooh, there go Citizen Kane.

Speaker 4 (01:10:42):
Godfather.

Speaker 3 (01:10:43):
Godfather is the answer. Godfather is the best movie ever
made according to this, what do you think too?

Speaker 4 (01:10:48):
Is Godfather too? It's actually not even in the top. No,
it's a.

Speaker 6 (01:10:54):
Shindler's list, all right, I was not close.

Speaker 4 (01:10:56):
Then he goes, uh, here's one. He goes, Lord of Lord.
Oh yeah, you have it. Don't watch it. Don't watch it.
It's so good, it is great, but don't watch.

Speaker 3 (01:11:05):
It's if you if you're already in a bad mood,
watch it and it'll just take it to that next level.

Speaker 4 (01:11:09):
But then if you're in a good mood, don't watch it.

Speaker 1 (01:11:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:11:13):
I had to walk out of it. I couldn't take
it anymore.

Speaker 6 (01:11:15):
If you wake up and you were feeling incredibly indifferent,
shind there's the list time.

Speaker 3 (01:11:20):
Yeah, yeah, I'll do the top ten year real quick,
and then we'll go to break. It's a Lord of
the Rings, Return of the King, Parasite.

Speaker 4 (01:11:26):
Oh that was good.

Speaker 3 (01:11:27):
Lord of the Rings, The Two Towers, Star Wars Episode four,
A New Hope, Godfather too, Dark Knight Saving Private Ryan,
Silence of the Lambs. And I think this is junk
and I'll tell you why. I'll tell you why this
is got opinion. This is a complete junk list, and
I'll tell you why. Nowhere near this do you see

(01:11:48):
the Green Mile? And nowhere near this do you see
shaw Shank. And both of those are I mean shaw
Shank I think was just rated by was it Afi
or whatever as the number one move of all time?
Green Mile isn't a those are Those are perfect stories,
are perfect stories.

Speaker 4 (01:12:05):
I'll give it to Shawshank first of all. Dark Knight.

Speaker 6 (01:12:07):
You think any of those should be the top ten
more than Dark Knight? I love a both Man movie. Yeah, man,
you think so. Dude?

Speaker 3 (01:12:13):
You believe that a Batman movie should be in the
top ten before Shawshank and Green Mile?

Speaker 4 (01:12:18):
Dude, that's your problem. You're looking at it just like
a Batman movie. No, I'm not looking at it like
a Batman. They are calling it. You don't even call
it by its name. It's a Batman movie, it's it's
a superhero movie.

Speaker 14 (01:12:27):
Dude.

Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
If if you walked up to any movie fan and
you went like, hey, you see that Batman movie, and
then they would be like, you mean The Dark Night,
they would correct that.

Speaker 6 (01:12:37):
W ready yeah, Coco number fifteen, Oh there you go,
Hell yeah, hell yeah, also Dark Knight at least for
I'll speak for my generation here, as if they voted
me in Massive lesson learned. When Heath Ledger got cast,
everyone was so pissed wrong about that casting. So it's
like a weird ASoP fable history with that film or

(01:12:59):
like never judgeable look by its cover because he did
such a good job and everyone was so mad when
his name got cast.

Speaker 3 (01:13:05):
As the joke, Yeah, Jack, your favorite number twenty Dumb
and Dumber pulp fiction. You've never seen dumb and dumber,
which is another one of those things where you're like,
goett on, miney, how does that even happen.

Speaker 5 (01:13:13):
You that one?

Speaker 4 (01:13:16):
Now?

Speaker 6 (01:13:16):
I know, I just found out my favorite number one?
You haven't seen dumb dumber? Right where the where the
beer flows like wine?

Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
Do you haven't. Oh no, any of these clothes, pretty bird.
Holy crap.

Speaker 5 (01:13:32):
Off.

Speaker 4 (01:13:33):
Come on, dude, I plan on watching it one day.

Speaker 1 (01:13:35):
Yeah, you have to.

Speaker 4 (01:13:36):
It's too good. It's really dumb of you to not
see it. It's so good. It's actually dumber than that.

Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 17 (01:13:44):
Ah.

Speaker 4 (01:13:46):
Have you seen Dumb and Dummer?

Speaker 5 (01:13:47):
Oh yeah, absolutely?

Speaker 13 (01:13:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:13:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:13:48):
Who hasn't had Dedloves?

Speaker 3 (01:13:49):
I mean debloves like you like you like that kind
of comedy too, right, that kind of silly comedy like that.

Speaker 4 (01:13:56):
I love that stuff. All the stuff from Money Python
can't get better. I mean money.

Speaker 6 (01:14:01):
I would consider money Python really really smart. I would
consider Dumb and Dumber all sugar.

Speaker 4 (01:14:06):
No brakes.

Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
So it's like Airplane, man, I think Airplane is still
the greatest comedy of all time.

Speaker 4 (01:14:12):
Like there's there. I just I have to see Dumb
and Dumber. I saw it like two or three years ago.
I don't remember it being very very punny. I just
remember it.

Speaker 6 (01:14:21):
Being risk after risk. Do you want to hear the
most annoying sound in the world.

Speaker 4 (01:14:24):
Yeah, you know it's that. How do you know that's
gonna work? Dude? Have you seen Airplane before when I
was a kid? Yeah, dude, you have to rewatch it.
It goes so hard. I surely will.

Speaker 6 (01:14:35):
Yeah, you have to, dude, I'm serious.

Speaker 4 (01:14:37):
I thought that was that was naked gun. You're right,
you're right, Okay, thank you, thank you. Don't call me again.
Don't call me, Shirley Man.

Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
All right, very good, all right for seven nine one
text us at seven seven zero three one. Got a
few minutes left for your keyword money m O n
e Y. Slide over to real radio dot FM and
send them on for your chance at one thousand dollars
back in a second with more than gym.

Speaker 4 (01:14:57):
Coward show s.

Speaker 13 (01:15:01):
Hey, jcscrew what's going on? This is Ray Mellow heading home.
I recently saw Weapons on HBO Max and I thought
that movie was brilliant. I love the fact that the
movie touched upon each of the main characters and how
they all connected to the plot. Amy Madigan's role as
the villain in the movie was brilliant. I cheered at

(01:15:24):
the ending of the movie. And one of the movies
that I never watched until recently was Rubblecock.

Speaker 12 (01:15:29):
Hey coming back at you, Oh gosh, making me laugh
so hard, bro Jack, you have to have to watch
Dumb and Dummer.

Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
Bro that's it.

Speaker 12 (01:15:38):
Nothing else enough said Alohak.

Speaker 19 (01:15:41):
Yeah, happy day Covert and Company. It's concrete, Mike. And
this is another message directed towards Jack Bradshaw. How have
you not seen Dumb and Dumber? How have you made
it through your wife without seeing this? Dude? You will
pee your pants watching this movie. Damn two knuckleheads. They're

(01:16:04):
so stupid. Do yourself a favorite, go home and watch it.
Smoke a joint, watch the movie.

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
You're gonna watch, Jack, You dumb me. There's a chance.

Speaker 7 (01:16:15):
Oh, I'll watch it when it's on one of the channels.

Speaker 4 (01:16:19):
Again. You should that where that comes from. Yeah, dude, so.

Speaker 7 (01:16:23):
You're telling me there's a chance that I've been using that.

Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
Quote for You've probably used a whole bunch of dumb
and dumber quotes without knowing it.

Speaker 4 (01:16:31):
Have you ever said kick his ass? Sea Mass? That's one.

Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
There's so there's literally so many scenes in the movie, Harry,
who's in the movie, dude that you'll think is very funny.
Do you remember I was Karen Duffy They called her
duff from MTV back in the day. Okay, I don't remember.
She's in the I think I heard I think it
was duff uh. She was in the movie as well.

Speaker 6 (01:16:56):
I expected the Rocky Mountains to be a little rockier
than this.

Speaker 4 (01:17:01):
All right, welcome back on, Jim. There's dead Hello Jack, Yeah,
and Saws Daddy's.

Speaker 19 (01:17:05):
Here as well.

Speaker 4 (01:17:05):
According to the map, we've only got four more inches.

Speaker 3 (01:17:11):
The very last scene, the very last scene, is when
you the Hawaiian Tropic bus stops by. That's like one
of the best things that really sums up the entire
thing right there. You know, I'll quickly share what I
just shared with you. On the break, there's a Nick
schwartzon who's a comedian. He is talking about Dumb and
Dumber and it kind of went viral talking about. The
most important scene in Dumb and Dumber is when Harry

(01:17:34):
looks at Lloyd and goes, man, I'm sick and tired
of being sick and tired.

Speaker 6 (01:17:38):
Yeah, and he expresses that he's done being a loser.
And from that moment on, every joke hits because you're
rooting for him.

Speaker 3 (01:17:46):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, brilliant part. You're right, all right, seven
to seven zero three one. Your four o'clock keyword is money.

Speaker 4 (01:17:53):
Money.

Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
You only have a few minutes to get over there,
but you can still do it. That's real radio out
of him sending off. So I saw a thing online
today I found kind of interesting. You know, Jack, I
know that you have people to come out on trigger
treat Ross. Are you planning on handing out candy? Are
you guys going to be out of the house on
Halloween night?

Speaker 4 (01:18:07):
I think we will be out and about trying to
wain a costume content a very nice cool dep your
handing out candy?

Speaker 5 (01:18:13):
Then, yeah, we hoped to.

Speaker 3 (01:18:14):
I don't know if I will again because we you know,
we kind of live so far off the road that
it'd be kind of weird for people to walk down
our driveways. We probably won't be doing that. But you know,
I saw something online today I found very interesting and
I've never known this to be the case.

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:18:28):
And it was basically a woman who was asking people
to bring their families to this particular place to trigger
treat because the people there would be very appreciative of that.

Speaker 4 (01:18:40):
Are their nursing home is the answer? Yea.

Speaker 3 (01:18:42):
And they said, to believe it or not, that a
lot of people don't know this, that nursing homes are open.
Those people will sit out and they'll give out candy.
So if you and they say that, they're so thrilled
as you know, as when kids come in to hand
them candy. And I guess a number of neighborhoods or
institutions our programs will bring them by as a you know,

(01:19:03):
as a program for not only for the kids, but
also for the people in the nursing home. But it
was a really impassioned plea for that to happen, and
I found it very genuine and cool. And I never
thought of that before. That would be actually kind of
a cool thing.

Speaker 4 (01:19:16):
I like the idea. I mean, it's gonna be weird.
It's gonna be weird. Not even chocolate.

Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
Getting a catheter, yeah, oh cool Worthers again, no other werethers.
I got one of those strawberry ones that's wrapped up
and looks like a strawberries.

Speaker 3 (01:19:32):
Yeah, that old dentist candy whatever that one is. How
the dentist gives you the worst possible candy for your
for your teeth.

Speaker 4 (01:19:39):
Before I make jokes, let me say this is great, wholesome,
love it.

Speaker 3 (01:19:44):
And I knew you were gonna be in today, and
I know that you actually have experience with nursing home,
so that's why I brought this up.

Speaker 6 (01:19:48):
They would they that is going to work when it
goes well. But the times that it does not go well,
when it rains, it's gonna pour.

Speaker 4 (01:19:57):
Oh really, Well, it's.

Speaker 6 (01:19:58):
Just they're gonna listen, there's some old people in those
retirement homes that forgot.

Speaker 4 (01:20:03):
Who they are, right, Yeah, the man just pooped himself.

Speaker 6 (01:20:06):
Then you're knocking on their door going give me candy,
they might just sock you right in the mouth, like
come right after.

Speaker 4 (01:20:13):
Well, they're not.

Speaker 3 (01:20:14):
Gonna put the curmudgeons out there, and I mean they're
gonna put the nice ones out there.

Speaker 4 (01:20:17):
Obviously.

Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
If you have somebody who can't stop touching himself, they're
not gonna roll that dude out.

Speaker 4 (01:20:22):
In the hallway. Do you think they have a rating
scale for their curmudgeon or not?

Speaker 3 (01:20:26):
But you know, the look you working in there, I mean,
you knew who the good ones and bad ones weren't
I did.

Speaker 6 (01:20:31):
Oh wait, okay, that's what I'm saying. The staff would know.
But that's the thing is that there was good ones
on one side, bad ones on the other side. And
if those kids zig instead of zag and they're on
the side, that's like, uh, you know, wake up screaming cabbage.

Speaker 4 (01:20:45):
Yeah, you know it's a candy guntlet. That's gonna be
a different Halloween.

Speaker 20 (01:20:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:20:50):
Did you ever see that when you were there? Were
you there that long?

Speaker 11 (01:20:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:20:53):
Did you see people trigger treating?

Speaker 9 (01:20:54):
That?

Speaker 4 (01:20:55):
Not trig or treat?

Speaker 6 (01:20:55):
But wait, I like, I remember working Halloween one night
and they like played spooky music and everyone got candy
and stuff. That's cool, they celebrated, but I cannot. Also,
one of the most terror I've ever felt was working
there because old people are creepy.

Speaker 4 (01:21:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:21:12):
You ever look down the hallway and see an empty
wheelchair if someone's using a bathroom?

Speaker 4 (01:21:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:21:16):
Not good.

Speaker 4 (01:21:16):
And you're like, all right, I'm clocked in right now.
Whose is that?

Speaker 6 (01:21:20):
It's spooky? Yeah, retirement homes or spooky? Did how long
did you work there? A couple of years? About a
year and a half two?

Speaker 3 (01:21:27):
It's uh my uh My wife's grandmother was just put
in a home because she got to the point where
she needed medical you know, medical help kind of not
around the clock. She's not you know, she's not indigen
mighty needs living, yeah, assisted living? Right, and then we
are we know somebody else is actually considering that Now
that's a big decision for families. Man, that's a that's
a really I mean, you have to have a talk

(01:21:48):
with the person, and that person is like, you know,
if they're living with you, you know, you're having that conversation. Hey, look,
you I'm not gonna be around every day like like
I am now, but you're also going to make new
friends and have cool stuff to do.

