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April 27, 2026 161 mins
Monday - Jana from XL1067 & Magic 1077 is in for Deb. We talk concerts, work stress, Q ratings and the death penalty. Nutritionist Sarah Geha talks protein. Brandon Kravitz from the Kia Center before Game 4 of the Magic-Pistons playoff game, plus a draft recap. Attorney Ray Traendly on your phone being used against you, legally speaking. Plus, JCS News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Fab good luck.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Someone's gonna get offended. It's just the way the world works,
so hopefully save everyone a little time and or energy.
Here's this. The opinions that you hear are those of
the host and callers and not those of I heard,
media ex managements or advertisers. You are now listening to
the Jim Colbert Show on Real Radio one oh four

(00:25):
point one.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Dad.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
That's right, guys, everyone, a Monday 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 big old show you for you this afternoon.
We'll get you caught up once hatting in the world.
Jack will do that with JCS News around three twenty
four o'clock hours. Just us, just us and you guys.
Five block hour, we're talking to Sarah Gia. She is
a nutritionalist. We're we're talking about this big protein fad

(00:49):
that's happening.

Speaker 4 (00:50):
Now.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
We'll do trivia at five forty. We'll ended up with
sports and Ray Trinley. You heard it here first, Your calls,
text adult backs all day long. Welcome to the show.
I'm Jim. To my left, my lovely and very dangerous
co host Miss Jane straight Ahead, producer Jack Bradshow seven
nine one. That's how you call us? Text us easily
at seven seven zero three one. Find us on social Instagram, Facebook,

(01:10):
at the Jim Colbert Show on x just at Jim
Colbert Show, and all day every day at Jimcoberlive dot com.
This is where you can check us out on YouTube.
You want to send us a talk back, you can
do that as well. Grab the iHeartRadio app, go to
Real Radio and use that mike to send your comment
over to Jack and your three o'clock keyword is fun.
If you win, go to Real Radio dot fm and
send that away for your chance at one thousand dollars.
Fun is the word. Guys gonna get that money. We

(01:32):
haven't had a winner yet. I know that's unheard of
for us too. I don't know what to do.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Who did you make mad?

Speaker 1 (01:38):
I don't know. We have obviously pissed off the wrong
person because in this contest, this radio station competes nationally.

Speaker 5 (01:44):
None of us have. Yeah not, Orlando's been the one
one in two top markets.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
Oh they blocked us something zero question? How you doing, man?

Speaker 5 (01:52):
I'm good? Why do you call me dangerous.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
That's what I call deb because she is and you
are a little as well.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
She's missus dangerous. I just miss dangerous.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
Yeah I like that. Yeah, well, I know you're a badass.
I'm sitting here in a sweater like like some little girl,
and you're there in a tank top, and I mean
it's like a billion billion degrees under under zero in
this building.

Speaker 6 (02:16):
You know how jadd is approach. She emailed me earlier
today and she said, Oh, by the way, you know,
what's the temperature of your studio because these things vary. Yeah,
you know from from Africa hot.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
To undra down in my other studio.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Oh yeah, well you walk to get quite cold when
you walk up for where the sports station is, I
mean from where we are to the sports station, which
in feet is probably sixty five feet sixty ft some
of the men, and the temperature change is about nine
degrees plastic, so it gets brutal. But for people who
do not know, general Jenne works at XL one of
six point seven and Magic one of seven point seven,
among forty five thousand other stations throughout the how many

(02:52):
US What is the count?

Speaker 5 (02:53):
I think right now it's somewhere around like forty nine
to fifty.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
So you could drive anywhere to get you. She gets
a full salary for each one of them.

Speaker 5 (03:03):
She's going down.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
It's the big one.

Speaker 5 (03:05):
I wish, I wish.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
And you can hear her voice all across the US actually,
and you know, Mel Taylor's gonna be with us tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (03:12):
She's she's the same way. She is a beast. I
don't know, because she has four kids, like under the
age of eight.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
I don't know how she does that. I don't either, dude.
I think it's fake. I think they have like a
family that they just kind of write things off and
then she just sws photo ops with them. They're actors
and they're all good kids. You would think they'd be gnarly,
but they're not. Yeah. Yeah, Ryan's the greatest good which
up to man, everything good.

Speaker 5 (03:37):
Yeah, other than run in my mouth all the time.
It's great to have a change of scenery to come
in and like focus on one show for four hours.
And you and I always get to hang out kind
of off campus when we host different charity events and
we have another one coming up. So when Jack put
the call out, I was like, oh.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Yeah, yeah, I got to come to hang out do that.
It's so funny because a lot of people that work
at the music stations, and this is not taking anything
away from the music stations. You know, they do what
they do. But when you get to talk long form,
you know, it's it's very intriguing.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
You know.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Johnny was just in here. Yeah, Jack Kahan, Johnny to
come in.

Speaker 5 (04:07):
I love that. That made me so happy.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
I've blown away.

Speaker 6 (04:11):
It's a lot different than just spending ninety seconds talking
then introducing the next Justin Bieber record.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Yeah that's a shot, but I didn't take it. But
you But the thing is, he's built for this. I
mean because you know, again hanging out with Johnny off
the air and doing charity events and seeing him here
at the station and stuff. You know, he's got the
chops for it. He's you know, very well read and
and really good at making good conversation and funny too.

Speaker 5 (04:33):
You know, we're so lucky. We say that all the time,
Like CHS Cluster and this group of stations, like usually
radio stations hate each other and there's all kind of
shenanigans going on. That's never been the case here. I've
been for twenty two years. You're you know, even longer
than that. All of us have been lifers here and
we just genuinely enjoy hanging out with each other.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
It is true, you know. And funny thing, You're the
only other person I've heard say that about the group here,
because I've been saying that for uh, you know, the nineties,
we had some people that were a little sketch, you know,
we had some people that that believed that they believed
in themselves a little too much. Maybe the early twos
A couple of those people are still kind of hanging around.
We got rid of those fools too, but.

Speaker 5 (05:13):
Not much of us left anymore.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
The core group, man like the Christmas party has never
been more fun. It's more genuine than it is now
for sure. All Right for our seven six four one again,
you can always text us at seven seven zero three one, Jack.
We have a very interesting day for you for me, yes, sir,
oh boy, oh yeah, a very interesting day for you. Okay,
I got I mean, I got news, we got stories

(05:37):
from the weekend. What else you got? It's a Monday.
It is a Monday, but you already noticed it. So
we'll talk about that in just a few minutes. Yeah,
So Jenna comes in and she says, what do you do?
We'll tackle this a little bit later. She goes, what
do you do if someone in your family? How did
you word that to me?

Speaker 5 (05:54):
When someone passes away and you know they have something
that they loved, loved, loved loved, and you're like, deepok,
election great, right, what is the right thing to do
with these things that meant so much to them that
maybe you don't really know what.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
To do with such a great question? That is an
unbelievably good question because this happens to every like really
does like and this is gonna this is something I
deal with my I talked to my wife about, right,
and like the stuff that we have and we were
literally just talking about this weekend. Right, My wife still
has almost every paper and drawing our kids did from

(06:31):
the first grade on. It is you know those large
bends that you buy to store stuff in, the big ones,
Like literally I could almost get in. We have three
of those, and I may when I say full, each
of them weighs one hundred and fifty pounds and it's
and it's papers and drawings and homework and projects and

(06:51):
all the stuff. And I look at her, I said,
why are we keeping this? She goes, well, I mean
the kids are gonna want it. I said, I got terrible,
terrible news. Baby. I love you so much, a great mom,
You're a great woman. These kids are going to throw
that away immediately when they get it.

Speaker 5 (07:06):
Well, they're gonna go through it once and and they're
gonna reminisce, reminisce and be nostalgic, and they're gonna be like,
what do we do with this? Yeah, and it's gonna
go in the trash.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
It's gonna go with the trash. There's nothing, nothing of value.
It's only the value is to you. And she goes, well,
be that as it may, but we're keeping it. You know,
I'm in this. I keep it, right. I have it
for my daughters.

Speaker 6 (07:24):
But I also have a you know, kind of a
fat file folder of stuff I did as a kid
that my mom saved, and every once in a while,
you know, you look through it when you're for some reason,
you're digging around that file and you look at it
and you're like, oh yeah, yeah, and then I put
it back. I can't throw it away right right.

Speaker 5 (07:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Now, just so happens this family member that Jen is
talking about also had some other really unique stuff that
most people, like Jenna doesn't have any value in it.
I'm I haven't sitting here right in front of me.
Most people will look at look at that much like
I did when I when I reacted when you told
me what it was?

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Like what?

Speaker 1 (08:02):
And it doesn't mean anything to you. That has no
value at all to you, other other than the fact
that it was your stepfather's and you knew he loved it.

Speaker 5 (08:09):
And I know it's cool, but yes, I mean.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
Like it's not a conversation starter for you, right, yeah, yeah,
oh it is conversation So we'll get that a little
bit later as well. And then of course we had
Deb's wedding this weekend and uh so it was myself,
it was Jack Ross and his beautiful wife Olivia, my
beautiful wife Tory, uh, Darryll and Penny Payne of pau
Affection Dog Training. Oh yes, of course they're awesome. And

(08:33):
then Glenn was at our table. Glenn's wife was was
just kind of a convalescing after a medical uh procedure,
so she wasn't able to join us. My beautiful wife
was Naomi Bradshaw dot Com was there as well, and
I saw there the former mayor of Mount Dora sitting
with us, Chris. Chris c right, Chrissy. Yeah, So we
had a really nice time. The wedding was absolutely stunning,

(08:55):
was the The vibe was great, a very debid Chris vibe. Yeah,
very low key. But yeah, they've been getting like eight
or nine years I think beforehand. So you know, so
you know, Dev is now married, and it's so funny
because Dev is such a unique person. And to be
honest with you, you know, outside of the radio station,
we don't really interact a whole lot, except you know,

(09:16):
just if we find something interesting. We'll occasionally send each
other on Instagram reel to make you know, our animal thing, right, Yeah,
so we're here all the time, right, I mean, and
it's just the nature of the business. I mean, I
would say the same thing about Jack, I mean, or
Ross for that matter. We don't really see each other
a lot outside of station events. So really, to be
honest with you, we had no idea like people on
the show, because we didn't talk about it a lot

(09:38):
going in because she was so stressed out about it.
And the the other thing too is I don't want
to get into a conversation and have her say something
and have me like react it like, well that's not
how I would do it kind of thing or whatever,
even though I would never do that. She just was
so nervous to talk about anything, so I didn't really know.
So one of the big surprises was like, what was
she going to be wearing? You know, how is there

(10:00):
wedding dress was gonna look? You know, because Deva is
a really unique woman. Yeah, and uh, I actually text
her this morning and I said, man, that dress could
not have been more uh for a wedding in this
They had their reception at the Mount Dora Yacht Club,
which is right there on the lake, giant panel windows
overlooking the lake during the day, which was absolutely beautiful.

(10:21):
It was a gorgeous everything. It could not in my opinion,
I don't think it could have gone any better. The
food was delicious, the service was delicious. Everything was great. Yep,
everybody was so well behaved. Church had air conditioning, The
church had air interception had air conditioning. By the way,
the church is the oldest building in Mount Dora. And
by the way, also not the church that my wife

(10:42):
and I got married at. How does this happen? I
do not know the answer to that.

Speaker 6 (10:46):
Why were you proclaiming that this was this? They were
getting married in the same shirt she.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Was proclaiming it. I just gota went with it because
I thought she knew where we were.

Speaker 6 (10:53):
So Jenna, I am sitting in the middle of this
church and my phone rings in the church at what time,
I don't know, five minutes to the ceremony, maybe ten, fifteen,
fifteen minutes before the ceremony.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
My phone drinking, and I'm like, I got to step
outside of the dress.

Speaker 6 (11:09):
I get outside and it's Jimmy's like, I love the
invitation at home.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
Where's this place? Where's this place? And and I'm like,
you mean the.

Speaker 5 (11:16):
Place that the church you got married, the place you
got married.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
I'm like, dude, it's not the same church. So Jack
get me the address. We pull up and it's not
the same church. And I wait because here's what happened.
We're doing a couple of projects around the house and
we got up that morning which started just kind of cracking,
kind of going at it right. Well, next thing, you know,
it's like one one thirty and I'm like, oh s,
you know, it's like a game. We had to go right.
So it's showers, loan nine yards and get going and

(11:42):
walk out without her invitation, without her card or gift
or any of that stuff. Drive straight to the church,
make it there like eleven minutes before, get set up,
and then go in and uh and do the ceremony.
It was awesome.

Speaker 7 (11:54):
It was.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
It is not me stopped saying it's right, this is right.
It is a text check first, he said, I just texted,
and then I called him like, well I think the
text was still in the air. Yeah, yeah, yeah that
I sent and I called him in type of my response,
I'm like, what does he want?

Speaker 5 (12:10):
I am so happy for her. Yeah, you know, I
always you know, everybody teases me as like having a
cold dead heart and watching the two of them like
date and just be together and how actual they generally
just enjoy each other's company. I'm like, my waken up.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
I didn't know you have a reputation for cold dead heart.
Now I know.

Speaker 6 (12:28):
It's like you guys did the perfect work company. Uh
So I did snap one picture during the ceremony and
I caught both of them, and I with depths permission.
That's the one I put on our instagrams. All that
it's got a lot of fun.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
I have video of them ringing the bell because this
church has a bell tower, so as you're walking out,
I mean that when it was lifting deb off the ground,
was literally lifting her up the ground. Let me tell
you what though. She was putting some work though, dude,
I'm telling you she was. She was got herself a
little work out following that bell. But a great time,
very quaint, exactly what you thought it would be for

(13:02):
a Devin Chris wedding. So congratulations, it's it's miss right.

Speaker 8 (13:06):
Now, miss missus, missus.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
That's MRS period.

Speaker 5 (13:11):
Yes, yeah, all right, not to be confused with miss.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Yeah, it's the single woman where it's m I S
S or MS period and I think it's just m
S right, M I S S means younger, doesn't he usually?

Speaker 5 (13:23):
Or miss m I S S is for a youngerly
younger right? Okay, I am not that.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
I was about to say. You get to say that,
we wouldn't my ss Jana? Yeah, sorry for seven nine
six four one text us seven seven zero three one.
What do you get for news? Oh boy?

Speaker 6 (13:41):
Jerry continues Tomander, the FBI wants your help in solving
the mystery and animal stories, including gators, Pomona, Pomeranians, and yes,
even sloth.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Oh all upcoming, very good. Let's take a little break.
We'll come back and get Jack's news and do more
than Jim Colbert shows.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
Stay put Classic Alternative this weekend on Real Radio one
oh four point one Real Music Weekends, Classic Alternative.

Speaker 9 (14:11):
I ninety five northbound before LTG A Boulevard. There's an
accident off to the shoulder, causing some stop and go traffics.
Backed up from.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
I forgot.

Speaker 1 (14:25):
Did you co take two? All right?

Speaker 2 (14:30):
This is take number four?

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Okay, you know him? You vivid tea back and rock
lege and the day we raise a beer to the
gummy Bear. It's National Gummy Bear Day. Oh I am
a gummy bear, A funny, lovey gummy bear.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
I don't remember how this song goes or anything, but
they have a good.

Speaker 10 (14:51):
Show, y'all.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Don't get those at XLS.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
No different kind of gummy gonna get that guy and.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
I love it magic eitherly all right for our seven
the one on textas seven seven zero three one fun
by the way, which he's having ton of. That is
your three o'clock keyword? Have you in slide over? To
real Radio dot FM and send that away for your
chance at one thousand dollars. Guys, fun is the word.
You get that cash. I'm Jim, there's Jenne and Jack
is here as well and has your news. Let's get it.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
It's time for j CS news.

Speaker 11 (15:25):
Wows.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
This guy got a first name on everything.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
It's in my contracted.

Speaker 10 (15:29):
Here's the news on the Jim Colber Show.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
I didn't write that, by the way I did, but
it's always fun for when someone hears it for the
first time that hits. Yeah, that slaps for you there.
Yeah my contract, dude, just put it in there. Shut up.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
Our top story the White House Correspondent's dinner shooting at
Cole Allen, the suspect in the White House Correspondence dinner shooting,
has been charged with attempting to assassinate the president, among
other charges. The thirty one year old made his first
appearance in federal court. Investigators are examining a message alleged
to be from the suspect, as far as the security

(16:06):
at the event. The White House Operations Team, the US
Secret Service, and leaders at the Department of Homeland Security
will convene this week to discuss security protocol for major
events involving the president. The White House declined to rule
out operational changes to Trump's schedule following the shooting, including
the prospect of ensuring that the President and Vice President JD.

(16:30):
Vance not attend events simultaneously. I didn't think they were
supposed to happen anyway. I always thought that that was
like protocol. The reason why I was like, well, why
do we never see the vice president with the president
and some of these foreign things. I'm like, well, they're
not supposed to be in the same plane together, and
we're not supposed to be in the same building together.
I always thought that was protocol forever.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Yeah, and so.

Speaker 6 (16:49):
And the one thing that they did when they did
swoop in, they both went in separate directions. I think
that was just the side of the stage. They were
closer to it at the time.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
But what JD got out of there in a quick
I mean he was gone a full ten seconds before
they got Trump out of there.

Speaker 9 (17:02):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
I have my favorite to Steven Miller hiding behind this
pregnant wife or the whisking rfkaway while Cheryl Hines does
her best and keep up. I mean she was a
full twenty feet behind the dude. My wife points it out.

Speaker 6 (17:14):
It's like, so they're there to protect the like the secretary, right,
and the spouser. So that's the cabin It's not the couple,
it's the cabinet.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
It's the president, the vice president, and the cabinet members.
And that's it.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
I mean, the spouse are welcome to go along, but
the priority is definitely the cabinet.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
You better break a wine bottle and get ready to
fight if your wife because speaking.

Speaker 5 (17:36):
Of wine bottles, were the wine off about to say?

Speaker 1 (17:41):
You know, this is a tragic bit. Obviously, we don't
want any of this ever to happen. I mean, it's terrible,
but one of the funniest things ever. There's two things.
One was the two the two people were grabbing bottles
of wine because everybody else is under the table. They
were taking that wine. And then the one dude, all
of this was happening, my man never stopped eating a salad.
Yeah I saw stopped eating his salad. He just goes

(18:02):
this brought us good. I'm having it. Yeah yeah, ye crazy?
And is that that isn't this one of the reasons
like that that was at a hotel? Correct? Correct? Right?
Washington Hill. They call it the Hinckley Hilton, Yes.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
Because that's where the shooting.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Was for.

Speaker 6 (18:18):
He was leaving an event there, but that's also where
the previous White House correspondence dinners have been.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Right, I know, that's that's brought up quite a bit
of a conversation about you know, these things should be
more in a protected environment. And I think a lot
we had a lot of ballroom stuff after that, right,
one of the reasons when that happened, and people were like,
why are we doing this outside of a protected environment
from the government.

Speaker 6 (18:38):
Oh yeah, I think the President himself that night was
posting this is why I need my ballroom approved post
stop fighting it. And then you saw a whole legion
of tech supporting Yeah. Sure, Okay, a little local, more tragedy,
a little closer to home. USF murder suspect left a
digital trail. Now, authorities over in Tampa Bay area say

(19:00):
a second body has been found in the water near
the Howard Franklin Bridge, where the remains of a missing
University of South Florida doctoral's doctoral student were discovered days earlier. Now,
the victim has not yet been identified, but maybe Nahita
Bristi who vanished with her boyfriend Zamil Lemone, their former
roommate Hisham Abergabe.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
Oh man, good job there, thanks.

Speaker 6 (19:24):
Chary anyways, is charged with two counts of first degree
in murder. Investigators say evidence including blood and personal belongings
were found near their apartment in the days immediately before
the USF doctoral students mysteriously vanish. He the suspect asked
chat GPT a series of queries, among them, what happens

(19:46):
if a person is put in a black garbage bag
and thrown.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
In a dumpster. That's an odd question to ask. Not
a good look for you. Yeah yeah, yeah, bye bye.
That wasn't a sex thing, right, It wasn't like U
will it make me? No? Nothing? Okay? Because the one
roommate was found in the battle. Wow, that's crazy. We
have another Chedipeach story about that as well. It's so
crazy that what's going on there. So I think this

(20:10):
is just this is all kind of adding up to
a moment that the people who run these sites are
gonna have to kind of come to grips with h Well.

Speaker 6 (20:18):
It's but always the uh, the rules and the regulations
are always a few steps behind it being ugly shot
into the world, and it's like the worst people will
do the worst things with these, right, and then now
you have to adjust. The FBI looking for help and
aid to find a truck driver who went missing right
out of central Florida over in Bervard County, and the

(20:40):
FBI is asking for the public's help to find this
truck driver who disappeared. Agents say forty one year old
Alejandro Hokemino Gonzales picked up several vehicles in Georgia, stopped
at a Brevard County truck stop early Friday morning. Now,
surveillance shows that the truck later changed direction then disappeared. Yeah,
pruck was found hours later back in Georgia, but Gonzales

(21:04):
in several vehicles were missing. Investigators seeking video from the
ninety five rest area near Grant Valcaria and urge anyone
with information to contact the FBI.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
Yeah not a good scent. Yeah yeah, yeah, that does
not sound good. So let's move on. You know, that's
the dark stuff.

Speaker 6 (21:23):
We get out of the way, and we move on
to Jerry and what he's doing in the state of Florida.
Jerry's been busy. He's been in Texas, California, Virginia. Now
Jerry's visiting Florida. It was Jerry Mander. Oh yeah, yeah,
because Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has unveiled a new congressional
map aimed at boosting Republicans hold on the US House.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
The proposal would add four GOP leaning seats, leaving.

Speaker 6 (21:51):
Just four Democrat leaning seats in the district statewide, and
they eliminate a Hispanic majority seat in a central Florida
held by Democrat Darren Soto. The map was revealed to
Fox News, of course, ahead of a special legislative session
called by the governor. Democrats and civil rights groups say
that the secretly drawn plan limits public input and could

(22:14):
violate Florida's constitutional ban on party partisan Jerry Mander.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
Yeah, I think it'll get I think this will get
some blowback. I believe there were any. There were even
some Florida Republicans that do not want this to happen.
So we'll see how this goes.

Speaker 6 (22:27):
We'll see special session still has to be you know,
come into effect, but I mean it all starts. We
normally do this on the zeros, right, you do the
census every decade, you do the census. Then they redistrict.
But you know, Texas started it. Then California says, wait,
hold my beer.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
Yeah, that's just started this entire war. Indiana rejected it,
but Virginia just passed it, and then it got rejected
by court. Now I hear the Supreme Court's gonna allow
it to go through again. Don't know what's going on
with that.

Speaker 6 (22:55):
There's a lot of tip for tat happening, and I'm
not sure which one we're on right now. However, winter
park stand off, some good news ends peacefully after twelve hours.
This happened just at the end of our show on Friday.
It was a tense standoff and a winter Park condo complex,
and it did end peacefully after the suspect surrendered. It
was a twelve hour police negotiating me. Ask a quick

(23:17):
question about that, Yes, me, ask you guys. So, if
I pin up in my house and I hold myself
in there for twelve hours and then I walk out
peacefully put myself on the ground, you cuff me and
stuff me. Is me staying in my house? Does that
add charges to what's already happening, Like me just refusing
to come out and making you bring out all the

(23:38):
swat teams, making you bring out the hostage negotiator or whatever.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
All of that. Does that add any actual charge to
what's happening? Would that be resisting a rest without violence?
Maybe something along that. I think they could tack that
one on. Yeah, but like nothing else crazy though, right,
Like you can't just make because we hear these charges
like you get We got you for a traffic violation,
and then I got your four four other things that
we noticed while we were doing that. So I didn't

(24:02):
know if like you hold yourself up for an entire
half a day.

Speaker 6 (24:05):
I believe he discharged his weapon inside his conduct.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Yeah, well they'll get just some attention. Yeah, that's what.

Speaker 6 (24:13):
Started it, and the neighbors call the police and then
they came, and then then there was this twelve hour
standoff and finally.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
He came out.

Speaker 6 (24:22):
But I mean that that's twelve hours. That's nothing but
stress for the neighbors. Now what you can't get back
in your room. The police are now working. You know,
you thought you were getting off your shift and now
suddenly your entire neighborhoods closed down. Yeah for twelve hours. Yeah,
So they identified the resident of forty year old Charles
Preston Wolf and we wish him. Well, well, here's the

(24:45):
latest in the Sloth World drama. It's been a story,
actually global story, every day. It's every I mean today
it was on I mean it was everywhere. It was brutal.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
It was.

Speaker 6 (24:55):
The strangest thing is we have a different guest. We
have a different guest co for the past week and
a half. And Joana today brought her own mousepad and
it's a Sloth World mousepad.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
But oh, Jim, you were a lot.

Speaker 5 (25:10):
It was when I got here. See this is what's said.
Though it's a very cute little mousepad. We can put
it online.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
Well that's what sucks in general. I thought all the
marketing stuff, all the branding stuff was really good for
this place, Like it looked amazing.

Speaker 5 (25:25):
Who thought it was a good idea?

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Who approved it? Yeah, Well, the thing is they're not
protected enough to stop anything like that. And that's the
what we're finding out. I think that's probably gonna end
up changing because of this.

Speaker 6 (25:36):
And they were selling it because they were trying to
raise capital, So they were pre selling tickets, they were
selling their merch trying to you know, raise money.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
Early on, they.

Speaker 6 (25:45):
Weren't even open yet and guess what they're closing. Yeah,
it's the It was dubbed as the world's only sloth
areum closing permanently. The owner of Sloth World Orlando confirmed
with Fox thirty five that he plans to file for
bankruptcy protection and that he will no longer move forward
with plans.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
To open Sloth World. He said he had no other
choice but to file bankruptcy because, I mean, there's no
possible way to open up with this kind of press.
It's just the worst ever. And now he's got people
crawling up his ass from everywhere. And he had zero sloths,
right yeah.

Speaker 5 (26:20):
And they have been removed and they are being taken
care of. The one they got, well, we.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Know they're at the zoo. We're gonna have them on
Wednesday to talk about it real quick. But how much
do you think one of those costs, like if you
bought one from a dealer, Because when we had them
in here, we actually sloth.