Speaker 4 (01:21:59):
You just won't be sitting around. It's it's a it's
like having a conversation with a kid.

Speaker 5 (01:22:03):
Yeah, you're gonna love camp.

Speaker 6 (01:22:06):
Called shuffle Board. Yeah, it's cool, You'll you'll love the game.

Speaker 4 (01:22:11):
Yeah Jack.

Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
Did you guys ever consider that with your mom or
was it always going to be that she was gonna
be with you until until she couldn't well?

Speaker 4 (01:22:19):
Because I mean, you're the only person I.

Speaker 7 (01:22:20):
Know that really dealt with that, right, And and it
got it got tougher towards the end because of her health,
because of her health and her needs, you know, as
her needs kept, you know, as her health deteriorated, her
needs grew, and then we just felt overwhelmed, specifically my wife,
Like I'd come to work and my wife is home

(01:22:40):
and you know, and basically some of these problems seem
more than she could handle, needing an expert, and that's
when we had a friend of ours say, you need
to check out hospice. And people had this in mind that, oh,
hospice is when someone's like on their way out, that
they just take that.

Speaker 4 (01:22:59):
But that is not the case.

Speaker 7 (01:23:02):
Hospices, uh, for people towards the end. But if you
have a condition where you know, you could be on
hospice for years. But they were so helpful. They brought
in a hospital bed and they had people come visit
and it was three days a week and then it
was every day and it changes.

Speaker 4 (01:23:20):
It depends on the need.

Speaker 7 (01:23:21):
Yeah, right, and so, but it was have It just
took a whole level of responsibility off your shoulders. Worry
that you're going to do something wrong that's gonna, you know,
hurt the person.

Speaker 4 (01:23:33):
You're kinda yeah for sure, you don't or scare them,
you know, because I mean, what a change of life.
That is.

Speaker 7 (01:23:39):
One of the hardest things I had to do was
it was we were my mom was in the hospital
and this was also towards the end. She was in
the hospital but being transferred to a rehab facility, which
is also connected to assisted living there, and when we
brought her there, she did not want to be there.
She was in tears begging me not to leave her there.
Oh man, I had no choice. It was like the

(01:24:01):
hardest thing I had. She yeah, when she was when
she was able. Did she sit out and give out
Halloween candy when you when she was living there at
the place, at your place, at my house?

Speaker 9 (01:24:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:24:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:24:11):
We always tried to have someone on hand because my
daughter's whether they had plans to go out trick or treating.
I'm usually get only getting home about seven thirty or
so after the show, So my mom would definitely be
one to kind of sit.

Speaker 4 (01:24:24):
Out front and do that. That's cool, man, Yeah, that's cool.
She appreciated it.

Speaker 7 (01:24:29):
And what my mom reminded me something that I didn't
even know happened, was total like oblivious oblivious to it.

Speaker 4 (01:24:37):
But you know the whole needle in a candy bar.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah that happened to me. Did it really?
I got a candy bar with it? No, get some
insulin or something. I tried it, knew I loved her.
It was in our neighborhood and we had to call
the police and stuff. I hain't no idea. It's like,

(01:24:57):
how did you find it? Didn't do it? I yeah,
I did, but my or I don't know how my
mom saw it, but the I remember seeing the TV
movie and I always folloween.

Speaker 6 (01:25:08):
It was just one of those things they made up,
but it was actually something that happened to me that
I just blacked out because I guess I was little enough.

Speaker 4 (01:25:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:25:17):
I think it was Halloween three because I remember a
scene from that movie where a girl bit an apple
and she pulls the apple out of her mouth and
there's a one of those eraser like when the old
safety razor blade right between her tooth cutting into her gum.

Speaker 4 (01:25:30):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Halloween is here.
Blood corn guns for the seven dud one six one
four one again.

Speaker 3 (01:25:41):
You can text us at seven seven zero three one.
Singles in California are paying to do something very unique.

Speaker 4 (01:25:48):
I'll tell you what that is. Supposed to have a
keyword coming up right now.

Speaker 10 (01:25:55):
Jimmy, you don't have to watch out for toilet paper.
This actually happened to us. And keep gone watch out
for kids that put tar on your windows.

Speaker 4 (01:26:08):
You don't put candy out.

Speaker 10 (01:26:09):
You don't got a light on. You're getting something and
you might not find it until later.

Speaker 5 (01:26:14):
Then you got to clean it up.

Speaker 6 (01:26:17):
That's real.

Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
Dock, great Mike again.

Speaker 19 (01:26:21):
I just went through in home hospice care with my
mother dying of stage four brain cancer, and if they
were a blessing, they called it end of journey when
they came in and they came daily to help bathe,
change and clean my mother, which was a massive relief

(01:26:42):
on us from everything else we were still trying to
deal with.

Speaker 4 (01:26:49):
All Right, welcome back to me.

Speaker 3 (01:26:49):
You jump over show Real Radio one zero four point
one year, five o'clock.

Speaker 4 (01:26:52):
He wearn his dollar d O L L A R.

Speaker 3 (01:26:55):
Slide over to Real Radio dot FM and send that
off for your chance one thousand months. Remember, if you're
in the game, pick up your phone, turn it on,
and answer it when it rings, even if you do
not recognize the number or if it says no caller ID.
That's how they tell you won. You got to pick
up that phone for sure. Dollars the word guys, go
get that money for sure.

Speaker 4 (01:27:12):
I'm Jim. There's deb Hell. Jacket's here ye, and so
is Ross. Believe in yourself.

Speaker 3 (01:27:17):
We'll have some thoughts in about an hour or so. Also,
it's Only Money Is Today. Scott Brown will be in
the six o'clock hour as well. We do trivia at
five forty five. All that's coming up here on the
Jim Colbert Show. Well, I mean out in California, we
know things are different, right yes?

Speaker 4 (01:27:30):
Oh yeah? Have you ever you've been in La before? Right? Yeah,
you've been in La Jack, because I was with you.
Have you been in Los Angeles?

Speaker 19 (01:27:37):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:27:38):
Los Angeles, I would say is one of the more
interesting places I think I've ever been. It's really it's different,
there's no question. I mean, you can have a bunch
of different kind of experiences from one block to the next.
You know, you can be on the Walk of Fame,
which is one of the most p ridden. I mean
it's one of the worst things. It's so terrible.

Speaker 4 (01:27:59):
And then you know, and you'll be.

Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
Walking in to be Smoke Chop, T shirt shops, smoke shop,
T shirt shop, and then it's Beverly Hills and then
it's like it's Rodeo Drive, Like it just goes from
nothing to everything and then back.

Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
It's a really weird spot. You agree with that, Jack, Yeah, Yeah,
it's odd. Right. Yeah, So in Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (01:28:19):
This particular group has say has said that they believe
that traditional dating is dead. Yeah, the idea of traditional
dating is dead. And what do you think they think
caused that pandemic?

Speaker 4 (01:28:33):
I'll say tender online dating.

Speaker 5 (01:28:36):
Social media capitalism.

Speaker 3 (01:28:38):
Now that capitalism is what they say killed dating because
dating is wrapped up and where are you taking me?

Speaker 4 (01:28:43):
What are we doing? How are you know?

Speaker 3 (01:28:44):
How much is this going to be? And the focus
this is what they're saying. Deb devs a side eyeing
you here a little bit. This is what they say here, right,
Like I don't.

Speaker 5 (01:28:52):
Because we've always had capitalism, but I think the difference
is when your date needs to be instagrammable.

Speaker 7 (01:28:58):
That's what changed it may so yeah, but we're also
in late stage capitalism, so.

Speaker 4 (01:29:03):
Yeah yeah maybe so yeah, you're right, this is that
five point zero version. Yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:29:08):
This group, though, this woman has started this thing and
she says she has to remind people, No, this is
not a cult stage one reminding somebody it's not a
cult bad sign, right, nor is it a seance a
bad sign too. But on a chilly October ninth a
passerby peeking through the window of this place may think
that that could be going on. It's a new dating

(01:29:31):
idea and it's called the Fields. Oh what do you
think the fields is? What would they do during the fields?
What would And by the way, people pay two hundred
dollars a session for the Fields to come in and
be part of the fields. And it's just like it sounds,
feels fields like if you're up in your fields, you're

(01:29:53):
talking about your feelings.

Speaker 5 (01:29:55):
No, see, if there's someone in the room you vibe with.

Speaker 6 (01:29:58):
I believe that is going to be the case. But
how you do it is by sitting across each other
and staring no words.

Speaker 4 (01:30:06):
That actually is part of it. That's part of it.
And then you can do it. Yeah, and then you
go ahead.

Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
I was going to say, now, I was just going
to make the joke about holding hands. This is California. See,
you'd have to keep them apart so that you'd be
able to feel like your energy feel that's actually I
don't want to mess up my aura, right, I don't
know your energy.

Speaker 3 (01:30:28):
This is a singles mixer one that employs various touch
based techniques aimed at getting participants to learn more about themselves,
chip away at their defenses, and maybe just maybe fall
in love along way, what these guys do for two
hundred dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:30:47):
You go into a room with other people.

Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
It's dimly lit with electric light, and you find somebody
as you are trying to kind of like what Devil
was saying, just you feel like you're I guess attracted
to somebody.

Speaker 4 (01:30:59):
I don't think they point out partners or anything like that.

Speaker 3 (01:31:02):
And basically you get into deep eye contact, you spiritually
center your conversation and lots of touching. I mean lots
of touching what they want you to know. So let's
say you and I were doing it, deb right, We're
gonna do the fields thing, right, Yeah, there's no consensual there.
So this, by the way, part of this whole thing

(01:31:24):
is having the conversation about about is it the consent
of the touching. But you would have a conversation and
then as you're having the conversation, you would run your
hand along every curve of the other person's body, being
respectful to the special areas, but you would do that
and you would basically trace their body with your fingers

(01:31:46):
as you talk to them about what they liked in life,
what their feel what was driving their existence, and things
of that nature.

Speaker 5 (01:31:53):
I'd charge more than two hundreds for that.

Speaker 4 (01:31:55):
I would like to see a demonstration of this.

Speaker 5 (01:31:58):
Ross you and Rob Gon do it right now, sit
with you, Jim Ross and Jimmy in each other's eyes.

Speaker 3 (01:32:05):
It says, if you're looking through it, you may think
it's a little strange. But to Hoffman, she has a
master'sy in psychology with a focus in spirituality from Columbia University.

Speaker 6 (01:32:13):
Right A, Right, you majored in psychology, but I focused
in spirituality.

Speaker 4 (01:32:19):
Way, the second part isn't a.

Speaker 3 (01:32:21):
Thing, She says. There's a method to the madness. By
nudging people out of their heads and into contact, she
hopes to also nudge them past their limited beliefs and
rules around dating.

Speaker 4 (01:32:33):
For some it's worked.

Speaker 3 (01:32:34):
In other words, the idea that you're terrified of touching
somebody in the first eight or second date or third date.
You don't know how to breach that idea of taking
a relationship from conversation to physical And I mean physical
doesn't mean sex or anything like that, just the idea
of touching each other. I think the first glimpse of
that for most dating is what holding hands, right yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:32:54):
Or the good night kiss at the door.

Speaker 3 (01:32:56):
Sure, putting your arm around somebody at the movie theater
or something like that, or dinner as you're walking you
put your arm around their waist or whatever has to
guide them down.

Speaker 4 (01:33:02):
The road because they don't know how to walk. I'm joking.
Have you ever done that?

Speaker 6 (01:33:06):
What you ever stare into your partner's eyes? But not
like for like an absurd amount of time. Have you
stared into your partner's eyes for like ten minutes straight?

Speaker 4 (01:33:15):
Oh no, not for ten minutes to do whether you
will get raw? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:33:18):
Yeah, that's and that's what they're talking about. One thousand
percent true. Anybody who doesn't believe me, go home tonight,
get weird. Look at your partner for ten to fifteen
minutes straight in the pupils.

Speaker 4 (01:33:30):
Man, that's a game changer. That's a weird one.

Speaker 6 (01:33:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:33:33):
Yeah, stuff happens. I don't get it either. That's exactly
what they say here. It says h the beginning of
level two, they lay out the corporates for the mess
that is modern dating. Among them, she says capitalism, which
has encouraged people to bring transactional attitudes to dating technology
like you guys are saying, it has eroded key interpersonal
skills essential to forming lasting relationships, and pop culture, which

(01:33:55):
has sold people on unrealistic expectations of romance. She's trying
to break all this down with what Ross says. I mean,
can you sit and stare into your partner's eyes for
ten minutes and just don't say anything.

Speaker 6 (01:34:07):
I can tell you exactly what the experience was for me.
The first couple of minutes, you are secretly in your
head going like this is so ridiculous. That's about your
first two to three minutes. Then the next like two
to three minutes, you're like, all right, well, I might
as well do it now that I'm here, We've made
this deal. I'm just gonna stare and she's gonna stare
her back. And then on those last like three minutes

(01:34:29):
you realize simple facts, those are the eyes that have
seen me every day. Oh yeah, that those are the
eyes that I'm going to see every day. What in
all of those thoughts, every emotion is right behind those eyeballs.

Speaker 4 (01:34:44):
Yeah, it's a very heavy experience, she says.

Speaker 3 (01:34:47):
The antidote real quick to all of this stuff is
is the guide to keep people back into real, authentic
connections with each other. Her ways of doing this include
involved eye contact and gentle non erotic touching.

Speaker 4 (01:34:59):
How do did you get involved doing this? How did
that come up? I heard about that a while ago
and I remember doing that.

Speaker 8 (01:35:07):
It.