Speaker 5 (26:32):
Yeah, I mean they're priceless, They're God's.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Little Yeah, so you think that, But the thing is,
really they're so inexpensive. To get one as a pet
was under three hundred bucks. Wasn't it something like that
you can.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
And that's why when we had them in here, the
one the vet or the one of the people with
Sloth World was saying they didn't want the price to
be low, but they they like the fact that when
it's a higher price, it really cuts down on the
illegal trade of the slot.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
But they were the I mean allegedly, allegedly allegedly they're
the ones you know, getting wild caught slots sent here.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
Yeah. Now it says here that it says between six
and ten thousand apiece for the pet trade. But look,
this guy told this wasn't even close to that, and
someone else says as low as two thousand dollars. I've
heard they're lower than that. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (27:23):
Well, according to the Sloth Conservation Foundation, the facility they
talk about, Sloth World had imported at least sixty nine
wild caught sloths by early twenty twenty five, and at
the most recent update, only thirteen survived. Given the thirty
one that they already reported had died, they're saying there's

(27:44):
twenty four that are unaccounted for.

Speaker 5 (27:47):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Yeah, yeah, and they have thirteen of them at the
zoo right now and they're in quarantine. I think for
at least thirty days, possibly up to sixty and I
heard all of those made it through the first couple
of nights, which is a really good sign. But it
does not mean any way, shape or form that they're
out of the they're out of the water there, because
it still could you know, I guess they're pretty fragile
and delicate animals YEP.

Speaker 6 (28:07):
Spokespeople for the zoo said they're receiving dedicated care from
their animal and veterinary teams with regular monitoring and treatment.
Although although zoo officials did say they are feeling cautiously
optimistic about the animals progress, they said one slot the
remains in guarded condition. They're still along road ahead and
they are taking it one step at a time, according

(28:29):
to the Central Florida Zoo and Botanical Gardens. And they
did that in the Facebook post.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
Yeah yeah, let me be in with us on Wednesday to
discuss it more, which is awesome.

Speaker 5 (28:38):
Well, hopefully little shed some light on, you know, the
trade and what's happening with these amazing animals, and it
just shouldn't just I just still can't believe something like that.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Actually almost it's bananas, right, Like it's bananas. Isn't it
all right?

Speaker 6 (28:49):
You want some good animal stories please? Pomeranian dog got
his head caught in a kid gate. Okay, I thought
you said it was a good story, buddy. It is
because Barvard County firefighters used the jaw of life to
open up the kid gate and they take they saved
a little Pomeranian dogs.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
They couldn't wait to get those things out too. That's
like's equipment. You're like, I gotta open something. How about
this one?

Speaker 6 (29:11):
Orange County Deputies get a call responded to a nine
to one one call from an apartment complex over a
roughly five foot alligator walking near the complex. They showed up,
it was over eleven feet long. With trappers, they successfully
caught this gator without without injury and just a reminder

(29:35):
that it's breeding season in the state of Florida. Alligators
are on the move looking for mates, and some are
being run out of these areas by bigger males. According
to Gatorland Global Ambassador Savannah Bone, Yeah there you go.
How cool is that a statement from Earth?

Speaker 5 (29:51):
I think everything is in spring light mode. Just my
morning walks. There's ducks going crazy over there. The squirrels
are going crazy over there. The gators are in.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
Yes, sin, I gotta tell you something else too, Like
I'm part of a Facebook website called Orlando Golf Now
or whatever. It's just a you know, a website for
people who play golf. And what we do. We get
a lot of people who go onto the website and
they ask about, you know, hey, what courses should have
come and play? And what person said, Hey, do you
think I'll see any alligators? And man, you should have
seen the responses like, yo, bro, I gotta tell you
to see one at You'll see one at a fountain,

(30:21):
You'll see one at a You're gonna see him everywhere, buddy,
You'll have no problem finding any gators. The biggest one
I've ever seen is on a golf course. The biggest
one I've ever seen came out of a golf course.
Pond About that size, yea, it was a gigantic. It
had to be five six hundred pounds eleven feet that.
There's a gator on your screen.

Speaker 6 (30:36):
If you're watching a real radio dot FM slash y,
that's one big gator and half no big goodness. There's
two teams arrested after riding a lawnmower through target.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
You should not be laughing at that. That sounds like encouragement.
You should not do that. Both eighteen So they actually
did some other Did you see the other thing they did?

Speaker 6 (31:01):
Yeah, that the night before they took a leaf blower
inside of culvers, Yeah, into a culver's is all for
social media? Social media, I maintain, let's have it. We
need an extra like double the penalty social media.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
That's exactly the note I wrote to talk about that
story today, is like there should be something like like
when you hit an old bla If I punched a
forty year old guy in the face, it's one charge.
But I punched you in the face in you're sixty five,
that's a whole different machine altogether, same exact scenario. If
you're doing stupid s because of social media, they gotta
drop the hammer on your hands. Yeah, you have to

(31:37):
have your accounts are deleted, Your social counts are deleted.

Speaker 6 (31:40):
So no matter how many followers, your accounts are deleted
when you are convicted of doing something illegal.

Speaker 5 (31:46):
For claims, yes, oh yes, that's the ultimate, Like what
do you mean I got zero followers?

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Whi's gonna snatch your social life right up from under
your feet. You dummy, I like respect. One mower is
not the only things being filmed in a Cala. They
have a couple there's a couple of mask guys hanging
outside the post office and they're just recording, filming people
as they come, they come to and from the post office.
Some residents say the mass men have been recording people

(32:15):
as they come and go. One woman, uh says one
of the men walk right up to her car, tripod
out phone rolling. Okala.

Speaker 6 (32:23):
Police say the men are what they call First Amendment
auditors lord, and what they're doing is legal. They're in
they're in public right. Their advice is if it makes
you uncomfortable, walk away it says. The police say, stay
com don't touch their equipment, and if things turn threatening,
call nine to one one.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Yeah, but they know what they're doing though. By the way,
there's there's an entire social media like group of these
people that do this. They go to sensitive areas and
they start filming, trying to antagonize people to come out
and approach them and start something. And they do this all.
I mean, I can show you thirty videos during this
next break of people who do this exact thing. They're
not breaking any laws, but they are annoying the hell

(33:05):
out of it, like, where are you filming my building
for it? And he goes, what does it matter? I
don't have to tell I don't have to tell you
any of that. I'm on a sidewalk, I can film,
I can film you. You're in public. Yeah, yeah, it
doesn't matter. And they're just doing it to be deucebag.
Yeah that's it.

Speaker 6 (33:16):
And finally Winter the weekend box office Michael Jackson. Yeah yeah,
Michael movie ninety seven million dollars record for a biopic.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Yeah yeah, and crazy because it has a one star
review from The Times. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (33:31):
I saw and I'm always surprised based on my level
of interest, and I saw that I'm not watching that,
And then it's it's like breaking all these records.

Speaker 5 (33:40):
Its like, wow, I saw a good review that said,
you're not going to learn anything new, You're going to
enjoy the music, but you have to remember it's coming
from a very certain perspective.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
Right Yeah. Yeah, they have nothing controversial, right, it has
nothing none of the other stuff that we knew at
the end of Michael's life celebration. Yeah yeah, all right.
Four the seven nine one six four one text us
at seven seven zero three one. Don't forget your three
clock keyword is fun. That's fu in got a real
radio that FM and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars. Back in a second with more
of the Jim Colbert shows.

Speaker 2 (34:09):
They put sure, Hey, I am smart for can't It's
build coffee on a control board. Kat you think so?
Real Radio one O four point one. Gary P.

Speaker 11 (34:18):
Human from the ODO dot Com Weather Center O do
dot com the only business software you will need.

Speaker 12 (34:27):
That'll a race everything on the phone. Hey, can't film nothing,
They'll lose all the pictures, the phone numbers, there everything,
little bastards, mist.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
And gray more every syllable. All right, welcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show. Real Radio one oh four point one.
I am Jim. There's Janna.

Speaker 5 (34:48):
Good turn my microphone?

Speaker 13 (34:49):
Are you?

Speaker 1 (34:49):
I'm a professional, total pro. Yeah that's right. Jack's here
with us, so you guys, Actually it's so funny. I
just found out that Jana went to a rock show
this weekend and Jack also went to a rock show
this weekend. Yeah, let's start with Jack. We were actually
we thought we were gonna have the opportunity to interview
this gentleman but scheduling worked out poorly for us, so
we weren't able to. But Cracker was in town. You'll know,

(35:13):
I guess low was one of the big hit Loo teenangs.

Speaker 6 (35:15):
Yeah yeah, and a bunch of other songs, big alternative presence.

Speaker 1 (35:20):
In the nineties. Yeah, man, they were crazy.

Speaker 6 (35:23):
Ninety two their first album came out, and I was
just a huge fan of those first two albums.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
I had never seen them live. They were playing a
Toughies music box.

Speaker 5 (35:31):
How perfect.

Speaker 6 (35:32):
So I bought a ticket. Wait and just it was
just an amazing show. You said, Sublime.

Speaker 1 (35:38):
I just Lime. Yeah, yeah, yeah, right, thank you.

Speaker 6 (35:42):
So now, yeah, I felt like I was twenty five again.
That's when I first heard that CD. I loved it
so much. I was managing Calico Jacks over Melbourne at
the time. I actually had it put in the jukebox
there and play that play those songs all the time.
I play him right now on real music weekends, and uh,

(36:02):
you know, I just it was fantastic.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Sound was amazing, you said, it's so completely outright. Sound
was great. It was sold out. You know, ran in
New Coworker and you know, a friend there, and but
just just stood there and just soaked it up and.

Speaker 5 (36:17):
When my music is so good for the soul, it
is one of.

Speaker 1 (36:19):
My favorite things in the world to do. And it
was great. Man. I just I was just so thrilled.
I stood for the whole time.

Speaker 6 (36:26):
You know, I didn't even It's like the one decision
I had to make was walking out, is if I
buy a shirt, and I wanted one, and I didn't
get one. But it's not for the reason you would think.
The reason we would think is because you're cheap. Correct
you are.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
Excuse me, let me let me rephrase that, because it's
so mean. You're frugal, thank you very much. Let's say this,
it's extremely frugal. I agree. Yeah, the frugality is too hot.
I agree.

Speaker 6 (36:53):
And price point was thirty dollars a.

Speaker 1 (36:58):
World of concert. Sure, that's that's not a bad deal.
Like forty five bucks.

Speaker 6 (37:04):
Days when you go to an arena or show or
stadium show, that band is getting at least forty forty
five bucks.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
That is so yeah, that is so crazy.

Speaker 6 (37:16):
Now I think what they had a jacket at the
Rolling Stone show that was over two hundred.

Speaker 1 (37:21):
Oh yeah, yeah, Taylor, easy easy jacket. These things online.

Speaker 6 (37:28):
But I just thought about it, and I thought, I
have at least two under shirts at home. I probably rotate.
I probably have maybe twenty that I'm even wearing. The
rest are all just in drawers or in the closets.
So you have concert shirts now, just hirts and shirts
in general, maybe all shirts. I don't even know, but

(37:51):
I know I use a fraction of them. And I'm like,
I don't need another shirt, But it's like I wanted
to remember this night.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
That's a dumb Why throw one of your old ones
away and get a new one? What? What kind of
mentality is that we now wasting thirty bucks a shirt?
How much cooler would the Cracker shirt be today and
the one you have on now?

Speaker 3 (38:11):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Wow?

Speaker 6 (38:12):
Well I like this because my latest thing is I
go with no branding. I'm i because I'm so frugal.
I had to pay money for this. Yea, that should
tell you something, because all the Freeze shirts I wear
are advertising something else.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
It might be a radio station, I said. I said
that at one point, like if I went to my
cabinet and pulled down a beer glass, like how many
or how many of the glasses in my house have
a beer logo on it? Ama and then I went
home that next night or that night, and I swear
I had this. Now it's not that way. Now, I
had one glass in my cabinet that did not have
a beer logo or a brewery logo on it. They

(38:49):
were all pint glasses from all the breweries we've been
to or that have been sending stuff over. I'm guilty
of having.

Speaker 6 (38:56):
I have Christmas shirts that say Magic one oh seven
seven because I stole them from here.

Speaker 1 (39:00):
Very nice, that was you want? And then you saw
Altar Bridge this weekend, I did.

Speaker 5 (39:09):
Yeah, they put on a great show. They just started
their tour and they try they try to always start
it here and because this is like hometown for them,
and uh, that's such a great venue.

Speaker 1 (39:21):
And this is nothing against anybody else that hosts a concert,
but House of Blues, in my opinion, is the best
sounding room in the city. And look the Doctor Phillips
area for what it is, for sure, no question, I mean,
but when you go for a rock show, there's a
vibe that has happened, and man, like that House of
Blues vibe for rock shows is pretty darn good.

Speaker 5 (39:40):
Yeah, it was a really great show, and like we
were talking about it, just kind of charges your batteries
a little bit. I'd done yard work all day, I'd
had a remote, a car remote at that like, I
had had a long day, and I was like, I
don't really want to go, but I wanted to see
my friends. And I was like, you know, I want
to see the guys. First song in I'm.

Speaker 1 (39:55):
Like, yeah, right, decision, yeah, yeah, And they are like
grossly Orlando based, is I think all of them but one?
Or do they all live here? I know that Scott
and Mark live here for.

Speaker 5 (40:05):
Sure live here. Miles and Brian do not.

Speaker 1 (40:07):
They do not, right exactly, the belswere, That's what I thought.
So yes, Scott Phillips and Mark Tremonti, which is guitar
player and drummer, also remembers of Creed still are, Yeah,
still our remembers of Grade I guess, so that whole thing.

Speaker 5 (40:19):
But yeah, it was just a really great vibe.

Speaker 1 (40:20):
So yeah, that's awesome man, all right. Yeah, I love
like music. It's my favorite thing in the world to do.

Speaker 14 (40:25):
All these years, we get sick of it, but no,
you never get tired of it.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
Because the funny thing is is like I remember seeing
Garbage play years ago and uh, and it was so
that it sounded so good. I wondered if it was
actually live. And you realize that professional musicians are very
good at what they do and rarely make mistakes, especially
at that level. And I think half that band at
one point really they were studio musicians before they came

(40:51):
together and created the band. But uh, they then somebody
made a mistake and I was like, oh man, they're
live because.

Speaker 5 (40:58):
It was that goody as it Zar Larson a couple
of weeks ago. And vocally, you know a lot of
these pop girlies they're not You don't think they're going
to have the chops. And my friend Zouzy was like,
is she really singing? I'm like, yeah, she's really crazy.
And it wasn't until she like made like a little
vocal haha, and she's like, wow, like she sounds but again.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
House of Blues years ago. House of Blues, don't excuse me,
this was hard rock live. Went to see Stone Tible
Pilots with Pat O'Hara, who is at the quarterback of
the Orlando Preads for a while and I went with
Pat and because he's a big hard rock fan, like
crazy heavy metal fan, and we went to that show
and we both were sitting there in the dead center
of the crowd, like wondering if it was live again

(41:36):
because it sounded so amazing. But yeah, yes's great, all
right four seven nine six one four one text us
at seven seven zero three one. So Janna brought something
in today and we kind of went over that at
the beginning of the show of like, if you inherit
something that meant something to a lot to the person
who you inherited it from, but it doesn't mean anything
to you. What do you do? And I'll tell you

(41:58):
exactly what that is next, Jack, You're gonna like this.

Speaker 2 (42:00):
Your chance to win a grand in your hand is
minutes away on Real Radio one oh four point one,
brought to you by.

Speaker 4 (42:06):
Mill's Air from the Klosman Law Traffic Center car crash
called Klosmanlaw Klasmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 9 (42:13):
Looks like eastbound and westbound lanes are getting affected.

Speaker 2 (42:17):
You're listening to the Jim Kolbert Show.

Speaker 13 (42:25):
Sho Jimmy. A few reasons why garbage sounds so great live.
Besides the fact that they're great musicians. One their drummer
uses electronic drums and all the samples he has on
there are actually pulled from their recordings, so he has
no acoustic stage sound either. Two the guitars and bass

(42:46):
and all that stuff, they're running di I into the board.
They have no stage amps that are actually drawn. Their
stage volume is nothing. Their entire stage sound is through
in years. The only thing you can hear is Shirley
Manson's voice. It's super dialed in nerd.

Speaker 1 (43:02):
I love it, and he's right. And they got what
they call go direct. They have rack systems. Like you
go to big shows, you'll see a bunch of amps
and stuff. Well that's mostly that's for show. Like when
you it was so funny, I remember the old van
Halen thing when you go and you'd see the van
Halen show and it just be these wall of amps
and they were all turned on. And if you know
anything about how music is made, like in a studio,

(43:23):
you realize he can't loop all those together and make
it sound okay. What was really happening is is off
stage he had a combo which was just a small
amplifier with one speaker that he might because that's the
amp that a guy named Bogner wired for him specifically
to get what they call the Brown sound, So all

(43:44):
of that was just for show. And he's right, so
those are all rack systems. He just goes right in
the rack that goes and does all their effects right
out to the to the what they call the mains, yeah,
which is the main system that you hear, and then
the stage volume. Then when you see those wedges when
you're on stage playing. And I hope this isn't sounding pretentious.
I just happen to play on stage for a couple

(44:04):
of for a little bit. No, no, no, so im
Pat o'harer and I were on looking out? Was that
a week? Brag? Was that wild? That's an old like you.
I'm bragging you about an arena league quarterback? All right,
very nice, but I guess it's a great guy who's
just fun to hang out with.

Speaker 12 (44:24):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
But but he's right, like there's on stage you can
hear this. You know, they're monitors because that's how they
hear what's coming out of the mains and stuff. But man,
it did it sounded amazing that dude's right? Four seven
nine one, welcome back here, four o'clock heyward his win
w I n go to real radio dot FM and
send that off for your chance with a thousand bucks.
I'm Jim, there's Janet and Jack is here as well.

(44:48):
By the way, Deb is still on the show.

Speaker 5 (44:50):
Yes, she is just honeymooning.

Speaker 10 (44:52):
You just feel free.

Speaker 1 (44:53):
She was out last week to prepare because it's just
basically an army of Deb getting ready for the wedding.
And then she's taking a couple days off to do
a couple of things with Chris, and then she'll be
back with us on Wednesday. And I'm telling her she
can't take off UNTI about October. So we'll see how
that goes. Now, going back to what you said at
the game of the show, So Jenna comes in and says, Hey,
I got a cool topic for you today. What do
you do when someone that you know passes? Can we

(45:16):
say who it is?

Speaker 14 (45:16):
By the way, to do my stepfather, but your stepdad,
whom you had a great relationship, Yes, thirty years thirty
years right, So stepdad has a collection of a bunch
of stuff.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Now we will talk about some of that stuff.

Speaker 5 (45:27):
Yeah, yeah, we certainly can, But specifically that this thing
that has kind of come into my life and has
disrupted my life a little bit because I just don't
know what to do with.

Speaker 1 (45:38):
Right, Jack, she doesn't know what to do with it,
because here's the thing, and let me let me ask, right,
So if if Jack, if let's say you collected something
you thought was really valuable to you. Let let's go
back and say, maybe it's the beanie baby thing even
back in the day, or maybe something that actually has
some value now. But watches, yeah, yeah, you watches, right,

(45:58):
Watches is weird because that's a little too much. Well,
actually it works out perfectly, right, and you inherit some
watches Jack, Right, And let's say the watches actually have
some value. Right, But the person who bequeathed the watches
to you gave them to you specifically as a gift
from him, and the watches have a lot of monetary value.

(46:22):
Do you keep the watches or do you sell them?
You sell them? You have no problem with that, No,
even though you know the person's dying wish was for
you to have the watches.

Speaker 6 (46:32):
Now, this brought they wanted you to have this. It
brought them joy. It's of value, but they have to
they would understand that it's not. It doesn't bring you
the same joy, right, right, you know, they I think
they'd want that item to go to someone who it
would bring joy, right, and it's even better if you

(46:52):
could give it to that person and not sell it
to them.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. What if you hop on jimpopt live
dot com or go to real Radio dot FM slash watch.
I'm gonna hold up something real quick. And it's kind
of unique. So as part of Jana's this.

Speaker 5 (47:09):
Was something that was rolling around in his desk drawer.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
This was rolling around in his desk drawer. And as
you and as you can see on Le'll just read
you some of the names on the camera. This is
a baseball right.

Speaker 5 (47:20):
In autograph baseball from what year, well, nineteen fifty seven.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
Nineteen fifty seven, Jeff Gee, I wonder whose signature?

Speaker 5 (47:30):
Maybe some names like Mickey Mantle.

Speaker 14 (47:33):
Oh, boy in a slaughter yep, Yogi Barram, hmmm, Whitey Ford,
U Don Lurs.

Speaker 5 (47:41):
Oh my god, the perfect Casey Stengel plus plus plus
plus plus.

Speaker 1 (47:49):
I mean I can see him right here.

Speaker 5 (47:52):
And so the story behind the ball is his father
had given it to him. The Yankees had come to
town to play an exhibition game against the Virginians. At
the time they're now the Richmond Braves, but it was
the Richmond, Virginians. And this was a ball that his
father had given him and he kept it on his desk.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
And by the way, right there, right there, if you
look that, you can see the last name that is
Mickey Mantle's signature on this baseball.

Speaker 6 (48:18):
It is tough because you know that, so you would
not sell this is what you're saying. Well, no, no, no,
it's complicated. It's complicated about it, Jane, I know what
the value, the sentimental value that would be to me.
I have a Yankee room. I have a lot of
a Yankee memory Meilia, I have more than I can display.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
I have some willing to sell.

Speaker 6 (48:38):
But however, it obviously was something very special to your
your stepdad, and so but it right recommend does it
for you? How do you remember him? Is there something
else that you have that special to you that allows

(48:58):
you to remember him? Or when you see that you
also think of your stepdad?

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Yeah, because, gentle, when I look at that, and I
consider knowing you a little bit, what that is is
a really nice bag. What that is is a very
very very nice bag from the maker of your choice.
Almost You're right, I'm against selling it. Now. She doesn't
have the same vibe for Yankee stuff like you do?

(49:22):
What does she do? Does she sell it? And I
mean her stepfather made sure for a fact that she
got that ball. Does she sell it? It's got value.

Speaker 10 (49:31):
I have a.

Speaker 6 (49:31):
Question, what was any of the interaction between you and
your stepdad regarding said baseball?

Speaker 5 (49:38):
None?

Speaker 1 (49:39):
Zero, just like rolling around in a desk drawer.

Speaker 5 (49:44):
It Yeah, because it mattered to him because his dad
gave it to him, right, and he didn't even realize
the signatures that were on it. So we went through
it like ten years ago. I was like, yoke bearra.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Do you have any sisters or brothers? Interesting question?

Speaker 10 (50:01):
Okay?

Speaker 15 (50:01):
What?

Speaker 13 (50:01):
No?

Speaker 10 (50:02):
All right?

Speaker 1 (50:02):
Well the reason I asked because not that.

Speaker 5 (50:04):
Listen to this show.

Speaker 6 (50:08):
Your said dad received it from from his father, and
so I think, what maybe he was trying to to
pass it on to you.

Speaker 5 (50:20):
He wasn't even trying to pass it. So it's just
something that was sitting on his desk forever. And as
we go through, everything's seal it. But once you go,
once you when you take the items from said person
and you're cleaning it up, and you know, my mom
was like, what should we do with this? I'm like,
I don't know what to do with it. Trying to
get it authenticated, but that takes you know, a million
hoops to jump through. Once I get it authenticated, do

(50:41):
I want to sell it? Do I want to make
sure somebody? Great ideas said, maybe contact there's a baseball
there's a Virginia baseball museum. Maybe donate it to a museum.
Oh that hurt.

Speaker 1 (50:52):
That doesn't get you right.

Speaker 14 (50:55):
I don't want the purse. Let's just be clear. But
I want to do the right thing. So the right thing.
I want to do the right thing by the ball
and by the man. Okay, So because the ball is cool,
it is very cool.

Speaker 5 (51:07):
You want to touch it?

Speaker 1 (51:08):
No, no, no, don't touch it. I do want to look
at it. Do not touch it with your put your
stupid oil on it, Jack, you're cheap oil. It was
rolling around his dad. It doesn't matter. He doesn't want
you touching it. I just prayed to him.

Speaker 5 (51:20):
He asked me, y'all ever been in that situation where
you're like, Okay, I know what I would want to do,
but I don't think they want me to do that.

Speaker 6 (51:26):
I have things, you know, my mom passes, and then
there's stuff in my house and my sisters all come
in and they take the things they want and they leave,
and I'm left with everything else.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
It's like, Okay, what do I do with this? What
if you had to be was it a jewelry heirloom
made out of gold that is now like six thousand
triff they're melting that down.

Speaker 6 (51:50):
So I do like the idea of donating it to
a place in his honor where his name would be
as donated by and therefore that also keeps his memory alive.

Speaker 5 (52:04):
I like that idea. Yeah, and people think I'm crazy,
Well what are you doing? I would donate it to
like the Virginia Baseball Museum or something that would make
everybody happy. Right, Maybe I just donated to Jack.

Speaker 1 (52:15):
Don't donate.

Speaker 9 (52:18):
Do not.

Speaker 1 (52:19):
I'm gonna tell you something. Sorry, Jimmy's mike is just broken.
I don't know what happened toilet burst. There's no way
you're donating. I would do it. I would ruin it.
If the in the in the if you like donated
to Jack, in the transfer, you reach out to hand
the ball to Jack, I go screaming through the scene.

(52:41):
I take it. I immediately pill it off and flush it.
Have you had the praise.

Speaker 5 (52:46):
No, I tried to take it by a couple of
different places, and it's really just a lot of hoops
to get it done.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
So I just, I just I just did this online.
Right before the show. I popped in and said, U
nineteen fifty seven baseball signed by Just Mantle and Yogi Bearra.
I didn't even I didn't include Whitey four, didn't even
include those that was thirty five hundred. Yeah, that it
did not even include those names. That was thirty five hundred. Now,
this is a preseason game or something like that.

Speaker 5 (53:11):
It was as exhibition game, so an exhibition and it's
on an international ball, which is another level of something
which I don't.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
Right right now. That means it is not the official
Major League Baseball at the right Yeah, international league. Yeah, yeah,
So it may not have like crazy value because there
are a number of balls that were signed by call
it five grand yeah, I'd say probably five thousand bucks,
that's what I think.