Speaker 6 (01:35:07):
Yeah, if you just stare into someone's eyes for an
uncomfortable amount of time and you get passed through that
threshold of uncomfortable. I forgot where I heard it from,
but it's one thousand percent true. You're gonna feel something.

Speaker 3 (01:35:19):
And when they pair, when you pair off, what they
want you to do is ask questions, not like you know,
what do you do or where you're from kind of
stuff like that. What they want you to ask is
where in your life do you currently feel like you're
in the depths and why you're there.

Speaker 6 (01:35:32):
What's something you're grateful to have learned from your parents,
and what's something you've had to un learn from your parents.

Speaker 5 (01:35:37):
That just sounds like a therapist you just paid two
hundred bucks to touch you.

Speaker 4 (01:35:42):
These are like if you and I were doing it,
I would be asking you these questions.

Speaker 5 (01:35:45):
Those are deeply probing questions that I can't imagine as
I'm gently outlining the it just sounds.

Speaker 4 (01:35:51):
That's exactly what's supposed to be happening doing very California. Yeah,
I never found my dog and ask these questions.

Speaker 6 (01:35:57):
It would be really weird if I knew the fir yes, right,
but you don't know them, Yeah, you don't know who
they know.

Speaker 4 (01:36:03):
One thing that I have.

Speaker 6 (01:36:04):
Found extremely freeing, especially in the world of entertainment, is
doing stand up for strangers. But then I get a
little weirded out when, like, you know, like a.

Speaker 4 (01:36:11):
Former principles in the room.

Speaker 6 (01:36:13):
Oh yeah, you know, like so it would be very
liberating at least for me to just if it's a Rando. Oh,
I'll get weird with Rando. Yeah, yeah, I guess it.

Speaker 3 (01:36:22):
Says here and exercise follows each each discussion, one pairs
gaze into each other's eyes for minutes to end days
another one they finger trace each other, which involves gently
gliding their fingers over the other's body.

Speaker 4 (01:36:36):
They also hold each other in long embraces. Some of
them like do it on the floor, they do it
in chairs, or they'll.

Speaker 6 (01:36:43):
Just basically have what is to be a really long,
involved deep hug.

Speaker 4 (01:36:49):
Yeah, that will also do it.

Speaker 6 (01:36:50):
It's like weird because we get so used to like
the small talk version of it, Like right, we all
say I love you at the end of phone calls.
But now it's kind of become tradition, and I'll hold
myself accountable.

Speaker 4 (01:37:02):
I'm guilty.

Speaker 6 (01:37:03):
I don't.

Speaker 4 (01:37:04):
It's just what now, what we do on the end
of the phone call.

Speaker 6 (01:37:06):
It's not saying that I don't love her, but it's
not the meaningful stare take a moment and acknowledge, and.

Speaker 4 (01:37:14):
You're singing from your gut and.

Speaker 6 (01:37:15):
From your gut, right, Yeah, that's a different I love
you than all right, I'll see you soon, Love you bye, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:37:21):
Love you bye.

Speaker 3 (01:37:21):
Is just how people in relationships say goodbye. There's nothing
wrong with that. Yeah, And I've heard that that whole
thing comes back from the idea of you want to
say goodbye at the or you want to say I
love you at the end of conversation, simply because that
maybe the last thing you say to them.

Speaker 4 (01:37:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:37:37):
And now, like you could be on the phone, I
love you, and then you get a car wreckor you
could get in a car wrecker or something crazy would happen.
The last thing that came out of your mouth was
I love you.

Speaker 7 (01:37:45):
Do you ever hang up with someone then they said
I love you and you responded, But that's not normally
someone you.

Speaker 4 (01:37:50):
Would say, I love you too.

Speaker 5 (01:37:51):
I mean like when Jimmy said that to.

Speaker 4 (01:37:53):
Oh Zickie Marley.

Speaker 6 (01:37:54):
Yes, yeah, yeah, you've done that to celebrities.

Speaker 5 (01:37:57):
I thought that was on. Could go and trace each
other's body gently with the tips of your fingers while
you ask each other what lesson you learn from your parents?

Speaker 4 (01:38:06):
And you want one on you?

Speaker 6 (01:38:07):
It a lot of Marseilles, lot of mercy, break Jack,
We gotta get out of here.

Speaker 5 (01:38:13):
Brother, you can't no irie.

Speaker 4 (01:38:16):
Oh god, it's from Jamaica.

Speaker 17 (01:38:18):
Man.

Speaker 6 (01:38:18):
It's also to sue one love. It's literally they're not
doing great. Love Love is his religion. Oh no, you
can't miss it. You can't miss it.

Speaker 2 (01:38:34):
Tuesday's Just Got Mo Better with Ross Pageant presented by
just call mo dot com.

Speaker 11 (01:38:42):
Oh.

Speaker 8 (01:38:43):
Every time I hear Ross say the substance, I can't
help but think of a terrible movie from the eighties
called The Stuff That I Saw as a kid, And
it's about this yogurt like substance that's found deep underground.
They begin to mine it and sell it as a
yogurt like substance in the grocery stores. But what nobody
knows is anybody that eats it. It turns their insides
into white goo and they all become zombies. That's all

(01:39:06):
I can think of when I hear them say the
substance for some reason.

Speaker 4 (01:39:10):
Yeah, the stuff. Yeah I missed that. I've never seen
this stuff. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:39:19):
I was more of that when Demi Moore started getting
acclaim and recognition for her performance in the Substance.

Speaker 4 (01:39:29):
I was all in on seeing it. And now this
cat sitting to my left trying to talk me out
of seeing it seems counterproductive. It's one of the best
sales pitches I can give you. Dude, he don't watch it.
It's a game changer. What have you do? Don't listen
to this?

Speaker 5 (01:39:46):
Well, somebody texted in earlier and said they're an rn
and said Ross was not kidding.

Speaker 6 (01:39:54):
It was.

Speaker 5 (01:39:56):
Very difficult movie to watch because I wanted to watch
it as well.

Speaker 4 (01:39:59):
Damn going on in this movie?

Speaker 5 (01:40:01):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:40:02):
Brother.

Speaker 6 (01:40:02):
I can show you one scene on the break I
don't want to see it, and then just draw it
out for me on that Okay, Gore, is it a
Gore situation?

Speaker 4 (01:40:14):
There is gore, but it's not.

Speaker 5 (01:40:15):
Yeah, it's I'm an RNA. Forty years and the substance
grossed me out so bad. Ross is an exaggerating it's.

Speaker 6 (01:40:24):
Literally how it's shot, I would say, is the main
reason why. And the close second it's the sound design.
Whoever snorted, oh my god, I don't need that. Whoever
did a bunch of adderall in the editing booth and
put sound to every zipper, every squish, every kiss, to
every lick, to every you hear everything, and it's done

(01:40:48):
so well, but it's like a one hundred and well
you it stays with you. I am a different person
after seeing it, Like I can look at images now
that will not do anything to me. And it's just
because of angles and how the colors that it uses.
The director, Oh my god, shout out to that frenchwoman. God,

(01:41:13):
it put some airs on my chest.

Speaker 3 (01:41:14):
Man alright four seven nine four one textus seven seven
zero three one year five o'clock.

Speaker 4 (01:41:19):
Keyword is dollar d O L L A R.

Speaker 3 (01:41:22):
Slide over to real radio dot FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand of those dollars.
Dollar is the word, guys, go get it.

Speaker 4 (01:41:28):
I'm Jim. There's deb Jack, good morning and Ross true.

Speaker 3 (01:41:34):
The substance is listed on the Wikipedia page Extreme Cinema.

Speaker 6 (01:41:40):
It is the only movie that I thought afterwards, I
was like, was that rated R? I'm I was surprised
that it was rated R and not X. Yeah, NC
seventeen or like, wow, I would have been pretty if
my seventeen year old kid saw that movie.

Speaker 4 (01:41:57):
I would not be okay with it.

Speaker 6 (01:41:59):
Yeah, I'm like, man, you gotta be in your mid
twenties and see a car accident before.

Speaker 3 (01:42:05):
So they list the Exorcist up there with this movie.
They list the Cannibal Holocaust up there with this movie.
I've never even heard of that. It came out in
eighty Can you imagine nineteen eighty graphics? No, with a
movie called the Cannibal Holocaust.

Speaker 6 (01:42:21):
There is just some aspect of watching it that just
you can't stop getting enough of it, but you also
can't stop looking away.

Speaker 3 (01:42:32):
The last movie I've heard that had this kind of
vibe around it was The Green Inferno. Yeah, that's the
last movie I heard that. If you watched The Green Inferno,
prepare yourself accordingly because it is really, really, really gory.

Speaker 7 (01:42:47):
I used to hear the hype about the Exorcist, and
I remember I and it was about a year ago,
this time of year ago. I think it was Halloween
time where I ended up watching it, and I like
the movie. I know it was a good movie, but
I didn't think it was all that, and I don't know,
maybe it was in the time. It was scary in
the subject matter, and so I was prepared for it

(01:43:09):
going into it knowing that, yeh, she crawls on the
wall and the headspins and the vomit and yeah, so
I wasn't shocked by that, but I didn't think it
was anything that was like, oh my god, I can't
I'm not going to sleep tonight.

Speaker 4 (01:43:26):
Right right right, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:43:27):
So reading The Substance, because it's actually number three on
this list, of this other list, it says, quickly cementing
itself as one of twenty twenties premiere body horror films,
the Substance leaves audiences in a state of shock and
awe due to its destructive and over the top use
of visceral carnage. This Yeah, the film is initially reserved

(01:43:49):
when it comes to Gordon disturbing imagery, instead instead giving
a slow build of more and more gross content until
a cavalcade of bloody proportions is its final act, and
I don't want.

Speaker 4 (01:44:02):
That to just be the entire movie.

Speaker 6 (01:44:04):
And I want to remind you what makes this movie
go from good to one of them one of them's
is it has a message. You brought up Green and
four and Green Inferno. What's the message of that movie? Oh,
they made it or that guy didn't. This is an
abstract story message that is just getting a drill to

(01:44:26):
the back of your head, specifically about beauty standards.

Speaker 4 (01:44:30):
And I would say, what it's like.

Speaker 6 (01:44:34):
To be a little bit of an not even old,
but older woman in the world of entertainment.

Speaker 3 (01:44:42):
Right, right, right, right, yeah, And that's been an argument
in Hollywood for many, many years, right, and he aged
out of parts when men don't really have to worry
about that.

Speaker 6 (01:44:49):
And just having that message come in that hard, that fast,
I will forever thank the movie for that and be
so grateful that a horror film goes that hard and
also has a meaning, yeah, which a lot of horror
films simply put do not, which is why they don't
get nominated in my opinion.

Speaker 3 (01:45:08):
Right like Hostile, Yeah, Hostile and Hostile too are also
pretty tough to watch.

Speaker 4 (01:45:12):
I mean hostile was I mean just to. I think
it was just the.

Speaker 3 (01:45:18):
Just how like it seemed, how a worthless human life
was in hostile made it kind of disturbing, right, how
it was just you know, hey, we need this person
for this experience, and people are paying for it, and
that's it, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:45:30):
And you you show this house.

Speaker 3 (01:45:32):
It's got these rooms, and they've abducted these people and
they basically sell them to this person who who will
where people will pay to come in and kill somebody
they want, They want the thrill of doing what they want.
And man, there are a couple of scenes in that
movie that were just you just feel so terrible, you know. Yeah,
it almost feels bad that they're like, why am I
supporting this?

Speaker 13 (01:45:50):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:45:50):
Yeah, And you kind of get the feeling that maybe
somewhere on the planet that happens, Like you kind of
get the feeling that's somewhere on the planet there's somebody
out there that will abduct somebody for you if you
want somebody to just kill and have fun killing.

Speaker 4 (01:46:03):
God, that can't be that far out of the realm
of possibility.

Speaker 3 (01:46:06):
There's eight billion people, yeah, and a bunch of them
have a whole bunch of money and no morals. I
mean ed Gean happened, right, So yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
a nightmare on Elm streets of that?

Speaker 4 (01:46:17):
Would you guys find that gory? I didn't think that
was that. Man, it's all about the Terrifier, all the
Terrifier movies on was But I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:46:24):
In high school, I just remember that's what i'd watch
that Halloween movies.

Speaker 4 (01:46:31):
I don't know. That seems like a yeah, write a
passage for people of our age, and.

Speaker 3 (01:46:35):
That seems kind of goes what as a kind of
this goes with this whole idea about the poker house.
Like one of the things was is people are saying, like,
you know, we had no idea that they were running
these scammy poker games right next to our house.

Speaker 6 (01:46:48):
You know, it was like in a brownstone, so they
were sharing walls.

Speaker 4 (01:46:51):
And they had no clue.

Speaker 3 (01:46:52):
And I was just like, man, I bet you would
be absolutely mortified if you found out what was going
on in some of the houses in your own neighborhood.
Like can you imagine what people are doing in their
homes when nobody can see them and nobody's doing Man,
there must be you can I know this because I
you know, I tell the story. Sometimes I've met one
what I know is a really really bad human being.

(01:47:14):
I you know this because I'm someone's neighbor. Well, I
knew it because the guy wound up going to jail
for what he did, and we met him personally at
his house and after the crime was kind of after
the crime was exposed, what he did? You know, you
think to yourself, God, these people were living right next

(01:47:34):
door to him, with their families and kids. Who would
have thought in a million years that that was going
on in this house right next door. Kind of like
the BTK thing, a really modest home and a really
modest neighborhood, but yet inside that house is one of
the worst human beings in human history. Like you just wonder, like,
what's happening in your neighborhood all the time you guys
think about that at all.

Speaker 6 (01:47:52):
I mean, that exact scenario gave us one of our
greatest viral moments in the last twenty years when that
one white girl, Oh my god out and then the
black leg homeless guy was like, I knew someone was
wrong when a white girl was running.