Speaker 5 (53:31):
All Right, I gotta go.

Speaker 1 (53:33):
Yeah, I'm gonna have to walk you to your car
to that kid, right, Yeah, no joke. We'll just leave
it here somewhere. I mean, nobody will touch it here,
perfectly safe.

Speaker 5 (53:42):
Thanks for the input. I'm still just but.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
What about flex Like, so let me ask does it
have the same value? Like it's kind of a weird
thing though, Like if I inherited like something like a
piece of really expensive jewelry from a parent or something,
and I'm like and somebody says, hey, look, you know
this is worth this much money, and I'm like, wow,
I could use that money. You know, it would be
difficult to talk to yourself out of selling that because

(54:06):
you you know, you're but I have kids that could
pass it on to I'm kind of with Jack on this,
like you have an heirloom where you can continue this
to go down even if the person doesn't really care
for baseball, Like I know that you're maybe your daughter
doesn't care for baseball.

Speaker 14 (54:19):
But because of who who it came from, there's that
There's that whole other side of it too.

Speaker 5 (54:24):
It's like the Chevelle has no interest in the Chevelle,
but it's like I'm going to pass it to her,
going to her.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
Yeah, well in Chavelle thing we can talk about.

Speaker 6 (54:36):
It's nice to have something, right because even if it's
not a signed baseball, I don't have a lot from
my dad. I was very young. I wasn't even eight
when he passed, So there's very few things I have
that are tangibly his that I can see and think
of him, So that what's kind of night. It's a
display piece. It's also a great conversation starter, and it

(55:00):
also keeps his memory alive every time you see it.
And they could do the same for your daughter as well.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
But also you have other stuff that he gave that
could do that for you as well.

Speaker 5 (55:09):
Though, right, some watches as not as cool, like this
is history, Yeah, yeah, but I just wanted to sitting
on a like.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
Al Yeah, she needs to be on the Antiques Road
Show or something.

Speaker 7 (55:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
Yeah, oh they would trip balls. Don't we figure about
five grand? Yeah? I see five thousand bucks. I think
it's about close, depending on the providance and stuff. I
haven't seen the other names because I mean, like I said,
I just searched Mantle and bearra on that I didn't like.
I didn't include Don Larson or Casey Stinkle or Whitey
Ford or any of those people.

Speaker 5 (55:38):
I mean, I'm getting an education, that's for sure.

Speaker 8 (55:40):
Like I didn't even know it should about five grand
or let's say a classic baseball that's about what that
education costs these days. Yeah, buy my daughter a car, yeah,
good bye easily.

Speaker 6 (55:52):
But and it's also one of those things just beyond
a baseball when when you get left something that was
of sentiment value to that person, but to you it
doesn't hold the same value.

Speaker 1 (56:05):
What do you do with it? Yea, yeah, because I mean,
like most of the stuff that I knew from my background,
you know, being passed out, it's knives and guns. In
my family, it's knives and guns. Like I have a
knife for my grandfather's estate that is really old and
really kind of unique. I also have a pistol from
him that was old and unique. I didn't get access
to the entire estate, but that's kind of what you know.

(56:27):
I have a buddy of mine who when his father passed,
he passed down a cash of guns that his father
also gave to him. But the funny thing is is
like he didn't like want all those older guns, and
I think wound up packaging them up and selling a
lot of them and keeping the ones that he had
most of the value. And I would not do that, No, no, no,
I have like I'll never sell my my grandfather's pistol

(56:50):
I'll just give it my boy when when he gets older,
and I have another shotgun coming because my uncle just
told me that my grandfather on my mom's side, I'm
getting his twelve gage shotgun, which has no value. It
literally has no value whatsoever.

Speaker 5 (57:03):
It's got history behind but everybody.

Speaker 1 (57:05):
In the family's known about that shotgun since you know,
for you know, eighty five years. So eight four seven
back in a second.

Speaker 6 (57:12):
Real Radio has your chance to win one thousand dollars.
Just enter this nationwide keyword on our website, win WI
and win. Enter it now on our website Real Radio
dot FM.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
Good luck.

Speaker 9 (57:28):
Keep an eye up our emergency crews still on the
roadways clearing up that crash on Colonial Drive near I four.

Speaker 10 (57:34):
There. It has been certified. Came with.

Speaker 1 (57:39):
A cow horn that you kept the the black powder
in Pretty interesting.

Speaker 16 (57:47):
Hey, regarding that baseball, I hope she puts that really
soon inside a box that protects it from the sunlight,
because those signatures will definitely fade over time if it's
left out in the in the sunlight.

Speaker 1 (58:01):
Even if it's just that in the room, it needs
to be protected. So she brought it in today in
an old ziploc bag. That had a Rochesstree chicken in
it for the last God. Yeah, so it's great.

Speaker 5 (58:14):
That's a great piece of it.

Speaker 1 (58:16):
Smells, smells, it smells like a hot dog at the ballpark.
You're four o'click. You can't say, you can't say that
that's sexy. That's not how you're supposed to say the
hot dog of the ballpark. That's sexy.

Speaker 5 (58:27):
It's really tasting.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
Okay, When is your four o'clock keyword? W I n
go to real radio dot at piments and then I
offer your chance at one thousand dollars. When is the word? Guys,
go get that money. I'm Jim, jan is here with us,
and so is Jack. Yeah, Jana, so kind to drop by.
She usually works at Excel one of six point seven
and Magic one O seven point seven. You can hear
her daily on those signals, and if you're driving throat now,

(58:51):
and if you're driving throughout the US on every other
signal in America as well. I think you and mel
uh my wife, and I marveled. We took a little
road trip up to to uh, Mississippi to see some
family members not that long ago. And I swear, I
swear as I said here. Every single market we drove through,
we could hear we heard Mel Taylor's voice. Yeah. We

(59:12):
saw John Morgan billboard and heard Mel Taylor's voice. Yeah,
Morgan billboards are right for seven uh nine six one
four one text seven seven zero three one. I saw
this online today at read it and I thought it
to be an interesting question. So you and I, actually
all three of us, we have you know, we were

(59:33):
pretty lucky to get these cool jobs that we have.
But I had a real job before this. You know,
I owned a printing company before this, So that was
the hardest I've ever worked in my life, was doing that.
I think any any business owner out there listening to
us right now would say, that's probably the thing, Like,
you've never worked harder in your life than if you
own your own business. But I wanted to ask you
because I'm interested.

Speaker 10 (59:52):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
The question from Reddit today was what is the biggest
stress maker for you at work? What's the biggest cause
of dress for you at your job? And I'm asking
everybody this getting laid off, getting laid off? Yeah, yeah,
So the word in this industry.

Speaker 5 (01:00:08):
I mean, unfortunately, it's you know, entertainment's changing constantly and rapidly,
and you know, you attach your name to as many
as things as you can. But sometimes, and it happens
in every industry, it's it's not because of what you're doing,
it's just sometimes that's how it goes. And that's my
biggest fear. As you know, as a single mom, I
take care of everything. So it's not just oh, I

(01:00:29):
don't want to lose my really cool job. I can't, like,
I don't know what I would do. It's back to
the old Chevron gas station for me. But what you
before you get this job one of a few, I'm
gonna go back to probably waiting tables if I met
you for a while. But you know, that is my
biggest stressor but honestly, other than that, the biggest like stress.

Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
Well, I mean that's enough. I mean that's enough, like
you know, distressing that you're gonna get laid off because
I mean we obviously just went through another phase of that.
We lost a very good friend of ours here at
Real Radio, Serena was laid off in a cut because
of uh, that's it. I mean, yeah, and that's it.
And that's the other thing too, I think now, like
when something like that happens now, It isn't that it
just happened to you. Now you have to go out

(01:01:11):
and face social media finding out, especially in a job
like this where there's some notoriety involved, but even outside
of that, you know, you start you start questioning your
own value and stuff. And it had nothing to do
with her or her work I think or she is
as a person. I mean, she's a wonderful girl. She's
like one of the best people and and unbelievably talented.
We're going to hear that I have to do. I
have to tell you, though, if I'm being honest with you,

(01:01:32):
I find that a little shocking because if your because
of your tenure and what you mean to the company,
that you think that you're in that world a possibility
possibly getting laid off, that just that's that's wild to me.
Out I never I never thought you'd say that.

Speaker 5 (01:01:44):
Yeah, I think you have to. You have to keep
a healthy fear.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Well, there's no question. I just can't think about it ever,
because I mean I thought I would tell you every
single minute that, uh, there you're on this chain? Did
did bring it out?

Speaker 10 (01:01:57):
What is yours?

Speaker 1 (01:01:58):
It was that? It isn't. Yeah, it's getting laid off.

Speaker 6 (01:02:00):
Yeah, and that's the thing. It's or the biggest stress.
Not me, but anyone my worst days. I can count
them on one hand, and it was our mass layoffs
in nine in twenty twelve, and then after that they
kind of trickle like these annual little mini events where
they there's a riff or reduction in force the new

(01:02:21):
nice way to say it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
Yeah, yeah, I just order the texting service and man,
it's crazy. One of the reasons I asked this question
is because it is unique to every career. This guy says,
my biggest fear is killing somebody. Now that sounds wild, right.
He's a doctor, he's a medic. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah,
but I would you know it again?

Speaker 5 (01:02:38):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
Yeah, I don't think in those realms, like you know,
this job that we have is a joke, like compared
to what people out there doing, you know, every time
a cop goes out on a call, like every I mean,
you think about some of the people who have jobs
and the stresses that they deal with in those jobs
compared to what you think other people deal with. It's
kind of interesting to me because each career has its

(01:02:59):
own kind of set of factors and variables there. Yes,
Like I mean, we have a buddy that rebuilds helicopter rotors, right,
so his whole job is he brings in these you know,
carbon fiber helicopter rotors. They put him through all these
tests and look for stress fractures and stuff like that,
and his job is to re manufacture them to bring

(01:03:20):
him back to life. Right. Why do you think about
the stresses of that when they're bolting on one of
those things that he put back together. There's lives involved
with that, Like, I better have done this right, because
those things don't float.

Speaker 10 (01:03:31):
Well.

Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
I don't know if you noticed.

Speaker 5 (01:03:32):
Ah, my dad was a helicopter pilot, so was he
really that's crazy he would take them apart. I think
that's really cool what your friend does. But yeah, it
makes you know, getting the wrong record on the air
probably not the biggest stress.

Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
Yeah, yeah, hundred percent. Like even I was thinking about
this as I was reading it this morning, Like you know,
uber drivers, you think about how the world is these days,
Like every single time you pull up to pick somebody up,
that is a that is a.

Speaker 5 (01:03:56):
Flicking panic attack.

Speaker 12 (01:03:58):
Here.

Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
Why we're just talking.

Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
About all this really stress stuff.

Speaker 14 (01:04:02):
It's not stressful this is just what people deal with,
the kittens and unicorse puppies and kittens and unicors.

Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
Do you realize easily? Gosh? Do you think most people
believe it's just getting fired? Do you think that's what
most people go through life like? Every day they go
to work, their biggest stressor is this is if that
job is going to be there at the end of
the day.

Speaker 5 (01:04:20):
Gosh, I would hope not.

Speaker 10 (01:04:21):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
I don't believe it is. I don't know that there
are a lot of people.

Speaker 5 (01:04:25):
Were unique. Yeah, maybe so we have computers coming for
our jobs.

Speaker 6 (01:04:30):
Yeah, you think I think that extent that goes across industries. No,
I think there's a lot of people who fear being
replaced by or just replaced in general. But I think
artificial intelligence and and you know, computers are just another
form of threat, another threat to you.

Speaker 5 (01:04:50):
You can't tell me all the hours that you've been
on the air for, all the years and all the
recordings that you can't feed that into very something.

Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
I'm painfully arrogant. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:05:03):
I'd love to meet the AI version of you.

Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
Hopefully he would probably be tolerable.

Speaker 5 (01:05:09):
Or the opposite.

Speaker 1 (01:05:11):
Yeah. The thing is is like, I don't, Uh, I
don't think about that because I can't allow myself to
have that on my shoulders when I walk into work
every day, even though it may be a complete reality
one like what I don't do. I do not believe
I'm safe at any given point, but I can't allow
that to dominate my thought process because how could you
do that? Like how could you be effective at your
job if you're constantly worried about losing your job?

Speaker 6 (01:05:32):
And the three of us have been witnessing it long enough. Unfortunately,
is where you have to just accept it at some
point and realize that could be a day, but it's
you know, it's not going to be today, And today
I'm just going to do the job as best as
I can. And you know, if each day you do that,
then suddenly, hopefully you're at the end of a career.

Speaker 5 (01:05:55):
And I don't think you you asked the question like
what's the biggest stressor yeah, I don't think about that constantly. I,
you know, thoroughly enjoy what I do and what I
get to do, and especially when I get to do
with you guys, like I do come in every day
with a smile on my face, so they have the
worst day ever and I can still leave with a
smile on my face. But that is the big stressor
But when you bring up a great point, if you know,
if you're in medicine or you're taking care of the people,

(01:06:17):
or like.

Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
Oh, think about this. I mean you think about just
working on a road crew, like I will tell you.
And this is kind of a weird thing, like you know,
I've never shared on the air. Bit Man, I gotta
tell you, every time I drive past a crew of
guys or girls, whatever the case may be working on
a road and they're right there roadside, and I realize
how often I see people on you know, these major
highways going sixty sev seventy five eighty miles an hour,

(01:06:40):
not paying attention to anything on the road, buried into
their phone. Yeah, just looking at it, yep, buried into it, right,
And you just think, man, every single day, those cats
have to stand on the side of that road doing
some kind of work, trying to get their job done,
not knowing if somebody's going to be in an argument
with their husband or wife off to the side of
the road just getting wiped out. Dude, that would drive

(01:07:02):
me ba. I think I'd be more terrified of that
job than any.

Speaker 6 (01:07:05):
Saturday drive to Mount Dora for the wedding. This was
an afternoon drive. This was one point thirty in the
afternoon and for a good ten to fifteen mile stretch.
I'm behind this hyunday. It was just hitting the lines
on both sides, just back and forth and you know,
then a little weave. But it was just like distracted driving.
I would have thought he was drunk. If if it

(01:07:25):
was dark out, I would have pinned him as a drinker.
I don't know if he was just looking at his phone.
But it's just you see it all the time riding
my bike. It's just I see.

Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
That's why I don't. I try not to ride in the.

Speaker 6 (01:07:37):
Street because I just see too many people not paying attention.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Like, could you imagine being like a trader right now
with the market one day up three d points, next
day down six hundred points, one day up four hundred points,
next imagine going through that like every day. Like there's
so many different stressers for people in their jobs. I mean,
you know, as a restaurant owner, Hey, you're sitting there like, well,
everything's great. Then you realize beef has now gone up

(01:08:03):
forty thirty five or forty percent in the last in
the last six months. I bought two packages of beef
yesterday because we now make our dog's food because we
were doing that farmer dog thing, and that is ridiculously expensive.
So my wife is like, let's just make it right,
believe it or not. On the website they give you
all the recipes. You can go and make it yourself.
So we bought what do you think we bought two

(01:08:24):
and a half pounds of beef And this is true,
two and a half pounds. One one weighed one point
five to three and the other one weighed well, it
was actually just over that one point two to one.
How much do you think those two packs? It was
ninety ten so that's ground surloin. How much do you
think that was ground? Probably thirty dollars, It was exactly
thirty dollars. Wow, one was fifteen you know, one was

(01:08:46):
seventeen dollars and one was thirteen dollars. I paid thirty
two dollars for two and a half pounds of ground beef. Now,
if you're running a restaurant, you're not even gonna get
to eat it, right, you really, And this is the
cheaper way to feed your dog. Yeah. Wow, let me
tell you. You're out there as a restaurant owner and
you think of yourself, Wow, that's gone up. So now
my stakes that I was serving at like twenty nine
dollars a stake or whatever, I can't serve it for

(01:09:08):
that much more. But I have to eat the cost
of that steak man. That would drive me crazy, Like
this is my print shop. Almost put me in the
grave because of stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (01:09:17):
So what was the point of this reddit thread?

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
No, it was just what were the biggest stressors for
your jobs? Like what stresses you out at your job? Yeah?
Because I think what makes it a unique topic is
simply because everybody's just so different. Sure, like you could
be what's your biggest stressor if you're a cart guy
at Walmart not getting over or getting shot to.

Speaker 5 (01:09:35):
Whoos, I'd be like running the carts into somebody's car.

Speaker 1 (01:09:40):
Yeah, but that's another one. Like for me, it's just
that it's interesting because everybody's reality is so different from
day to day.

Speaker 6 (01:09:48):
Sure, and it's held to ultimately people's safety and security.
So the safety comes into fact with if you have
a job where other people's lives are in the balance,
whether you are a doctor or a medic or something
where the worst thing that can happen someone could lose
their life for security and the job. You know, your

(01:10:08):
security is a lot many times wrapped up in your
career and the fact that you have a job, So
losing that affects that. Yeah, so it it ultimately boils
down to those bigger things, in those bigger effects. It's
just some people have jobs that have a direct effect
on people's health.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
Yeah, yeah, other people's health. All right, four oh seven
nine one six one oh four to one Again, you
can always text our show at seven seven zero three one.
Win is your four o'clock keyword, that's wi in slide
over to your Real Radio out of m and send
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars back
in a second with more than Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
Real Radio is on Instagram at Real Radio one oh
four one. Sponsored by the Law Offices of Anna Jar
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Speaker 17 (01:10:54):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven three seven
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Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
Whether report is brought to you by Mills Air here.

Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
Kicking off the work week on.

Speaker 5 (01:11:03):
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If you mess up mostly I'm sending these messages correctly.

Speaker 17 (01:11:08):
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Leave a talkback now on the free iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
You're listening to the Jim Colbert.

Speaker 15 (01:11:17):
Show every morning Coolberg to Ruin as well to our
marvelous guest today, Janna. So, my dad actually left me

(01:11:39):
outside of the multitude of sports memorabilia and Grodge Fillow
tools his music collection which is over a thousand vinyl
and a couple of thousand CDs, and I'll never get
rid of it. It just means too much to me. I
passed up a little bit to Angel because he's cooling
love music.

Speaker 10 (01:11:53):
But Jack, do you know why you never joke with cashiers?

Speaker 9 (01:11:57):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:11:57):
I don't know why.

Speaker 15 (01:11:58):
For whatever reason, it never receives the register.

Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
They I mean, you get having your shows if you'd
be like, okay, well, institute of trade of some sort,
if you want to do okay, all right, Uh, welcome
back to the Jim Colbert Show. We're all ready to
go one oh four point one again. You got a
few minutes to get over to real Radio dot FM
and send off the word win. That's w I N

(01:12:22):
and we need a win. Man. This is the first
time I can ever remember doing these games that we
did not have at least one or two winners in
the first week. But we got pretty deep into this one.
Yeah yeah, JENNI said, isn't no winners the entire cluster, buddy?
Is that correct? That's unreal? Yeah, like that's unheard of
that we're getting pinched, no question. They just shut us
down up there. They turned off the spicket. No, only

(01:12:44):
the peap cities are winning. Pittsburgh, Panama City, Providence, Phoenix.

Speaker 5 (01:12:50):
How about our dear friends in Milwaukee.

Speaker 1 (01:12:55):
They have a couple a right, Yeah, we hate them. Yeah, yeah,
I M all right for our seven nine, six, one
four one. So another thing, Janna walks in here with
a plethora of a purse full. Could be a nicer purse,
but a purse. I'm done with the baseball. You can
update that's that was a jab at the baseball. That's good.

(01:13:18):
Oh that's nice. Yeah, similar similar to that bag.

Speaker 5 (01:13:20):
Yeah, it's literally called the number fool.

Speaker 1 (01:13:22):
She has a like a it's a carry bag for
her computer and stuff. Oh well, how'd you earn those
I don't know. Yeah, I can tell you how a
lot of people are in them. Well, I know I
do they showcase you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (01:13:34):
Have Marty Grabeans in my purse?

Speaker 1 (01:13:35):
Yeah? Oh no, because I did the broadcast at Universal.
Oh very nice. So Jana has a fifteen year old daughter,
and we've read stories about this before and she comes
in today and kind of I just asked her I had,
you know, I know her name. I just said, how's
you know your daughter? And she goes doing good? And uh,
I said, man, how old is she now? And I
just took a stab and I said thirteen fourteen? She's

(01:13:56):
fifteen now. Yeah. And on the cusp of driving, Yeah,
but what do we learn jack about kids and driving
these days? Well, a lot of kids are hesitant and
not eager to do that, and it's something that you
know they have to kind of they warm up to.

(01:14:16):
Let me just ask you, guys, like we're all near
the same age, could you imagine in our lives that
if you had a mom, like you know, you're you're
gonna if you had a mom that said, look, I'm
buying you a car and you're gonna drive like you
would hear you're like, okay, if I have to, like,
like I remember specifically like thirteen, thinking about what it

(01:14:37):
was gonna be like to drive at sixteen and the
freedom that that gave you or were.

Speaker 5 (01:14:42):
You really yeah, well we had a jeep on the farm,
so I would be like, yeah, the drive the jeep,
and you know.

Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
I couldn't wait.

Speaker 5 (01:14:50):
I couldn't wait to get give me that license.

Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
Let's go.

Speaker 5 (01:14:54):
That's not the case these That is.

Speaker 1 (01:14:55):
So, I mean that is like cause you're saying she
definitely she doesn't want to do it, like you're literally
gonna have to almost make her do this.

Speaker 5 (01:15:02):
She loves Halloween horrnites, and so I told her I
would get her the season pass if she did thirty
hours in the car before October first. So I am
having to barter, yeah with my child because I know
what she's comfortable with it. She's out of there.

Speaker 6 (01:15:20):
Yeah, when they experience what they don't know, they don't
know what they don't know, right, So they don't know
the freedom that they're going to experience. And then once
they experience that, they're never going to want to give
that up. And it's just a matter of getting comfortable.
For I have My twenty seven year old will do
anything she can to avoid driving. She drives, but she

(01:15:40):
lives where she works now. But if she doesn't have
to drive, that's a good day.

Speaker 1 (01:15:44):
That's unbelievable to me. Man, I wonder if that's kind
of a where you grow up thing, Like I grew
up rurally, so like you, I was driving at a
very young Age's not on the roads or anything. But
if you live in the middle of nowhere, you know,
hop in the pickup truck and go get the mail
because you have to drive down to a mailbox, a
group mailbox or whatever. And I would do that a
young I could drive a stick when I was really

(01:16:04):
I actually took my license with a stick, so I
was able to do that. The idea that somebody wouldn't
want to must be just because they're horrified. Because I'm
telling you, if I grew up in this city with
this kind of traffic, especially in the part of town
you live in with that kind of traffic, like I
kind of get the idea, Like I may I wouldn't
be scared of it, but I would be, like, man,

(01:16:25):
it's horrifying out there, like driving as a grown ass man,
it's scared, like driving as a young lady in traffic
in that area of town where it is complete zoo.

Speaker 6 (01:16:36):
My daughter's my youngest has been driving four years. It
was only this past year that you drove on I
four for the first time.

Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
Wanted no part of it, right, Yeah, horrifying.

Speaker 5 (01:16:47):
I grew I learned how to drive in Atlanta, so
which was terrifying.

Speaker 1 (01:16:54):
Orlando's traffic is like Mount Dora compared to Atlanta. That's
one of the worst.

Speaker 3 (01:16:57):
That.

Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
Look, we've been We've driven to LA and New York.
I hold Atlanta up there with anywhere. It is awful,
and i'ven't been there for years.

Speaker 5 (01:17:05):
I hate to jump back to the word, but I
think it also has a lot to do with this
generation that came through COVID, the anxieties, and they feel
like the fear and anxiety that these kids were dealing
with at a very she was in third grade, Yeah,
when all that happened, And I see this like residual
anxiety and a lot of these kids that I'm like,

(01:17:25):
why are you so afraid of driving? Radom Like why
and she's just like, I can't put it under word.

Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
But here's the thing again for us, like We've talked
about this as well, like getting my first bicycle. That
represented being able to go to my buddy's house without
having asked my mom or my uncle's to give me
a ride over there, because it was only a few
miles and I could easily ride the bike there and
eight or ten, twelve minutes, whatever the case may be.
You know, the car was that time seventy billion, Like

(01:17:52):
the idea of having a vehicle to be able to
go on dates and hang out with your friends and
not be bound to a certain part of town. And
when I lived in Polacke, we lived out in the
middle of nowhere, even in a small town, so it
was like everybody I knew drove at a really young age.
It was like it was kind of a purpose scenario.
It wasn't like here where you could you know, like

(01:18:12):
like Jack's daughter, you know, she works where she lives,
So theoretically, if she doesn't have somewhere to go, or
I need she doesn't have to, we would find somewhere
to go, like we just wanted to go.

Speaker 5 (01:18:23):
You know, there's still some kids who are anxious and
eager to drive, so all is not lost, and she
will when she gets to that point, how.

Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
Are you gonna break her? Just gonna are you? It's
the Halloween horn stubbery give her? Do you think if
you just stop giving her rides so she she hangs
out with friends and whatnot, Right, if you just stop
doing that when she kind of just come around.

Speaker 5 (01:18:43):
Maybe after she was sixteen, So right now, I'm not
waiting that long. I need her ready to go. So
it's sixteen day one.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
That's great for moms too, Yeah yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:18:52):
Yeah, gotta go.

Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
And she's active, right, so she's got a loss of
going on.

Speaker 5 (01:18:55):
She does, she has a loss of going on with
theater and just you know, all the things she does.
So it's like she to get it. I don't want
to force it on her. But at the same time,
I need to go buy a car. Yeah yeah, like now, yeah,
and I don't want to be that back to the baseball.

Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
Yeah yeah, just put it in the driveway and see
what happened. I wonder if that's specifically like a female thing.
You think you think guys at this age, like you know, fourteen,
fifteen years old, are also going through the same thing.

Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
I think it's more than it used to be. Yes, yeah,
it maybe they might be less likely. But Amy Koufel
was on New Chunky today and they were talking about
this because her son is also at the age of
getting a permit and they experienced the same thing where
they're just not as eager. I mean, I was ready
to go. First year I had my license. My town

(01:19:43):
I grew up in was a mile by a mile
and a half. First year I had my license, I
put twenty thousand miles on my car. Didn't leave my
town that often, just drove around. That's all you did
was driving around, hanging out, driving around.