Speaker 4 (01:48:05):
Up to me.

Speaker 5 (01:48:06):
I just saw that Instagram reel recently. Yeah, Ariel Castro, Yeah,
yeahah Ariel Castro, who kept those three women captive in
the third floor of his house for over ten years,
ten years, and one of them helping to bury one Jedu. Yeah,
and yeah, it's just how they get away with it,
you know, talk about the substances like that scenario. That's

(01:48:27):
a real scenario.

Speaker 6 (01:48:28):
We watched those movies and but that movie, the substance
benefits so much from not telling the audience this isn't real.

Speaker 4 (01:48:37):
You know, it's not real. It's a movie. YadA, YadA, YadA.

Speaker 6 (01:48:40):
But that is going to give us the liberty to
go as hard as we possibly can. And boy do
they make use of it being a ASoP fable, fictional tale,
goosebumps episode for adults. It is grotesque. Yeah, don't watch it,
you gotta see it. It's a different i'm BCAC moment

(01:49:06):
for me in that movie.

Speaker 3 (01:49:09):
All right, four oh seven uh nine one six one
four one Again, you can always text us at seven
seven zero three one.

Speaker 4 (01:49:15):
Saw another thing. We'll end up this segment with this.

Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
Saw another thing online today and it said, what occupation
do you believe has the most people who've gone to jail?

Speaker 4 (01:49:24):
Ooh uh, investment banker. Well, it was okay, Radio DJ.

Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
Have you ever seen those things where like the one
I see the most is a guy who works in
an auto shop and he'll walk up to every mechanic
in the auto shop and say, you know, hey, what
car would you never buy for your worst enemy?

Speaker 4 (01:49:38):
And they'll go to each one.

Speaker 3 (01:49:40):
This was one of those things, but it was walking
up to a guy who owns a construction company and
he's asking a bunch of things about the people who
do different you know, different vendors, electricians, mainsons, whatever, And
he said, uh, he said, what what occupation do you
believe has the most people that have gone to jail?

Speaker 4 (01:49:57):
What do you think? He said?

Speaker 6 (01:49:58):
Electricians, No, landscapers, no bouncers know the club's got their back.

Speaker 4 (01:50:04):
No, no, this isn't a construction te Oh sorry yeah yeah.

Speaker 19 (01:50:08):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (01:50:08):
The guy actually thought that he was gonna say drywallers,
but that wasn't that they can't drive. Maybe no, I
have no idea.

Speaker 3 (01:50:17):
Roofers is the answer, he said, it was the roofing cruise. Dude,
He's like those guys like twenty percent of the roofing
cruise down. You gotta remember this is another part of
the world. He's ad twenty percent of our roofing cruise,
chances are they've been to jail. I couldn't think of
any other one that, like, I mean, do you have
any other occupations you think that like a certain percentage

(01:50:39):
of them have been to jail. I mean, not on
the construction site, but you know construction sites. I mean,
because they do they do background checks for construction.

Speaker 4 (01:50:46):
Jobs, not all of them. I don't think they do many.
I don't think they do them any at all.

Speaker 6 (01:50:51):
Actually, it's kind of the whole that's the whole part
of the controversy with the world.

Speaker 3 (01:50:55):
Come, we don't do a background check for this job.
Imagine you're gonna do it first singing there? I mean,
I can't imagine that.

Speaker 5 (01:51:02):
Actually we do.

Speaker 4 (01:51:03):
We don't do a background check for this job.

Speaker 5 (01:51:05):
Yeah, we do. When I first got hired, because when
they pulled my name, it came up with a teacher
who had done some lout and lascivious things with a student,
and I had to say, no, no, that's not me.

Speaker 4 (01:51:16):
That's a totally different Yeah. Yeah, I'm the Debora Robertson's
married to Al Roker, exactly. I'm that girl.

Speaker 5 (01:51:22):
We do background We used to work at Channel nine.

Speaker 4 (01:51:24):
No, you don't do you.

Speaker 3 (01:51:26):
I never keep telling against I never took one. I
never had a background check to work here.

Speaker 4 (01:51:31):
It was run on you. But you did get a
background check. It was when you got married. You know,
you don't have to approve it.

Speaker 1 (01:51:38):
We just do it.

Speaker 5 (01:51:39):
Yeah, you aside when there's a problem. When there isn't
a problem with your background check, they just approve it.
But my name got flagged and they had to pull
me aside and ask me, is this you I.

Speaker 4 (01:51:50):
Understand you were in the red you were in the
radio business in the nineties.

Speaker 14 (01:51:53):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:51:54):
Does it seem like anything was regulated in the nineties
that we checked for anything in the nineties.

Speaker 4 (01:51:58):
I remember the nineties quite well. That was a complete mayhem.
It was a zoo. There wasn't drug testing, and there
still doesn't.

Speaker 3 (01:52:04):
Think that's part of a background check, is it not. No, No,
is not part of a background check.

Speaker 5 (01:52:10):
No, it's a different background It's a different test as
a background is running your name to see if you
have any felonies or any warrants.

Speaker 4 (01:52:19):
I'm kind of a jack on this one. Ran a
trust me you would walk in the door.

Speaker 6 (01:52:23):
Well, it's just like I wouldn't call a drug test
a background check. That's like a like a last couple
of thirty days check universals?

Speaker 4 (01:52:31):
Does them? Oh yeah, do they really? I would fall blown.

Speaker 6 (01:52:33):
I would think all massive corporations are checking to see
if you have a record.

Speaker 3 (01:52:38):
Yes, hmm, they'll snap up that social What will stop
you from getting a job, like Jack, you're a PD here?
What would stop you?

Speaker 6 (01:52:45):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:52:46):
What kind of charge would stop you? Would make you
pass on to the next person, like theft? I mean,
what will you tolerate? I mean drug convictions? Like if
somebody get busted for some weed, would that stop you
from hiring him?

Speaker 4 (01:52:57):
I don't know. I've never got to that point.

Speaker 7 (01:52:59):
I mean we fortunately for what we do here on
this specific station, we've hired so infrequently because we don't
have a lot of turnover. I mean several of us
have been on the air here for over twenty something years, right,
so we were.

Speaker 4 (01:53:17):
Not hiring a lot.

Speaker 6 (01:53:18):
Where this comes up the people I have personally had
to hire in the last ten years.

Speaker 4 (01:53:26):
We submit a background check, it says, yeah, no convictions,
outstanding warrants. I don't see that. I'm told clear, this
person is clear to high and Claire Claire he's good.

Speaker 6 (01:53:39):
Did any of your I mean, did any of your
stuff from your youth stick around for you?

Speaker 10 (01:53:43):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:53:43):
I never got arrested. Oh that's right. Yeh, you just
got sent to Juvi. Yeah yeah, no, not even I
got time with the gun at the bus stop. It
was an airsoft gun, thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (01:53:52):
I got I got arrested for selling alcohol to a minor,
but I don't remember that ever. I mean, that's again,
I don't think that's one of those things is going
to stop you from hiring someone. But I mean if
if you were doing that and you found that somebody
had stolen or they had a drug charge, which would
thwart you the most from hiring them.

Speaker 4 (01:54:09):
What kind of drug charge? What are we talking to me?

Speaker 9 (01:54:11):
You know?

Speaker 4 (01:54:12):
I mean, I don't know you have possession? A possession?
What we got here? We maybe a pipe with the
residue that pipe, that's good.

Speaker 6 (01:54:20):
But if it's like pills or distribute to sell something
like that, then I would be like Yates, Yeah, wish
you would have stolen something.

Speaker 4 (01:54:29):
Yeah more than stealing. No, No, I think stealing still
beats the case.

Speaker 6 (01:54:33):
However, those other charges get all those things distribute to
sell those people tend to not not steal.

Speaker 3 (01:54:39):
Yeah, yeah, so well, I mean if you have that
drug problem, you're definitely stealing exactly. Yeah, all right, four
oh seven nine one six one four one. You can
always text us. That's seven seven zero three one dollar.
By the way, is your five o'clock key word, that's
d O L L A R. Just slide over to
Real Radio dot I M and send that away for
your chance at one thousand of those dollars. That's the word,
guy's dollars. To go get the money and load them up.

(01:55:01):
It's signed for trivia.

Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
We'll do that next.

Speaker 1 (01:55:04):
You want to play a game good Jim Colburn Show.
Trivia is next, call down four.

Speaker 4 (01:55:13):
Four Mike Buzzer Larson here.

Speaker 19 (01:55:20):
Wow, Oh, Jimmy, I fell in it, Jimmy, I fell
for this penis enlargement product scam.

Speaker 17 (01:55:27):
Yeah, I did.

Speaker 5 (01:55:28):
I said twenty dollars to a company and you know
what they sent me, Jimmy.

Speaker 4 (01:55:32):
Well, they send you, buddy, a magnifying glass qua jock,
that clock, that quack shots a year rocket and for sure.
All right, welcome back to the Jim Goldberg Show, Real
Radio one oh four.

Speaker 6 (01:55:48):
Point one on Jim, there's deb Hello, Jack, is here,
sauces here the puzzle mask?

Speaker 17 (01:55:53):
Ten?

Speaker 4 (01:55:53):
What is in the old Jackie sacks? All the boards?

Speaker 6 (01:55:59):
Two?

Speaker 4 (01:56:00):
Click it in clack clickity clack. All right, here we go.

Speaker 7 (01:56:03):
We have some tickets to see FSU take a wake Parst.
You like the college football event, Well, we got passes
for you to go this Saturday at Dope Campbell Stadium.
That's a November first game and you could be there.
Oh do you like the comedy. I have a pair
of tickets to see Hassan Minaj and Ronnie Chang at
the hard Rock Live Orlando two Comedic Titans, one stage.

Speaker 4 (01:56:29):
Orlando, November sixteenth. You want to get your tickets, go
to hard Rock Orlando dot right. Those are the prizes
in the Jackie Sacks.

Speaker 5 (01:56:38):
So back to you click very nice, don't forget one.

Speaker 6 (01:56:41):
Roger Paget is a Wake Forest grad Is he here?

Speaker 4 (01:56:46):
Yes? Yes, yes, I was like he's not on that show?

Speaker 13 (01:56:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:56:50):
Ronnie Chang, Yah, Thamnaj and Roger band.

Speaker 6 (01:56:54):
Ross's father played for Wake Forest Golf. That's where he
met Arnold Palmer.

Speaker 4 (01:56:57):
That's trill.

Speaker 6 (01:56:58):
That's all that stuff in there.

Speaker 13 (01:56:59):
Huh m hm.

Speaker 4 (01:57:00):
Cool. Didn't he win some kind of prestigious ward.

Speaker 6 (01:57:01):
There. He was the first Arnold Palmer recipient, like a
recipient of the scholarship.

Speaker 4 (01:57:08):
Yeah that's super cool. Yeah, yeah, yeah, very cool. All right, one, two, three, four,
or five?

Speaker 5 (01:57:12):
Ever, let's do one.

Speaker 4 (01:57:14):
One's not there? How about too?

Speaker 6 (01:57:15):
It's two?

Speaker 4 (01:57:16):
All right? Very nice Viking girl.

Speaker 5 (01:57:19):
Mimi.

Speaker 13 (01:57:19):
I like that.

Speaker 8 (01:57:20):
I'm here.

Speaker 4 (01:57:21):
Hey, Mimi, how are you? I'm great glad to hear that.
Would let to play a little game with us? Yes,
I let's do it show all right, Mimi. This is
a real easy game.

Speaker 3 (01:57:33):
Got a question here for you have four answers. One
of these answers is not true, Mimi? What but if
you can find that, I will send you over to
the Jackie Sack you can find something nice for yourself.

Speaker 4 (01:57:42):
Are you ready?

Speaker 11 (01:57:43):
I'm ready?

Speaker 3 (01:57:44):
Here we go on this day in nineteen thirty six
should be familiar country music singer, songwriter, and musician. He
is an icon, inducted into the Country Music Hall of
Fame in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 5 (01:58:00):
Willie Nelson.

Speaker 4 (01:58:02):
He doesn't think the flag is a rag.

Speaker 6 (01:58:05):
Ohb he fought the devil in Georgia.

Speaker 3 (01:58:09):
Oh, Charlie Daniels, that's right. Charlie Daniels was born on
this day in nineteen thirty six. Here are three fun
facts about Charlie and one.

Speaker 4 (01:58:16):
Lie of gold.

Speaker 3 (01:58:18):
All right, we're talking about Charlie Daniels. Here, Mimi, which
one of these is not true? Okay, okay, we go.
Number One, as a session musician, he played on three
Bob Dylan albums and a solo album by Ringo Starr.
Number two Charlie Daniels loves snowmobiling. He actually suffered a
mild stroke while doing it in twenty ten. Number three,

(01:58:39):
in nineteen seventy six, He's signed the largest recording contract
at the time in Nashville, a three million dollar deal
with Epic Records. So cute or lastly, he plays six
instruments guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, piano, and drums.

Speaker 6 (01:58:55):
Which of those is a lie?

Speaker 10 (01:58:57):
Number three?

Speaker 4 (01:58:58):
No, that's absolutely true.

Speaker 3 (01:59:01):
He did sign the biggest recording contract in Nashville history
at the time in nineteen seventy six when he signed
for three million dollars with Epic Records.

Speaker 4 (01:59:08):
You gonna remember that's in seventy.

Speaker 5 (01:59:09):
Six, I know, but it's it's such a cute amount, now,
isn't it.

Speaker 19 (01:59:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:59:12):
Yeah, all right?

Speaker 3 (01:59:14):
Three?

Speaker 12 (01:59:14):
Four?

Speaker 4 (01:59:14):
Or five. Deb Let's go four? Four is Kyle Kyle,
How you doing good? How are you guys doing good?