Speaker 1 (01:19:58):
I gotta tell you, man, when my kids were coming up,
and you know, we watched them literally get to driving
age one year after the next, so it was like
one two one each year we had somebody turning sixteen.
And I will tell you when my oldest daughter turned
sixteen and she was able to drive, I looked at
her and I said, welcome to hell, because you're giving
every one of your brothers and sisters rides every time.

(01:20:19):
I don't want to. Here is the price you pay
for us buying you a vehicle. Get ready, because you're
get ready to tote somebody to wrestling practice. You're going
to volleyball practice. You're going to band practice and I
don't want to hear a syllable about how you don't
want to do it.

Speaker 5 (01:20:34):
Sorry, you got the freedom in that deal.

Speaker 1 (01:20:36):
You just became the Pulbert family. Uber.

Speaker 5 (01:20:38):
Yeah, so that I just have the one.

Speaker 1 (01:20:41):
And man, when they all started driving, and it was
not cheap, but I'm telling you, the freedom was worth
every freaking nickel, man, because we had four and they
were all active. And then I know parents out there
listening right now who have kids that are playing like
club ball and stuff. It was our life was a
joke for about four or five years where we would
just pass each other they're on the road and like
wave hi, hi, wife, because we were going to one

(01:21:04):
baseball practice, to a volleyball practice, to a band practice,
to a game, and it was crazy, man. And when
they were able to drive, it just made life so
much easier.

Speaker 5 (01:21:13):
Well, and the safety features on the cars these face too,
do not hurt because we had none of that.

Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
Well, no, no, no, no. My grandfather used to cut the
seat belt out of cars. He wouldn't get it first
thing and just cut it out brand new cars, cut
the seat belt out. Didn't want any of that.

Speaker 5 (01:21:25):
My mom used to put me on a Pizza Hut
booster seat.

Speaker 1 (01:21:31):
If you weren't laying in the back windshield, are jumping
up and down to the back seat exactly, just waiting
for that impact to sling you right through the windshield.

Speaker 6 (01:21:38):
Good times, good time, all right, Like we had the
Pizza Hut booster seat that works.

Speaker 1 (01:21:42):
It gets the kid at the right level, it doesn't
get the strap. Yeah, it made a pretty smart move,
classic ladies. Yeah, and now these car seats are like
thirteen hundred dollars. They're like Bluetooth. They wire into the car.
It's crazy. Yeah, it's gotta have a you know, a
holder for your iPad, right, Yeah, sure, all right? Four

(01:22:05):
our seven nine one six four one text us at
seven seven zero three one back in a second more
than Jim Coulberg Show. Got a fresh keyword for you
coming up right now.

Speaker 2 (01:22:14):
Celebrate the arrival of summer at the fifth annual Sanford
Riverwalk Rhythm and Bruise Barbecue Fest Saturday, May ninth. Details
a Realradio dot FM slash.

Speaker 4 (01:22:23):
Events from the Klosmon Law Traffic Center, Car Crash Call Klosmanlaw,
Klosmanlaw dot Com.

Speaker 6 (01:22:31):
Traffics Back to Media, Enter it now on our website
at Real Radio dot FM, and don't forget to answer
your phone if you get the call.

Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
Good luck.

Speaker 2 (01:22:43):
We now return to the Jim Colbert Show.

Speaker 1 (01:22:56):
Today.

Speaker 18 (01:22:56):
How's it o'hana ool, Sister Danna in the house. Yes,
welcome all board. Good on you Jana for going to
see alter Bridge. You know, I've always been a fan
of the band, not necessarily a fan of Scott's staff,
but with Miles Kennedy, they're probably, in my opinion, one
of the greatest modern.

Speaker 2 (01:23:16):
Rock bands of all time.

Speaker 18 (01:23:18):
I've all skilled musicians and just they rage on stage.

Speaker 2 (01:23:23):
Good up on you.

Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
Hello, Hello, brother, Thanks Jimmy.

Speaker 19 (01:23:27):
I appreciate you trying to stress all of us out.

Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
I'm going to be as balled as your ass by
the end of.

Speaker 10 (01:23:34):
Up.

Speaker 19 (01:23:35):
Until this point, I'm like, well, I've got a great job.
They take really good care of me. No boss, breathing
on my neck, no big stress.

Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
I love it.

Speaker 19 (01:23:42):
And then I'm thinking, well, you know, my one son
is deployed in the Middle East dodging drones and missiles.
Got another son that's dodging the principal's office on a
daily basis. With the feed up the kids in school goodness, man. Thanks,
sorry buddy, my bad.

Speaker 1 (01:23:58):
I'll take it all back, all right. Your five o'clock
keyword is media, M E D I A slide over
to real radio dot I him and sending that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Media is the word. Guys,
go get that cash. We hope you win. We'd like
to see a winner here in Orlando. And for Noe's
dassot be nice. I'm Jim Janna is with us today,
which is nice. Good to see you Jack here as well. Yeah,

(01:24:21):
good evening. Yeah, you get nervous when you come and here.

Speaker 5 (01:24:22):
Abou any chances me?

Speaker 1 (01:24:24):
Yeah? No, good, I'm glad you don't.

Speaker 5 (01:24:26):
Oh no, this is like Christmas.

Speaker 7 (01:24:27):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (01:24:28):
It's so funny because the news ladies that come in
and help us out, Amy Kufeld and Amy Sweezey and
then Lauren Roe came in a little bit later. Man,
They like, you know, especially call Fel Call is like,
I'm I'm nervous. I'm like, what are you nervous about?
You're like the number one TV personality in Orlando. What
could you possibly be nervous about?

Speaker 5 (01:24:45):
Dealing with you?

Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
It was the same way, I'm like, are you kidding
you guys. You're on television. You understand much more difficult
that is than this.

Speaker 6 (01:24:52):
But this is also way yeah free form where you
can get into topics of opin and then stuff and
you don't want to do anything that might hurt your
your day job.

Speaker 10 (01:25:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:25:05):
Yeah. The Q rating, Oh my god, the Q rating.

Speaker 5 (01:25:07):
I have a great Q rating, do you really? I
was in a study once when I was doing the
California Closets. Yeah, I got a C rating on the
TV campaign and I was like.

Speaker 1 (01:25:17):
That's awesome. Oh, I would look my Q rating would
be a in other words, first letter in the alphabet,
the lowest possible thing you could get. But I saw
somebody I won't mention who it is, but I was
at a TV station cutting some spots for uh, you know,
one of these things we were doing was getting supported
by television, and I was just in there going, you know,
just cutting a spot for it. And I know people

(01:25:39):
in the pit, you know, So I walked over to
say hey to a couple of the reporters that I knew,
and uh, one of the reporters was I'm like, where's
this person? And they're like, oh, that person's over there,
and and they said it in a sense like, hey,
be careful, you know, this person is having a moment.
And as I approached this person's desk, I heard louder

(01:26:01):
than normal grumblings about the Q rating because it didn't
come in so hot for that person, and that person
was not happy about it.

Speaker 13 (01:26:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:26:11):
Yeah, so I couldn't imagine dealing with that. I'm talking
to Matt Austin about a little bit from Channel sixth
and he tells me the same thing. Even though he's
you know, good looking, young, good at what he does
and everything I think he goes. He sweats that all
the time because you never know when people are gonna
look at you differently for something you know, you don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:26:26):
Pants you know, there's something to be said for that.
Q rating also called the Q SCO. It's a measurement
of how recognizable and well liked a person is. So
the questions they asked when determining a Q rating is
do you know this person or brand?

Speaker 1 (01:26:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:26:42):
Are you familiar with this person? And if yes, do
you have a positive or negative feeling about Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 5 (01:26:49):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (01:26:51):
No, can I tell you I don't even think it's
good to my house. I don't think it's even I
don't think my I don't think I'm not curating at
my house is good much less on the air. I
couldn't imagine that though, like, you know, because it's so funny,
because you know, a lot of people and God for
us as well, we were like, oh, you know, ratings

(01:27:11):
is everything, ratings and everything, but it's not like you
know when I read that study of years ago and
it said it said the number one attribute you can
have in your workplace is likability.

Speaker 5 (01:27:21):
Liability.

Speaker 1 (01:27:22):
Yeah, that's the number one thing. Because the whole idea is,
like I can almost tea if you have a brain,
I can teach you how to do the other stuff
I need you to do. Do people just naturally like
who you are, Like when you walk in a room,
do people gravitate toward you to hang out, talk whatever.
If you've got that and you're out there listening, you
can do whatever the f you want, because I'm telling
you that's half the battle in the world now is

(01:27:43):
just being liked.

Speaker 20 (01:27:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:27:45):
It's authentic.

Speaker 1 (01:27:46):
Yeah, and authentic. That's another thing to hear all the time, right, and.

Speaker 5 (01:27:49):
Nothing but authentic in here with you guys.

Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
Oh yeah, nothing but the humans in here guaranteed, just
a whole bunch of humans, all right, four oh seven
nine one six one four one. Again, you can always
text us at seven seven zero three one. How do
you feel about the death penalty?

Speaker 6 (01:28:04):
And that is why some of our television talent might
have a little nerves.

Speaker 1 (01:28:08):
Let's get when it comes, let's get in. Let's get
into you sweating here, let's get into your cue a
little bit. Is you actually don't you don't have to
have an opinion on the death on the death penalty,
but there's something interesting happening here. Uh and uh in
the US they want to have happened.

Speaker 5 (01:28:26):
Okay, I'm I'm biting.

Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
What well, how do you feel about the definitely?

Speaker 5 (01:28:29):
You know, I think there are some instances where absolutely,
if someone has done just the most abhorrent.

Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
Horrible, evidence is overwhelming.

Speaker 5 (01:28:38):
Evidence is overwhelming, no question, especially if they have you know,
I think it then Yeah, okay, I'm fine with that.
Where there's any great area and and and how it's
performed in some places, I it doesn't sit really great
with me.

Speaker 1 (01:28:56):
Well, the how thing is the question here? The how
thing is changing? Yeah, the thing is what's coming into
play like, I'm kind of with you on this, Like,
if there's even like even a modicum of evidence that
lead you to believe there's a possibility, and it may
be one on a trillion, it doesn't matter. You can't
do that right. You have to keep the person alive.
Because we've seen so many cases of DNA, you know,

(01:29:17):
freeing people. I think just four in the last year
or so that we've seen where people spent well over
a decade in prison on information that was erroneous, whether
it be a witness or something like that. DNA of
coursely frees them and off they go. When it's overwhelming
and it's no question and it's detrimental to everybody and
the person has zero redeeming qualities. I think the family

(01:29:39):
should be able to decide whether or not the person
lives or dies, because really that's what you're doing it for.
I mean, the person. If you're in prison for life
and you have no chance of parole, you really aren't
a menace to society anymore. So you could come beneficial
and be helpful.

Speaker 7 (01:29:54):
You could.

Speaker 6 (01:29:54):
Theoretically, I think they should be included in the prime However,
I don't think you should give them the burden of
that response.

Speaker 1 (01:30:04):
Percentage what percentage? What percentage? What? What percentage of that?
What should the family have?

Speaker 6 (01:30:09):
It should be it should be part of the process
where they judge asks.

Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
And say what do you guys think, and they say,
we think if you're.

Speaker 6 (01:30:16):
In favor of it, yeah, But to say it's solely
on them, that's a new level of guilt that some
of them would have to bear.

Speaker 5 (01:30:23):
A good point.

Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
It's, yeah, you think people have guilt issues. If dude
murders your entire family, you think you're gonna have a
guilt issue over it.

Speaker 6 (01:30:30):
Okay, that's one instance, and and I think for that,
there are would definitely be instances where some people in
the family would have that guilt. It might resent other
people in the family for making that decision.

Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
And I think maybe even internally, you would have to
have like a unanimous thing like let's say it was,
you know, they brought a mom and dad up whose
children had been affected by something like this, and they
asked the mom and dad and the mom said yes,
and the dad said no, you have to take that
into consideration, judge. That's and that's what judges would have
to make that decision on that, and how that kind
of affects the family and everything around. Right. Well, the

(01:31:04):
reason I bring this up is because, uh, it looks
like the uh, the Trump administration and right now wants
to add firing squads, electrocution, and gas asphyxiation as alternative
methods to executing people for the gravest federal crimes and
announce that last Friday. Now we know it was it
South Carolina that still hast the firing squad and didn't

(01:31:25):
believe that's it. And they just did that last year,
did they not? Yeah, thatsbody? That the most cost effective
way to go. No, here's the thing I don't understand
about this, right yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:31:34):
Cost of it too, Like you don't know who's got
the live round and like what?

Speaker 1 (01:31:39):
Yeah, But the crazy part of this argument was do
you know why they say they're doing this because they
can't get access to the drugs that they use to
kill people with. I'm like dogs, I'm like, just read
the news, buddy, Yeah, right, I just fired up fentanyl.
Just kill them all with finnel I do not I
guess I don't understand and the idea of the procedure

(01:32:02):
of this when we know for a fact we have
some illicit drugs that will do the job quite easily, right,
So I no, will wipe your ass out no time,
and it's dirt cheap.