Speaker 3 (01:59:20):
Buddy, we're talking about Charlie Daniels, the country music legend,
which one of these isn't true. As a session musician,
he played on three Bob Dylan records and a solo
album by Ringo Star.

Speaker 4 (01:59:29):
Number two.

Speaker 3 (01:59:30):
Charlie Daniels loved snowmemboarding a snowboard geezl Wheeze. Charlie Daniels
loved snowmobiling. He suffered a Miles troke while doing it
in twenty ten or lastly, he played six instruments guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, piano,
and drums.

Speaker 11 (01:59:46):
I'm gonna say number one.

Speaker 3 (01:59:48):
No, that's absolutely true. He did play on three Bob
Dylan albums and a Ringo Star album. That's how crazy.
That's how he kind of became famous. And a lot
of those guys do that, like Brad Paisley. I think
he's another one of those guys who it was just
a session guitar player and then started writing songs for
himself and became a gigantic star.

Speaker 4 (02:00:04):
Wow, uh, you have three or five?

Speaker 5 (02:00:08):
Let's go five?

Speaker 4 (02:00:09):
Five is Buck Buck, How you doing.

Speaker 16 (02:00:12):
Doing well?

Speaker 4 (02:00:12):
How about you doing good? Buddy?

Speaker 3 (02:00:14):
We're talking about Charlie Daniels. You have a fifty to
fifty shot here? Which one of these is not true?
Charlie Daniels loved snowmobiling. He actually suffered a mild stroke
while doing it in twenty ten, or lastly, he played
six instruments guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, piano.

Speaker 4 (02:00:27):
And drums. I think it's the one with the snowmo meal.

Speaker 3 (02:00:31):
No, that's absolutely true. He absolutely loved snowmobiling when he
did hav a mild stroke in twenty ten that canceled
a weekend of shows before he got.

Speaker 4 (02:00:40):
Back out of the hospital. Didn't the same thing happen
to you in Maine, Kimberly, How you doing? Welcome to
the show?

Speaker 3 (02:00:46):
Hello, Well, Kimberly, I have to tell you you're in
a pretty good position here. Tell me if this is
true or not. He played six instruments guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, piano,
and drums.

Speaker 4 (02:00:56):
I'm gonna have to say that's not true.

Speaker 3 (02:00:58):
It's not true, and you're a winner. Let me tell
you he did play four of those. Do you think
you can pick out which four he played.

Speaker 5 (02:01:08):
I would say he played them all except for the drums.

Speaker 3 (02:01:11):
Yeah he No, he didn't play piano either. He played guitar, mandolin, fiddle,
and banjo. He played all those quite well. You winner, though, Kimberly,
Jack will have something nice for you in just one second.

Speaker 4 (02:01:26):
You're such a purf. I did what. I'm agreeing?

Speaker 6 (02:01:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:01:29):
Why did she laugh?

Speaker 6 (02:01:30):
Then?

Speaker 4 (02:01:31):
That sounds dead? That's what because he knows you you
went rude. No, no, you're rude.

Speaker 13 (02:01:38):
You went.

Speaker 4 (02:01:40):
You did he knows, he knows what he did. I
was agreeing that we're going to gether set up with
a prize.

Speaker 5 (02:01:45):
Yeeah.

Speaker 4 (02:01:46):
And what's that prize? Jack?

Speaker 14 (02:01:47):
Maybe too?

Speaker 5 (02:01:49):
How you doing?

Speaker 4 (02:01:51):
Little zipper notes? A couple of things? You mean, not
about Charlie Daniels before we get the top of the hour.

Speaker 5 (02:02:03):
Song.

Speaker 3 (02:02:03):
Yeah, yeah, uh he wrote it hurts me for Elvis Presley. Really, No,
there's Elvis now, No, that was Jack, Okay, sorry.

Speaker 5 (02:02:17):
It appeared Ah no, that's what that was.

Speaker 8 (02:02:22):
No.

Speaker 4 (02:02:22):
I thought he was upset. I thought he was hitting
the table out of frustration. You know, he's happy. No,
man's wieder Joe. Yeah, did you just get that? Yeah,
I'm disgusted with him and myself.

Speaker 6 (02:02:36):
What help do you think he.

Speaker 4 (02:02:37):
Playing zipper sound the thing? Why? As for the conversation,
we just asked, I got the zipper there is that's
the part that I didn't wait table hitting the table right?

Speaker 13 (02:02:48):
Uh?

Speaker 18 (02:02:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:02:48):
He wrote it hurts me for Elvis Presley, which was
a B side to his song Kissing Cousins.

Speaker 4 (02:02:54):
Okay, that would be the B side.

Speaker 3 (02:02:57):
He and his wife, he had the most stereotypical wife
name of all time and country music. Well, I'll give
you three guests. That's one dolorous, that's two.

Speaker 4 (02:03:09):
Hazel is the answer. That is dong worthy.

Speaker 3 (02:03:15):
I mean, that is out of left field. Hazel was
his wife. They had they were married for years. They
had one kid. You Hazel got it. Charlie Daniels Junior
is the kid's name.

Speaker 4 (02:03:28):
Haven't heard from that dude ever. His middle name is Edward.

Speaker 5 (02:03:31):
And there you go.

Speaker 4 (02:03:32):
That's Charlie Daniels went down to Georgia. Uh what do
you have for thoughts there, big dog man?

Speaker 6 (02:03:38):
I had a really weird instance in a public bathroom
this past week and it's got Yeah, it's got me thinking.
It's not like it wasn't a hole in the side
of a stall, and I didn't know what it was.
I'm not saying that happened. I didn't the phone number.

Speaker 5 (02:03:51):
Jack, where's that zipp sound effect?

Speaker 4 (02:03:54):
You didn't meet a congressman? No vote here, can't do
any of that voting.

Speaker 5 (02:04:02):
I got your ballot box.

Speaker 6 (02:04:04):
I feel like there is one way to do a
public bathroom wrong. There is, there is several ways. There's
several ways, and there's a bunch of unwritten rules about
doing that. This won't be a disgusting thing. This is
actually going to be the the the Jjon Gray Poupon
Mustard of bathroom conversations.

Speaker 5 (02:04:26):
Great Poupon, it was a bathroom.

Speaker 6 (02:04:28):
Time to go with that bougie mustard deb And I agree,
he's a kid.

Speaker 4 (02:04:32):
Why would I go?

Speaker 6 (02:04:34):
But unwritten bathroom rules, and there's one that's on the zenith,
and also the different universes between a female bathroom and
a men's bathroom.

Speaker 4 (02:04:42):
Asked about public bathrooms, public bathrooms, two different rules, but
one conversation. We'll get that next.

Speaker 7 (02:04:54):
This has absolutely nothing to do with anything, but it
was kind of funny today.

Speaker 6 (02:04:58):
I'm a bar You're at a pool bar at a.

Speaker 4 (02:05:01):
Resort, and I was serving a gentleman a beer, and
as I did this, a bee stung him.

Speaker 3 (02:05:07):
On his elmo and I was like, oh, no, you okay,
And the guy looks dead in the eye and says,
I'm rombo.

Speaker 4 (02:05:16):
I'm trained to ignore the pain.

Speaker 5 (02:05:21):
Love that that's someone on vacation who just got a
beer at a pool.

Speaker 4 (02:05:24):
Yeah, God, almighty man.

Speaker 3 (02:05:26):
Can you imagine some of the stories resort workers have
from around this area of people and things they've had
to deal with.

Speaker 5 (02:05:33):
I've heard a few.

Speaker 3 (02:05:34):
I've talked to a couple of cruise ship people, and
those stories will peel your eyelids back. All right, Welcome
back to the Jim Corber Show, Real Radio one four
point one. Your six o'clock You word is credit. Cre
E D I T H. Make it over to Real
Radio dot FM to send that away for your chance
at one thousand bucks credit. Guys, that is your six
o'clock You were good luck. We want you to win

(02:05:55):
that money money. I'm Jender's dead.

Speaker 4 (02:05:57):
Hello, Jack is here. Let's get some raw thoughts. Oh man,
it's weird.

Speaker 1 (02:06:02):
I am king, it's funny, and here are my rules. Sometimes.

Speaker 4 (02:06:05):
Sorry, I came in high. I forgot about.

Speaker 1 (02:06:11):
It's ross stocks.

Speaker 4 (02:06:12):
Ross Stops is brought to you by who other than.

Speaker 6 (02:06:15):
Personal injury attorney Mode de Witt. If you are injured
on the go, you know the rest of the limerick.

Speaker 4 (02:06:21):
Just call mo.

Speaker 6 (02:06:23):
Doesn't just rhyme. It's also a great piece of advice.
Injured on the go, just call MO. I am here
to tell you, guys what Pinky's up. Pinky's up, Pinky's up?
All right, is here comes some high christit score bathroom talk.

Speaker 4 (02:06:37):
We're fancy.

Speaker 6 (02:06:37):
This is the bullet of conversations because we are responsible
in the front, but irresponsible in the back. Okay, careful,
all right, yeah, sorry someone, I'm trying to say it.

Speaker 4 (02:06:54):
Easy miney back in prison. Here we go.

Speaker 6 (02:06:58):
There are unwritten rules and public bathrooms and the biggest
one and please God Almighty Jack jim Man, you have
to know it. You walk in, you see two stalls,
you see three urinals. You have to go number one.

Speaker 4 (02:07:15):
Where do you go? Wait? Two stalls, two stalls, three urinals.
You have to go number one in the urinal.

Speaker 3 (02:07:23):
You go to the very first urinal, yes, or the
very last one, because you never go in the middle urinals.

Speaker 4 (02:07:29):
Because you allow someone else to go one away from you.
That is the rule that I think the younger peeps
don't know. You don't think they know that.

Speaker 6 (02:07:38):
I think people are all willy nilly with the willy
nillies these days.

Speaker 3 (02:07:42):
Because if you go in the middle one, you've guaranteed
yourself to urining next to somebody.

Speaker 4 (02:07:47):
And why would you choose? Man the f would you
choose that?

Speaker 6 (02:07:50):
It happened to me, happened to me in this last week,
walk in three urinals, boom someone in the middle.

Speaker 3 (02:07:56):
Oh, so you were on like one of the ends,
and we had to choose the middle one to be
he was next to you. He could have been the
first one and been apart from you, had a urinal
separating you.

Speaker 6 (02:08:04):
We could have had some social distancing without any politics.
We could have had, we could have had our magic.
We could have had the status quo that is using
the public bathroom. But nay, this man is a colonizer.

Speaker 4 (02:08:17):
This man man no boundaries.

Speaker 6 (02:08:21):
Is why we can't have nice things. This guy probably
doesn't return to shopping cards. He probably doesn't turn off sinks,
which is also the reason why we have automatic sinks
now because of people.

Speaker 3 (02:08:30):
Like this doesn't He doesn't answer text timely or yeah,
what kind of animal you're about gym?

Speaker 6 (02:08:39):
Yeah, no, no, no, we're not talking about that. Maybe
the last two little adjectives there, maybe that was a
little bit more gim, but you cannot use that center
urinal whatsoever.

Speaker 4 (02:08:49):
How about this one?

Speaker 5 (02:08:50):
What's up?

Speaker 4 (02:08:51):
What are what are the rules with conversation in a bathroom?
Public bathroom? Sports? And that's a sports and Jim, dude,
we peelites sports and that's it.

Speaker 3 (02:09:02):
If you're in a bathroom with another guy, you don't
talk about anything except sports. Well, what a game last night? Man,
never seen a World Series game like that before? I'm
show Hey my god, am I right?

Speaker 4 (02:09:12):
Oh my god?

Speaker 3 (02:09:13):
Oh Tan, I'm on my O tars. By that time
that's done, you're zipping up and you're getting the hell
out of there.

Speaker 6 (02:09:19):
I and praying, just to clarify the last thing I
just said, I was praying to But so you talk
about sports, no more, no less. I don't want your
view on the electoral college.

Speaker 4 (02:09:31):
I don't need that. I don't need any serious things.
I don't need you to bring up gun violence. I
don't need you to do any of that. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:09:39):
The the other one, too, is like you'll be peeing
next to somebody, you know, you know, they seed these clouds.

Speaker 4 (02:09:43):
That's how these storms get so bad. What are we doing?

Speaker 5 (02:09:46):
It?

Speaker 4 (02:09:48):
Just flush? Don't look and move. Also, while we're at it,
are you a paper towler or air dry peeps?

Speaker 3 (02:09:55):
I mean, I do prefer paper towels because of the quickness,
but I don't get upset when they're not any I
will glad use the air dryer.

Speaker 4 (02:10:01):
All right, not my favorite though, same I shouldn't.

Speaker 7 (02:10:05):
It's better to use the air dryer, but if the
paper towel is there, that's gonna be my first choice.

Speaker 4 (02:10:09):
Sure, yeah, yea.

Speaker 6 (02:10:10):
Dead oh, paper towel, paper towel all day, because I
get it.

Speaker 4 (02:10:15):
It's better for the earth.

Speaker 6 (02:10:16):
But whatever, man, what about just my my overall general happiness?
Because when I put my hands underneath the dryers, I
just can see how old I am?

Speaker 4 (02:10:24):
And who wants a film of pea water? Du you
want to film a pea water on?

Speaker 14 (02:10:29):
You mean?

Speaker 6 (02:10:29):
You know now you're just spreading it down my fingertips
and I feel like a weird, like a weird mutant
for X men.

Speaker 4 (02:10:36):
You're just microblasting and on my crime.

Speaker 6 (02:10:38):
Yeah, and then you're like just making my armskin flap
and it's I feel like I'm getting wrinklier as you're
making it go a little bit.

Speaker 4 (02:10:46):
You know, I don't I don't like that. I don't
like that either.

Speaker 3 (02:10:49):
I can hear it rip into the very manly arm
hair conversation at the sink or at the urinals.

Speaker 1 (02:10:57):
I mean, I.

Speaker 3 (02:10:57):
Believe if it's sports related, you can have it at
the urinals. I think almost anything is at the sink,
but usually the sink is, hey, man, have a great
day of a good show. Uh you know, uh, you
know whatever. I mean, something very simple and benign. You
do you are you humming?

Speaker 4 (02:11:13):
Oh jack the urinal? Yeah, you seem like a hummer dude. No, no, no, no,
I will say nice watch. Yeah, yeah, I see he
makes that joke. How do you see the watch?

Speaker 6 (02:11:24):
Though, Dude, you're gonna be looking down at their hands.

Speaker 4 (02:11:26):
Welcome to the joke. I'm sorry. That's what he does, dude,
that's what he does. He speaks in tongues. Yeah, he's
got a weird uh yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:11:36):
He's dad jokes.

Speaker 4 (02:11:37):
He speaks in middle aged dad tongue. Ye, cryptoperv watch.

Speaker 10 (02:11:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:11:46):
The thing is that's so alien, like you're looking at
the dude's package. What are you doing all right?

Speaker 9 (02:11:50):
Now?

Speaker 4 (02:11:50):
You're chugging the package. He's made that joke to me.
That was also like week two of me being here.
Oh man, that's at then he's laughing like it. He's
laughing like anywise.

Speaker 3 (02:12:07):
Right now he's thinking about how many watches he's seeing
slash dongs?

Speaker 4 (02:12:11):
What time is it always midnight? I what do you
want a tag boner?

Speaker 9 (02:12:18):
Uh?

Speaker 6 (02:12:22):
Probably my biggest argument, in my biggest complaint. This is
not an unwritten rule. But now let me criticize corporate
modern day bathrooms when they have automatic saints. Get on
out of here with that.

Speaker 4 (02:12:35):
Give me the lever. No, no, no, no no, because
people don't how to.

Speaker 6 (02:12:39):
People are not responsible with the leather, with the lever
and why because there people they got used to.

Speaker 4 (02:12:45):
Well, they're pricks. People are stupid.

Speaker 7 (02:12:47):
People leaving water running Yeah yeah, that's that I happened
yesterday here.

Speaker 1 (02:12:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:12:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:12:52):
Plus then you have to touch it. So wait a second,
you're touching less community stuff.

Speaker 6 (02:12:57):
Yeah, I get that, but just be because some people
leave it on one of my I feel like I'm
defending guns all of a sudden, defending guns.

Speaker 3 (02:13:05):
You don't that water running through They're like you're crazy, dude,
that's a that's our water.

Speaker 6 (02:13:09):
Well, you tell me if this reminds you of anybody,
maybe sounding like they defend guns just because a few
people leave the sink up means that they've got to
change all of these sinks because some people keep forgetting
to leave it up. Sounds very reminiscent of basically every
political argument everything.

Speaker 3 (02:13:28):
That not everybody has a gun and everybody goes to
the bathroom and has to wash their hands.

Speaker 6 (02:13:33):
I just okay, now, before we get out of here,
this is we're about to go to Narnia boys. Because
you don't talk about women's bathrooms as much as I do.
It's a weird topic between my wife and I because
I find the dynamics fascinating women bathrooms. First of all,
every time I've been in one, which is by chance

(02:13:53):
and random, every don't make this weird. Every dude has
walked into a women's bathroom, jack have you?

Speaker 4 (02:13:59):
Yeah, yes, okay, yeah, he never walked out. That's a
problem there. Hey, ladies, nice watch.

Speaker 3 (02:14:08):
But.

Speaker 6 (02:14:14):
Deb the dynamic of female bathrooms. Whenever I have seen one,
the first thing I think is it's just all rooms,
like it's all right, Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:14:27):
Yeah, we do not have to pee and worry about
who's standing right next to us.

Speaker 4 (02:14:31):
Yeah, yeah, yeah your watch brand? Is that a fossil?
But that's why it also takes longer.

Speaker 7 (02:14:37):
And there's usually a line for the ladies room at
events where the guys seem to move through more.

Speaker 13 (02:14:43):
I know this.

Speaker 3 (02:14:44):
When I worked at Winn Dixie years ago, part of
my job was cleaning the bathrooms at the end of
the night, and by a billion, the ladies bathroom was
way grosser terrible.

Speaker 4 (02:14:54):
It was so bad, but so real fast.

Speaker 6 (02:14:57):
Is it just because why is the female line traditionally
longer than the dudes? Is it solely because that's a
longer activity than the time it takes, Like we don't
have to sit, even though I could argue that I
think that we should. But also the stuff they wear though, right,
because you guys also can wear stuff, especially in your events.

Speaker 4 (02:15:16):
That have the you know, it's it's like a romper.

Speaker 3 (02:15:18):
It looks like, yeah, it looks like a one piece
bathing suit, but it has like a top thing and
it's built to stay tucked in and everything like that,
And those aren't the easiest to take on and off
to go to the bathroom, right or jumpers rompers?

Speaker 5 (02:15:28):
You don't take those off, You just slide them to
the side.

Speaker 6 (02:15:32):
As I told you, we went to Narnia. Boys, we're
finding out things we've never Yeah. Nice watch, Yeah, nice watch.

Speaker 4 (02:15:39):
Jim is staring at me. He was a right.

Speaker 5 (02:15:41):
Yeah he won't yeah, he won't make eye contact anymore.

Speaker 4 (02:15:44):
Over here, those two nails are a different color. You
didn't know.

Speaker 6 (02:15:49):
You didn't know how Frodo made it back to the shire?

Speaker 4 (02:15:54):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, how about this? This is the greatest.
Do you ever talk and the ones bathroom with you?

Speaker 6 (02:16:00):
Guys?

Speaker 1 (02:16:01):
Do that?

Speaker 5 (02:16:01):
That's a really good question. Do you sometimes at the sink?
It depends on who's in the bathroom with you. It
we're Sabrina and she said something I would I would
answer back.

Speaker 7 (02:16:11):
But you ever have you ever had to borrow something
from someone in a neighboring stall?

Speaker 5 (02:16:16):
I'm sorry, I don't have a square to spare.

Speaker 4 (02:16:20):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:16:21):
You never saw that Seinfeld episode.

Speaker 6 (02:16:23):
I like that though it rhymed. I'm a sucker for rhymes. Man,
have you but like, have you ever through like through
the stall like a rando?

Speaker 4 (02:16:33):
Like what's up? That's never happened?

Speaker 17 (02:16:36):
Right?

Speaker 15 (02:16:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (02:16:36):
No compliments on like a tire, not from the stall,
not from the stall, but like at the scene you're like,
oh wow, that's a great blouse.

Speaker 4 (02:16:47):
Yeah, you know, we don't do that. I don't think.
I don't. I don't tell dudes they look good in
the bathroom.

Speaker 5 (02:16:52):
You sure, No, I don't wait for that certain sound
before you'll actually deliver the compliments.

Speaker 3 (02:16:57):
Ay, man, that's a really nice suit you have on there.
It fits you quite And now I'll give Rake up.
Oh easy, buddy, he's up on you watch too, and
that's part of your suit, man, And he looked great.

Speaker 6 (02:17:07):
I tell ray he has nice suits all the time,
and I'm not gonna tell him in the bathroom. Deb
Have you ever heal flushed?

Speaker 1 (02:17:14):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (02:17:14):
Oh, I I foot flush every time.

Speaker 4 (02:17:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:17:17):
I don't put my hand on that thing.

Speaker 4 (02:17:18):
I'm a foot flusher.

Speaker 6 (02:17:19):
I'm a foot flusher and I learned that from a woman.

Speaker 5 (02:17:22):
Now wait a minute, though, do you guys put flush
at the urinal?

Speaker 4 (02:17:25):
Because if you do, that's impressive.

Speaker 5 (02:17:27):
That's impressive.

Speaker 4 (02:17:28):
Most of the urinals are auto flush, are they.

Speaker 16 (02:17:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:17:31):
Yes, when you back away from it, it rips it
for you. Yeah, but but I do I elbow that bitch.
I'm like, you know, atomic elbow in that thing you
can do punch, piss. Yeah, there's no way I'm putting
my hand on that. For many dudes have been you know.

Speaker 4 (02:17:41):
I mean then you walk five feet to wash your hands. Yeah, yeah,
but it doesn't matter. And that time I could be
picking something out of my teeth. I have five feet.

Speaker 3 (02:17:51):
Digging in my ears after ripping and zip it up
and like I gotta we had pork today.

Speaker 4 (02:17:58):
Your question.

Speaker 6 (02:17:58):
Yeah, dude, I have Bruce lead a urinal before I kick.
I gotta stretch for four though, But don't worry. Daddy
made Brown Belt when he was in third grade.

Speaker 4 (02:18:09):
Where I went there. Yeah, we did take the handle
water zero spots. Thank you moding it.

Speaker 3 (02:18:17):
I'm out right for seven nine six one four one.
You can always text us at seven seven zero three
one again. Your six o'clock keyword is credit.

Speaker 4 (02:18:26):
That's c R E D. I T go to Real
Radio Data FIM and send that.

Speaker 3 (02:18:30):
I'll for your chance at one thousand dollars back with
it's only money in Scott Brown. Next here on the
Jim Colbert Show, Stay put.

Speaker 20 (02:18:57):
My wife and I did a thing one night where
we sat across the table, held hands, stared into each
other's eyes for ten minutes, and then each of us
had to write down what they thought the other was thinking.

Speaker 4 (02:19:11):
Oh my god.

Speaker 6 (02:19:13):
One of us wrote, please don't fart, Please don't fart.

Speaker 4 (02:19:17):
All right, welcome back to the Jim Over Show.

Speaker 3 (02:19:19):
Real radio one or four point one credit is your
six o'clock yard. That's cr E d I T make
it over to a real radio dot FM and send
it off for your chance at one thousand bucks.

Speaker 4 (02:19:28):
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello Jack, Yeah, and Ross. It's true.
Let's do It's only money please, Oh.

Speaker 2 (02:19:34):
Brave people passionate about planning for the future, rise above
investment with to build real.

Speaker 1 (02:19:43):
Isn't that really just common sense financial advice?

Speaker 2 (02:19:45):
It's oh okay, dude's all with money with Scott Browns
on the Edgewater Family.

Speaker 4 (02:19:54):
Roo, we messed fiduciary.

Speaker 3 (02:20:02):
Poofy, the poofy fiduci it's a little poofy, yeah, the
poofy fadouci.

Speaker 4 (02:20:08):
I've been called worse.

Speaker 1 (02:20:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:20:10):
Scott brown joins us Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com thirty eight plus
years here in Orlando as a fiduciary and a financial advisor,
making sure that people's money.

Speaker 4 (02:20:18):
Lasts as long as they do. That's a good thing.

Speaker 15 (02:20:21):
And maybe even get a little bit more than they
stepped in with the past, like the day after when
you're gone, then their money runs out there. Actually, actually
we pay for the cast get and such.

Speaker 3 (02:20:32):
Do most of your people actually like have that kind
of thing? Because I saw a thing online today and
it says, and you'll be you know, and by the
time you go to pass away, you'll have two and
a half million in the bank. I mean, do people
really think about, you know, how much they leave to
their family members or their people who kind of want
to plan it so you they use as much as
they can as they're living their life.

Speaker 4 (02:20:50):
Oh it's all over the map, is it really?

Speaker 1 (02:20:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (02:20:52):
I like, if I have a group at a seminar
like we had this past week, by the way, they
were great, they'll be the people.

Speaker 4 (02:20:58):
There's the people that want to leave.

Speaker 15 (02:20:59):
The I don't want to spend too much because I
want to leave my kids this that or the other,
because you know.

Speaker 4 (02:21:03):
They need this and they need that and whatever. And
then you got the guy that's like, I want to
bounce the last check, buddy.

Speaker 3 (02:21:09):
I think that's when my wife is in that bumpets like,
I want to bout the last ye do not give
a crap earn money?

Speaker 4 (02:21:16):
Exactly, they didn't earn it. Yeah, what about my money?
My money is confusing? Yeah, exactly, it wasn't. The shack
thing is like, but you ain't rich rich?

Speaker 11 (02:21:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:21:26):
I had a buddy used to say that to his
kids all the time. He's like, he's like, well, Dad,
we're rich. He's like, no, we ain't rich.

Speaker 5 (02:21:32):
That's rich, right exactly. Kelly Clarkson said that the same thing.
Her kids are like, Mom, you know, with our money,
and she's like no, no, no, no, no, no, no no,
yeah exactly, that's my money. On your own.

Speaker 4 (02:21:42):
You seem to be confused, exactly.

Speaker 3 (02:21:44):
Scott drops in on Tuesdays for It's Only Money, basically
trying to give you guys some advice on how you
can make your financial life a little better.

Speaker 4 (02:21:51):
We did have a couple of seminars this past week.
How'd they go?

Speaker 15 (02:21:54):
They were great, We had great crowds, lots of what's
what was awesome about these seminars. For the first time
we tried and I was a little nerve, like, how
is this going to go? We tried a live planning
event where we literally had people ask questions and say,
we built a plan for a hypothetical compo. But then
we allowed the people in the audience to say, well,
what if I wanted to go to Europe once a
year or for the first five years, or what if

(02:22:14):
I needed to buy a car every five years? But
what if I want to fund my grandchildren's education statistically?
And they could see in live time the software working
to show the statistical likelihood of their success, which is
no major revelation, but when you see it live and
you see what I call the spreadsheet of life, which
is literally your life chronologically for the next thirty or
forty years, what you're spending every dime on, what you're

(02:22:36):
going to bring in, what your taxes are, the multi
columns of wishes and wants, boats, you know, golf, whatever
it is. It's really eye opening and people totally got
into it. That's awesome. Man, I'm glad it went well.

Speaker 4 (02:22:46):
Yeah, yeah I was. I was a little nervous.

Speaker 15 (02:22:48):
I don't know how this is going to go, but
it went fantastic. If they reacted, well they did. Folks
reacted and they participated, which was cool.

Speaker 4 (02:22:55):
Very good. All right, we do have some questions.

Speaker 3 (02:22:56):
By the way, anytime during the segment that you want
to send a question for Scott, you can do that.
We will feature it, maybe even today if we have
enough time, but definitely I will send them to Scott
and they'll kind of mull over the ones that think
that most people want to answer.

Speaker 4 (02:23:08):
And you can do that now.

Speaker 3 (02:23:09):
It's seven seven zero three. One first question was what
is an esop? An eesop? Somebody mentioned this last week
they did. We didn't have time because I was like, man,
that sounds relatively involved, is it?

Speaker 4 (02:23:21):
And what is it? Yeah?

Speaker 15 (02:23:22):
No, it's kind of a retirement plan. It's an employee
stock ownership program, as the acronym would imply. And you
see this in a lot of companies where the employees
are given stock. Like if somebody owns a business, they
for example, there's a local surveying company I happen to
know about and run their retirement plan for them, and
they the gentleman who started the two gentlemen that started
it retired. In order to liquefy their business, they sold

(02:23:46):
it to the employees. That's cool, right, So the employees
there's a trust that buys that they get their money
out and get to go live their retirement lives. And
then the employees over time, based on their salary and
based on their tenure, often get shares of the stock
in it. And I would say the most famous example
here locally is Publics. They have an amazing ESOP program.
And I will tell you there are lots of meat cutters,

(02:24:07):
lots of store managers, lots of cashiers, lots of produce
people who have millions of dollars. You know, if you
got a good buddy that's been working at Publics for
thirty or forty years, make them buy dinner.

Speaker 4 (02:24:16):
Let me take something.

Speaker 3 (02:24:18):
My son worked there when he in high school, like
a lot of people do, as their first job, right,
and they loved him. They wanted him to move into
the management program. But he told me, because a dad,
I don't want to work for a grocery store.

Speaker 4 (02:24:29):
My backire life.

Speaker 3 (02:24:30):
I said, Buba, I said, back up, I said, if
you get into this thing at seventeen eighteen years old,
they put you on the management program, and if you
get your own store, not only will your salary be incredible,
but the program that Publics puts out is one of
the best in the state.

Speaker 4 (02:24:43):
I think actually maybe one of the best in the US.
For sure.

Speaker 3 (02:24:45):
I said, you will do quite well, and you're one
hundred percent right, because we know those people you worked in,
like the produce department stuff like that, who just kept
going in and by the way, great company to work
for to begin with, agreed, and they did well.

Speaker 4 (02:24:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:24:56):
So I started bagging groceries at fourteen of publics and
I started with seven guys, and of those seven guys,
two of them are store managers when one's a regional director.
And they got zillions of dollars in public scot because
they started getting it at fifteen, fourteen and thirteen years
of age. So I'm still buddies with those guys and
they've done fantastic. So point being as if you're in

(02:25:17):
an esop, and there are many others around town that
are really really good, participating in that can be a
huge advantage because it's tax deferred and then when you retire,
of course you pay taxes when you take it out.
Sure that's in addition to your four one K. That's
not a replacement for your foural one case. So if
you're doing both, you're you're killing So.

Speaker 3 (02:25:33):
Basically what giny to do is if you're working with
a big company, ask them if they have an ESOP
program that you can be a part of, or is
that something you should know immediately it'll happen automatically. Yeah,
it's really not optional in most cases. Right, So this
is also something that's come up, and this is a
little scary. You and I have had a couple of
fun little conversations about the idea of crypto.

Speaker 4 (02:25:48):
Being in four to one k's.

Speaker 15 (02:25:50):
Yeah, so yeah, yeah, the current administration is kind of
in favor of it. So here's what that means. You're
not gonna buy bitcoin in your four A one K.
You're not gonna buy a ethereum or or a Doze
or any of the other coins. What they probably will
do and I've yet to see it, and we do,
we do manage quite a few plans about town is

(02:26:10):
what you'll see is ETFs. You'll see an ETF for
an exchange traded fund that owns the bitcoin for you
or the ethereum, and it likely what it will be
will be a combination fund where they own a bunch
of them, so you'll own a bunch of cryptos. What
I would advise and I will tell you, the smart
people in this space, and there are a few smart
people in this space, would say five to ten percent
is okay. But don't get carried away with your side

(02:26:33):
because you can. I mean, we've all seen the price
wings in bitcoin and it can. It can be up
thirty percent and six months and down forty the next.

Speaker 1 (02:26:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:26:40):
And one of the things that's really telling about that
that really is kind of uh. You know, there are
the charts that you'll see online occasionally and it'll be like, hey,
if you invested ten thousand dollars into this company you
know when it started up, this is how much you
to have now, sure you know, and it's Apple, you know,
it's Nvidia, Microsoft, Microsoft, this companies like that, and those
are great numbers.

Speaker 4 (02:26:57):
When you see those numbers are like.

Speaker 3 (02:26:58):
Holy s I should have made that move with by
Tim Kam and now and then you see bitcoins dues.
It's bananas. I mean, it's like, you know, I put
in ten k now I have like thirty million or
something like that. It's so crazy like that. And how
do you explain to people how kind of odd rare
that is? Or do you I mean, how do you
approach that kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 (02:27:15):
I with crypto, I.

Speaker 15 (02:27:16):
Say, look, it's to me, it's a it's has the
potential like gambling in or the lottery, to make you money.
I don't think anybody can explain to you exactly in
the case, especially in the case of bitcoin, if there's
no product, right, there's no product, there's no dividend, there's
no company, and there's no earnings, there's no employees, there's
none of that to kind of point your figure out
and go, this is why it goes up.

Speaker 4 (02:27:35):
It goes up because somebody else is paying more for it.
That's exactly.

Speaker 15 (02:27:37):
That's the only reason it goes up. Now, you can
make cases which we can't get into in ten minutes,
but you can make cases for a theoreum ethereum in
that blockchain process has practical applications. We'll see soon with
stable coin that that'll probably be to me. I think
ethereum is going to be the better bet long jum
because it makes more sense to me. But the reality is,
if it goes up, it goes up. Most people have

(02:27:57):
not made money in crypto. Most people are in crypt
to have lost money, but enough people have made a
lot of money, and that's the bat we're now all
paying attention hundred percent. Yeah, next question here is the
one we get asked, I think more than maybe any
other question here on the show from you. By the way,
if you have a question for Scott seven seven zero
three one, send that over before seven forty or so
or about the end of the show and we'll get

(02:28:18):
it over to him for next week's program.

Speaker 4 (02:28:19):
How much do I need to work with your team? Yeah,
so we've been over this a few times.

Speaker 6 (02:28:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:28:23):
The reality is you don't need anything. All you need
is a good attitude and a willingness to do, you know,
work on your process.

Speaker 4 (02:28:29):
Right.

Speaker 15 (02:28:30):
So, if it's just a matter of making a phone call,
asking a few questions will help you with that. If
you want to come in and begin some planning, will
help you with that.

Speaker 4 (02:28:37):
I made the.

Speaker 15 (02:28:38):
Decision long ago. You know, there's a lot of firms
out there. If you don't have half a million or
a million, they're not talking to you. In fact, there
are plenty of firms who will go u named in
this town that if you don't have over half a million,
you're going to a call center. They're not dealing with you,
And I'm not judging them I'm kind of judging them.
You're not completely judging them. But I made the decision
long ago because every people in my business. There are

(02:29:00):
insultants that go around and talk to advisors like me,
and the first thing they'll tell you is to get
rid of all your low clients. Hear it, everybody who
doesn't have X amount of money because they're not profitable, this, that,
and the other. And I listened to this for decades,
and I kept thinking, but some of my best clients
had no money when they started, and now they have
lots of money. Right, So I'm more of the farmer mentality.

(02:29:20):
I would like to take somebody with a good attitude
and a willingness and the discipline to grow their assets,
and if I can help them do that, I know
long term they're going to be a good client for
our business. So the answer to the question is you
don't need anything but a good attitude and a willingness
to listen.

Speaker 4 (02:29:34):
Love that man that works out for a lot of people. Yeah,
I mean, I think I listened.

Speaker 15 (02:29:38):
Some of the proudest things, some of my proudest moments
are not the guy that walks in with five million
and I help them organize and do a lot of
good things, which I believe.

Speaker 4 (02:29:46):
I can do.

Speaker 15 (02:29:47):
But my proudest things are the four oh one k
participants for the last forty years that I have been
beating over the head that now have a million, five hundred,
four hundred whatever it is that I know they wouldn't
have had had I not, So that to me is very.

Speaker 3 (02:30:01):
Satist one hundred percent. Talking to Scott Brown, it's only money.
That's Edgewaterfamilywealth dot com. We'll give you more information about
what you can get from the website here in a
couple of seconds. Let's ended up with this question here
it says happiness. Yeah, how to quote structure a happy retirement?
What a great question? By the way, Yeah, I get
this question.

Speaker 15 (02:30:18):
I have a lot of thoughtful people around me, a
lot of thoughtful clients, and one in particular comes to mind.
Who's a friend of mine, who's an attorney. He's always
asking me, Scott, who did it right? How do you
retire right?

Speaker 11 (02:30:28):
You know what?

Speaker 4 (02:30:28):
That's a weird question. Very subjective, isn't It's very subjective?

Speaker 15 (02:30:32):
And I kept and yeah, he's been asking me for
twenty years and I still don't have a good answer.
But I started thinking about it and I started reading
up and Arthur Brooks is an author. Some people may
recognize he's written several books. He's a Harvard professor, don't
hold that against him. And he wrote a book called
I think it's called that the Happiest Happiness Quadrant or
Happiness Factor, or something to that effect. But he breaks
it down in a way I thought was kind of cool.

(02:30:53):
He breaks it down as happiness overall. But happiness and
retirement is three things, enjoyment, satisfy, action, and meaning. So
when you think about going to retire, that's think about
those three quadrants. How do you get enjoyment? Enjoyment is
me going on a cruise with my daughter, You taking
your kids to dinner. That's enjoy playing a good round

(02:31:13):
of golf with a buddy, having a great cigar afterwards.
That's enjoyment. Understand that you have to build enjoyment. That's
a third of your program. The other part of your
program is satisfaction that comes from donating your time, mentorship,
maybe maybe Boys and Girls club, or volunteering and big brothers,
big sisters, maybe building a habitat for Humanity House. We

(02:31:34):
still with this is where I think people make a
mistake is they focus on the enjoyment part too much.
So now they go from the couch to enjoyment, the
couch to enjoyment, the couch to enjoyment. Where where they're
what they're missing, I find a lot is basically the
satisfaction of doing for others, which I know sounds a
little touchy feely, but I'm telling you, I see it
in my clients. The ones who volunteer, the ones who
are at the hospital, the ones who are building habitat houses,

(02:31:57):
the ones that are dealing with you know, maybe maybe
dog or pets or whatever. They get a lot more
out of life, it seems to me. And then the
third one is meaning that's time with your family, that's
time with your grandchildren, that's time with loved ones. Basically
where you're you're at that dinner, or you're talking to
your grandkids, you took your grandkid to the park, whatever
it is. So these three things, I think I think

(02:32:18):
this summed it up pretty good.

Speaker 3 (02:32:19):
Let me tell you what's kind of interesting about that.
If you read about the blue zones, you know, the
blue zone theories actually factor in two of those that
they believe that one of the reasons people in those
blue zones live past one hundred years average is because
of what they do for others. The idea of doing
that really kind of creates a certain thing in your
body or your mentality that allows you to have that

(02:32:41):
piece that lets you live longer.

Speaker 15 (02:32:43):
Yeah, I think people when they go to retire, myself
include I'm guilty of this. When I think about retirement,
it's like, Oh, I'm gonna get my sprinder van, I'm
gonna do this. I'm go play golf four times a week.
I'm gonna have it on a cigar every night, and all.

Speaker 4 (02:32:52):
These tiff I'm not gonna do all that. There's no
way I'm doing all that.

Speaker 15 (02:32:56):
We're so focused on the enjoyment part that we kind
of think we're entitled to, but the reality is why
those things are fun is because you can't do them
all the time. I already decided, like if I had
to play golf five days a week, I would hate it. Yeah,
I would hate playing golf five days. I like playing
golf two days a week, but I would not like
playing golf five days a week. So I need to
add that satisfaction in that meaning factor.

Speaker 6 (02:33:18):
I wasn't ready to get pilled that hard, right there
was that was such a fortune cookie like matrix.

Speaker 4 (02:33:26):
You get white pills.

Speaker 6 (02:33:27):
Yeah, dude, I have money pills green pilled. Well, it's
just such a simple fact of life. That's not even
money advice. That's just existence talk. Is that if you
grab your favorite thing, if you do it five days
a week, you enjoy it because you only get to
do it once a week.

Speaker 4 (02:33:43):
The importance of moderation in all aspects.

Speaker 3 (02:33:45):
Yeah, yeah, but really, I mean, going back to the
Primetime kitchen thing. I started cooking. I loved cooking. I
was like, well, let's let's do something fun with this man.
By the time about like three years into that thing,
I hated cooking because I was doing it for a
purpose rather than for myself and my family and enjoying
it way, I really enjoyed it.

Speaker 1 (02:34:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:34:01):
I think if you go into retirement and money factors
into this, you got to figure how much money goes
to enjoyment, satisfaction, and meaning and you can figure that.
But that's that's some structure, right, that's structure for your restirement.
If you have you write these three categories down, what
do I need for each of these categories on an
annualized basis. That's actually part of your financial planning, but
I think more important than that, it's part of your
well being.

Speaker 3 (02:34:20):
Absolutely. In the website's Edgewater Familywealth dot Com, you have
a couple of books there that.

Speaker 4 (02:34:24):
Can help people out.

Speaker 15 (02:34:24):
You can get I Got a Guy, which is a
guy to using a financial advisor. You can go to
Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com hit the drop down for that, or
I Never Made Anyone Rich, which is my book I
wrote many years ago, which is much better book than
the title of the Implies.

Speaker 3 (02:34:38):
Also, also on the website you could get to pull
down and make a consultation because a lot of people
will have questions. We can't cover everything on the show,
but you know these guys are always at the office.
You are one of your team members that can answer
questions from people who are you have questions that maybe
we don't cover here on the air, or they can
take a few minutes and talk with you directly and
try to explain what's going on.

Speaker 6 (02:34:57):
And I just wanted to say, because I know we're
up against the clock and I I really wanted to
point this out. Is that join me on my financial journey.
As Scott and I have our new show Aftermath.

Speaker 4 (02:35:08):
Yes I am. Listen. Our listeners kind of know exactly
who I am. I'm way too honest in front of
this microphone.

Speaker 6 (02:35:15):
But one thing as I became a dad, money financial
freedom has absolutely skyrocketed on my priority list. So if
you are like me, I think you have a ballpark idea.
How similar you are? Join me on my Lord of
the Ring long journey of figuring out Grab a lantern,
what's a good financial decision and what's not? Everywhere Me

(02:35:38):
and Scott are doing it Aftermath. Check out the podcast.

Speaker 4 (02:35:40):
More information coming out to you.

Speaker 15 (02:35:42):
Yeah, wherever you get your podcasts from we are, you
can find Aftermath, which is Ross and I talking shop,
talking bit, talking finances, everyday finances from his perspective.

Speaker 4 (02:35:51):
From my perspective, it's it's a it's what are we
doing about? Twenty thirty minutes? He yep, twenty thirty minutes
an episode three Hearty Topics. Also shout out to Scott.

Speaker 6 (02:36:01):
He hasn't told me to stop being me, so I
get to still ask dumb questions and get really smarty
and right.

Speaker 4 (02:36:08):
It's really fun. Yeah, that's awesome called Aftermath Aftermath.

Speaker 15 (02:36:11):
So wherever you get your podcasts from Go look it
up and there you'll find Ross and I, you know,
talking to talk.

Speaker 3 (02:36:16):
I love that man, all right, Scott Brown, that's what
our Familywealth dot com. Check that out, Debb. You get
some news for us.

Speaker 5 (02:36:20):
Yeah, we're gonna talk about a new survey showing this
party's advantage in the twenty twenty six race. Meanwhile, who
is leading in Florida's US Senate and Attorney general races?
And a real lasty moment in Tampa. We'll talk about
that next during you heard it here first.

Speaker 3 (02:36:35):
Yeah, don't forget your six keyword is credit. That's credit.
Go to real Radio dot if him and send that
off for your chance at one thousand dollars. Take a
little break, get Deb's news. Get the hell out of
here on a Tuesday.

Speaker 6 (02:36:49):
Hey, boys and girls are friends at TK law want
to remind us to look ahead, So we will look
ahead Tomorrow starts with the monsters in the morning.

Speaker 4 (02:36:57):
They will have a few opportunities for you to win
one thousand dollars.

Speaker 7 (02:37:01):
At nine o'clock, at ten o'clock, and again at eleven.

Speaker 4 (02:37:04):
When we turn it over to the news junkie. Don't
forget to look ahead with the team at TK Law.

Speaker 6 (02:37:09):
When it's time to plan your family's future, and that,
my friends, that time is now.

Speaker 4 (02:37:15):
Visit one firm for life dot Com. I just wanted
to say the Substance thing.

Speaker 1 (02:37:29):
I watched it.

Speaker 4 (02:37:30):
It's pretty uncomfortable.

Speaker 14 (02:37:33):
But I gotta tell you for me, I watched this
movie one time and I swear I will never watch
it again because there's scenes in that movie I cannot
erase for my brain, and that is mother Laurence.

Speaker 1 (02:37:46):
It will stress you out.

Speaker 14 (02:37:50):
Don't watch it.

Speaker 4 (02:37:51):
That last scene, dude, that last scene.

Speaker 11 (02:37:54):
The Substance.

Speaker 18 (02:37:56):
It is most definitely a good movie.

Speaker 8 (02:37:59):
And hey, you get a feeling out of.

Speaker 4 (02:38:01):
Anymore and a line of another girl, and that's not
bad at all. But it gets so gross.

Speaker 6 (02:38:08):
The visuals is I don't even know.

Speaker 4 (02:38:11):
It's like popping bubbles.

Speaker 6 (02:38:14):
Okay, okay, thank you, thank you, sir, Thank you things
a wild movie, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 16 (02:38:21):
Appreciate it all right, Yeah, Happy birthday, Charlie Daniels. You know,
people can think what they want to about the guy,
but I've met him before and he's a pretty nice guy.
I met him in ninety three, ninety four, my dad
and I were we were autograph Hounds. So we were
hanging out around the venue before his show that night,
and he happened to be outside of his tour bus,

(02:38:43):
so we approached him and asked him if he signed
a few things, and he invited us on the tour
bus for fifteen twenty minutes and that was a pretty
cool experience and he's a really nice guy. So happy birthday, Charlie.

Speaker 4 (02:38:53):
Yeah for sure.

Speaker 20 (02:38:53):
Man.

Speaker 21 (02:38:54):
Hey, JCS crew just wanted to just send one candolencense
out to the man who just called in about his
mother passing away from stage four brain cancer. Sadly, my
mother passed away from the same thing, so you are
in my thoughts and players.

Speaker 4 (02:39:08):
Oh, man, you're gonna bustle mic up boy. Hey, I'm
sure he appreciates it.

Speaker 11 (02:39:16):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (02:39:16):
Question. Yeah, have you ever seen the substance Scott?

Speaker 1 (02:39:21):
Are you?

Speaker 4 (02:39:21):
Are you a horror movie guy?

Speaker 2 (02:39:22):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:39:22):
I hate horror? Do you really?

Speaker 20 (02:39:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:39:24):
Scare me? Man, if you're aware of that?

Speaker 13 (02:39:27):
Just now?

Speaker 5 (02:39:27):
No?

Speaker 4 (02:39:27):
Now are you good?

Speaker 3 (02:39:29):
Big Chicken, welcome back to thed you go for show.
I'm Jim, there's deb Hello, Jack is here. Yeah, Ross
is here. It's true and straight Big chickens here as well.

Speaker 4 (02:39:38):
Big chicken.

Speaker 5 (02:39:39):
There's nothing wrong with you. I don't like those movies.

Speaker 4 (02:39:42):
Edge Orderfamilywealth dot com.

Speaker 3 (02:39:44):
You can get those two books, and of course you
can get her to pull down, make yourself a consultation
and talk to these guys. Try to make your life
a little better financially. We've got some questions coming up
for next week for sure, and we'll get those then. Also,
you can listen to the new podcast after Math. Yeah,
it's out there right now, so.

Speaker 4 (02:39:59):
Go grab it.

Speaker 6 (02:39:59):
That's raw, the big sauce, chicken Saulet's chicken without sauce,
A little chicken sauce.

Speaker 4 (02:40:08):
All right, dad, let's do you heard it here first?

Speaker 1 (02:40:11):
Good time for you heard it here first on the
Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 5 (02:40:15):
Probably no surprise here, but a new University at North Florida.
Polls shows Republicans leading in Florida's twenty twenty six governor's race.
Casey DeSantis and Byron Donalds each hold double digit leads
over Democrats David Jolly and Jerry Demings. DeSantis leads Jolly
by thirteen points and Demings by eleven, while Donald's shows
similar margins. Un f Researchers say many voters remain undecided

(02:40:39):
with a year ago before the election. Meanwhile, a new
poll finds Republicans are leading in Florida's US Senate and
Attorney General races as well. According to the University of
North Florida survey, incumbent Senator Ashley Moody holds an eleven
point lead over Democrat Jennifer Jenkins, while Attorney General James
Uthmeyer leads Jose Hovey Rodriguez by nine points. The poll

(02:41:02):
also found this is the top concern among voters.

Speaker 4 (02:41:08):
Oh we're guessing, yeah, play clip there? Oh no, sorry, economy, money.

Speaker 5 (02:41:12):
Um, anyone else?

Speaker 20 (02:41:15):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (02:41:16):
Sharks?

Speaker 5 (02:41:18):
Housing costs. Housing costs are the top concern among voters,
followed by property insurance, property taxes, the economy, and jobs.
That's and then finally, a missing toddler and his dog
are safe after they were found in Tampa. Jalen Johnson,
who was only twenty three months old, disappeared overnight from

(02:41:38):
his home on Silver One Drive and was found hours
later by a neighbor. The family's red nose pit bull
was found alongside of them, and both were unharmed. Hillsboro
deputies say nearly two hundred personnel joined the search and
they're grateful for the community's help. Of course you could
imagine that right, less than two years old, lost for
hours overnight, talk about terrifying, Yeah, exactly, scared it goods

(02:42:00):
and you heard it here first on the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 6 (02:42:03):
Thank you very much, deb no I I goes a
text came in talking about a certain news story.

Speaker 4 (02:42:09):
I was like, there's no way that's true, one hundred
percent true.

Speaker 6 (02:42:12):
Truck hauling aggressive monkeys thought to carry hepsy, herpes and
COVID overturns in Mississippi with at least one of the
monkeys still on the loose.

Speaker 5 (02:42:22):
Yeah, they had to kill the others, did they really?

Speaker 4 (02:42:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (02:42:25):
Because they were infected with diseases?

Speaker 1 (02:42:26):
Oh wow.

Speaker 5 (02:42:27):
So I don't know if they were coming from one
lab and going to another. But then the truck crashed
and the monkeys escape, so they had to go out
and kill the monkeys. What but one mill on the loose?

Speaker 4 (02:42:36):
Yeah, that's the literal plot of twenty eight days later.

Speaker 17 (02:42:40):
What do you do?

Speaker 4 (02:42:40):
Driv a monkey trip? The rage virus is here. Who
do we have to thank today, young lady.

Speaker 5 (02:42:46):
We want to thank Scott Brown with Edgewater Family Wealth.
In case you missed his timely financial advice. This podcast
has been posted at the Jim Colbert Show. Also want
to thank at Tourney Moe de Witt for saucing up
our Thursdays Froggers Grewing Are for that twenty five dollars
gift card. Congratulations Jimmy and last but never leased, Sam
bow And and Candice Rich for running our YouTube chat.

Speaker 4 (02:43:08):
Thanks guys, appreciate that.

Speaker 1 (02:43:09):
Jack.

Speaker 4 (02:43:09):
Question of the thing?

Speaker 1 (02:43:10):
Uh yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:43:11):
In our YouTube chat, we posted the question have you
ever had to take a drug test for work?

Speaker 4 (02:43:17):
Scott Yes? Okay, Jimmy, Yes, Jimmy, what do you think?

Speaker 7 (02:43:22):
The audience in our YouTube chat replied, what percentage do
you think had to take a drug test for work?

Speaker 3 (02:43:29):
Seventy three per yez sound fire, Yeah, okay, Ross stand
up yep.

Speaker 6 (02:43:35):
November six, Palm Coast, it's happening. More information is all
there on the interway.

Speaker 4 (02:43:41):
Do it to it, Lars.

Speaker 3 (02:43:43):
Yeah, comedy, it's Rosscomedy dot Com. That's Rosscomedy dot Com.

Speaker 4 (02:43:47):
It's happening at Hammockbeach.

Speaker 5 (02:43:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:43:49):
Yeah, that's nice. The resort of there's beautiful. Yeah, that's
little kind of like a little private thing.

Speaker 14 (02:43:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:43:53):
It's also open to the public. So nice. Forward to
the gig. That's a beautiful part of the state. Boom,
go low. One of the best team, one of the
best golf course is up there. It's a fantastic golf Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:44:02):
I think it's called is it the Reserve or what's
that calls too there's the Reserve and then there's the
Camick Dunes or Hammock Beach or something like that.

Speaker 3 (02:44:09):
Yeah, it is crazy good. That one is like I
think about like six holes on the ocean front. It's bananas.

Speaker 6 (02:44:14):
Well, I'm about to go low and then get the
audience laughing.

Speaker 3 (02:44:18):
Yeah, get ready to hit four iron from one thirty five.
Can't wait, it's it, ripping it right into the into
the breezer. Let's get out of here.

Speaker 4 (02:44:24):
Jack what he said, I know it all right. Coming
up tomorrow, I have Animal House.

Speaker 5 (02:44:29):
We've got Kristin Beerford from the Care Foundation coming in.
They had a fall festival planned and then someone narked
on him and we'll let her tell the story.

Speaker 10 (02:44:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:44:37):
We'll also talk to Scott Maxwell tomorrow. More opportunities for
you in a thousand bucks as well. On behalf of
dev Jack Ross and Scott.

Speaker 4 (02:44:43):
I'm Jim.

Speaker 3 (02:44:44):
We follow the new Showki. They follow the Monsters of
the Morning. After Us, it's Tom and Dan with the
corporate time and our friends from Real Laughs. We'll see
the Mark three for more of the Gym Colford Show.
Until then, have yourself a fantastic Tuesday evening.

Speaker 5 (02:44:54):
See you tomorrow.

Speaker 17 (02:44:55):
Bye.

Speaker 6 (02:45:00):
Yep, you got it, Toyota.

Speaker 2 (02:45:02):
Have 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 (02:45:10):
Both are available for free on the iHeartRadio app.
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