Speaker 6 (01:32:11):
It's done as a medical procedure and the drugs for
that medical procedure. There are the companies that producers say,
you know what, we want to be out of the
death penalty basis.

Speaker 1 (01:32:22):
And it's two levels, right, it's the first one the
first injection puts you asleep and then the second stops
your heart. Right, So they've had some issues with that.
But I guess, you know, I didn't even think of
the medical companies don't want anything to do with it. Yeah,
that's crazy. I would have never thought of that. Yeah
that I guess that makes perfect sense. And that's the
reason why they can't get it. It's not that they're
not producing, Oh wow, this mattericine. It's like they're like,

(01:32:46):
I don't think we want to sell this anymore. And
it says and I think up until I think, up
until just a few years ago in Oklahoma you could
still get hanged. That they would. They still did public hangings.
And I think into the nineties, Jack, double check that
from you, because I mean I remember that as a
trivia question one time. This is just my comb but
I think the electrocution should be done with. That's the

(01:33:07):
one thing I think they should, you know, I think
when they shut down Sparky, And I know a lot
of people probably disagree with me on that because they're like, well,
we want maximum pain, maximum everything. I'm like, no, no, no,
that's not the I mean, you're not going to get
retribution because the person. Retribution comes from the person, and
the person doesn't feel that. They don't even understand the
idea of remorse, so you're not going to get that

(01:33:28):
and anything that you even I was just watching Anything
on Bundy the other day, and you're any any apology
that you get will be completely for show because they
don't even understand the idea of it.

Speaker 5 (01:33:40):
What how did they take him down?

Speaker 1 (01:33:42):
They electrocuted his asked they frien him eighty eight or
eighty nine, and we learned from the Green mile what happened.
If you don't want this fund one right, and that's
way worse than fact. That's way worse than burn and
popcorn in the microwave. Wow.

Speaker 6 (01:33:57):
Wow, So the last public in the United States, what
did you think it was?

Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
I said, I thought Oklahoma had it on the books
where it could be used up intil the nineties. Oh okay, yeah,
well it was last done back in nineteen thirty six
in Kentucky. Okay, yeah, okay.

Speaker 6 (01:34:16):
Last widely recognized its the last public execution led states
to end executions.

Speaker 1 (01:34:22):
Open to the general public. And that was Rainy Bethea.
Oh really saying what they were guilty? Dude, that's what
they did in France. Look, let me tell you what.
In France, they weren't even playing around. And look, Jack,
look up the last date. Look up the date for
the last beheading via guillotine in France. Listen to this date.
This one's gonna make you. But I'm telling you it's

(01:34:46):
within your lifetime. I believe.

Speaker 5 (01:34:48):
Well, you talk about a great deterrent.

Speaker 1 (01:34:49):
I mean, but the thing is is and the crazy
thing is this. So I read stories about like people
who were, you know, going to face the goal or
face the guillotine, And what they would tell you is
is there wasn't like a guillotine that was set up.
There wasn't like a central guillotine for all of France.
Like what would happen is this if the case was
a death penalty case, and it was being argued in

(01:35:10):
the courthouse right, and it looked like it was going
to be one of those things where the person definitely
was going They would build the guillotine out in front
while your case was going on.

Speaker 5 (01:35:19):
You can hear the hand You could literally.

Speaker 1 (01:35:21):
Hear them building the thing that was gonna take your
head off while you're going through it, and then they
would walk you out. People would gather around and then
you'd get your head cut off. But well, children watched.
Everybody stood around, They applauded, They vendors would sell stuff,
thought it was happening as if it was like a parade.

Speaker 5 (01:35:39):
It's very brave heart.

Speaker 1 (01:35:40):
It is very brave heart.

Speaker 10 (01:35:41):
That is.

Speaker 1 (01:35:42):
I'm glad that we're our society has kind of gone
beyond that. I really am. Oh, I think we're rolling
it back a little bit.

Speaker 6 (01:35:48):
But the last public guillotine execution, public being the keyword there,
nineteen thirty nine in France. But the last time they
did it four years later they banned the death penalty
completely Inferance. Oh did they It was nineteen seventy seven.

Speaker 1 (01:36:04):
Wow, yeah, wow, yeah, I mean Jen Doobie, Yeah, yeah,
nineteen seventy seven. They were still using the giatine convicted
of murder. Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right four oh seven
nine one six one o four one.

Speaker 10 (01:36:19):
Again.

Speaker 1 (01:36:19):
You can always text us at seven seven zero three
one media. By the way, that is your five o'clock keyword.
Get over to real radio DONFM. That's right, go on,
cheer them up.

Speaker 5 (01:36:28):
You also can go through your phone though, if you
if you're listening to the iHeartRadio app, you can just
click on contest. Then it'll take you to where you
can also put in a keyword.

Speaker 1 (01:36:36):
So I've learned it, like two weeks ago. Why haven't
you been saying it?

Speaker 12 (01:36:39):
Then? No?

Speaker 1 (01:36:40):
I did. It's in your email. I emailed you about it.

Speaker 10 (01:36:43):
Oh god.

Speaker 1 (01:36:44):
Yeah. By the way, Jen, if you ever an anything
from me, don't email your email.

Speaker 5 (01:36:49):
I'm waiting on that spot you and I were supposed
to do two weeks ago when you.

Speaker 1 (01:36:52):
Were so nice going hot shot, I sent.

Speaker 5 (01:36:56):
It to your email.

Speaker 1 (01:36:58):
Did you take care of that for me?

Speaker 7 (01:36:59):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (01:36:59):
I took here.

Speaker 10 (01:37:00):
Here's the best.

Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
Appreciate what was that for? Again? Nothing we're doing?

Speaker 21 (01:37:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:37:04):
Oh boy, thank you.

Speaker 10 (01:37:06):
I appreciate that. Do you any men to do it? Still?

Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
I mean I can.

Speaker 5 (01:37:08):
I mean it rhymes with webath.

Speaker 1 (01:37:10):
I know, but if you want, we can have Ai
Jim doing Let's do that. No no, no, no no, He's
way better than me. I don't need that out there
all right.

Speaker 2 (01:37:17):
Back in a second, Real Radio was on Facebook at
Real Radio one oh four one, sponsored by the law
Offices of ener Jar and Levine. Accident attorneys called the
law Offices of ana Jar and Levine at one eight
hundred seven four seven free.

Speaker 17 (01:37:30):
That's one eight hundred seven four seven three seven.

Speaker 1 (01:37:33):
Three three from the ODU dot Com traffic center.

Speaker 11 (01:37:35):
ODU dot com the only business software you will need
leplan still block.

Speaker 22 (01:37:42):
Hey Jim, uh, my brother, my older brother was murdered
in nineteen eighty seven.

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
I won't say his name.

Speaker 22 (01:37:49):
He was in the Air Force here in Florida.

Speaker 2 (01:37:53):
Uh.

Speaker 22 (01:37:53):
I was seventeen at the time. This past December, I
went to Florida State Prison and watched his murder be executed.
If you want to talk about an emotional roller coaster,
you know what she said about families being part of
the decision, Hey, Part two, families being part of the decision.

(01:38:16):
Twenty thirty years ago, I would have thrown the switch myself,
But in recent years I was so very grateful that
I did not have the burden of making that decision.
I left it in the hands of the state of Florida,
and that's how I found some peace in it.

Speaker 1 (01:38:34):
So Wow, it's uh.

Speaker 22 (01:38:37):
It's an interesting perspective that has changed over time.

Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
Wow, dude, thanks for the call. That's crazy. Sorry about
your brother. Man. Wow, that's bananas all right. For seven
nine one six four one text has seven seven zero three.
When you're five o'clock, keyword is media media Go to
real radiodeta piments in that way for your chance at
one thousand bucks. Jim jan is here with us today.
Jack is as well. Yeah, and you know she comes
in a once a month or so and we talk

(01:39:01):
about what can make you better, how you can eat better.
She's a functional nutritionist plus an environmental toxins specialists, which
is important to you. Guys. Give it up good and
laugh for Sarah Geyah.

Speaker 7 (01:39:13):
How you doing, Sarah, I'm great, Thanks for having me back.

Speaker 1 (01:39:16):
Well, good to see you always, good to see you.
How close was he on the name he did nailed
at this time? I say gaha. This time I said
gea the way it's supposed to be. Uh, Sarah Sarah
in twent isn't licensed nutritionness. That's what you've been doing
for many, many years. You know when you text me
today or emailed me and asked me about the you know, hey,
when were we gonna do this again? I always love
it and I appreciate the reminder because I'm terrible at

(01:39:36):
that life in general. By the way, I said, you
know what, I'm glad you called because I love like
either busting a myth or affirming a myth. And we
can watch the cool thing And now is with social
And I know, jan I was so just talking to
you about eating protein bars or what was it called.

Speaker 5 (01:39:54):
Yeah, no, it's a protein bar, a protein bar.

Speaker 1 (01:39:56):
And as soon as she walked in, she's like, is
this okay? I eat this? And one of the things
that's happening right now, you know, and we've seen everything
from us I E Berries and you know, all these
nutrition things that come and go about what you should
or shouldn't be eating. And right now one of the
big things is is getting loads of protein. Everybody's doing protein.
Matter of fact, McDonald's is about to release a number

(01:40:19):
of drinks that are like you're they're like fruity drinks,
but they have like a protein cold foam or something
on top of it. McDonald's are Starbucks now has like
if you talk to my wife and my daughter, like
they don't even go to Starbucks anymore if they're not
buying one of these drinks. It's loaded up with protein,
with protein here and protein there. Duncan has them as well.
The protein it's like the it's like the new thing.

(01:40:42):
Everybody wants to get as much protein. The they're dyet
as possible. So let me ask, I mean, are they right?
Should we be getting that much protein? And is there
different kind of proteins that really matter when it comes
to eating protein.

Speaker 7 (01:40:53):
You always start with such great question. I wish I
had a two minute response and then I would just leave.
There's no easy answer, of course, as you can imagine,
it's I think protein is one of those things that
was not getting enough attention, and now it's getting too
much attention, right. Think there's some type of mintal ground
that we could find, and it depends. Some of the
people I work with are doing a great job with

(01:41:14):
their protein. I would say the overall thing that I
see in my practice and other nutritious that I know
is most people are under eating their protein. That seems valid.

Speaker 1 (01:41:23):
They're under eating and they're eating. But protein quality is different, though,
isn't it, Because I mean everybody thinks, oh, obviously it's
chicken breast, right, We've been told eat chicken breast. It's
the best protein source. Eggs too, Yeah, eggs. Red meat
has been vilified and then revived fifty thousand times in
the last twenty years, so who knows where that is.
Eggs have been vilified, Milk has been vilified. Jane and

(01:41:45):
I were just talking about how we love like parfais
with a nice big lump of Greek yogurt with fruit
and honey and stuff like that. But what where do
proteins kind of separate when it comes to quality in
your body?

Speaker 7 (01:41:57):
I would say quality, of course, is where I'm always
going to go. So I'm glad you're getting me there.
We want people to get enough protein, but we don't
want the protein. I'm fine with a protein bar occasionally,
of course you're leaving the gym and you need a
little protein as an adjunc that's fine. But we want
whole food. So whether that is seafood, chicken, eggs, red meat,

(01:42:18):
whatever it is, we want it to be closer to
the way it's found in nature, which is where that
move away in these new guidelines from ultra processed foods.
The more things that are done to it, from the
factory to the processing to the additives, the less it
becomes a realer protein. I know that's not quite the
right way.

Speaker 5 (01:42:38):
Yeah, you know, it's a protein bar has been through
all the processes. It's not going to be as good
as allah a chicken.

Speaker 7 (01:42:44):
Breast, protein cold foam. It's not a bad adjunct to have,
especially to bring down that all of those drinks are
very sweet, and when we have something that is just carbohydrates,
just sugars, our blood sugar shoots up. Protein is a
great way to blunt that spike that's happening.

Speaker 1 (01:43:01):
Oh, did not know that. The funny thing is is like,
I mean, I know, Jenna, you know that in the
wellness space, I mean that could be like Matt max Man,
there's so much information out there, and you never know
who's like telling you something just to sell you something
as opposed to telling you something to actually make your
life better and to make your health better. So like,

(01:43:21):
because when I used to work out all the time,
which about that, Jana, why I used to work out,
so I was told immediately after your work out, get
some protein in your body because that's what helps rebuild
your muscles that you've just broken down, and that's how
you actually build muscle, good strong muscles, just feeding that protein.
And he would give me a couple ideas of barers
that I could eat up. But he would always say,

(01:43:42):
you know, always weigh protein, like you know use if
you're using protein out there to lift or you're doing
a supplement, protein that weigh protein is better than soy protein.

Speaker 7 (01:43:52):
He's saying that because there are there's animal based proteins
and plant based proteins. We consider animal based proteins would
be more biol bioavailable, so your body will do a
better job of taking them and using them. I always
say to look at protein is almost lego set it
breaks it apart. Your body breaks it apart into volume.

Speaker 1 (01:44:11):
No no, no, you're.

Speaker 7 (01:44:13):
Your body breaks it apart into amino acids, and then
you take those amino acids and you build whatever it
is that your body needs. Right, plant based proteins are
a lot of them are not a complete protein, so
you need complementary proteins, meaning an example that we've always
used is rice and beans. You don't get the full
set of amino acids and rice. You don't get the
full set of amino acids and beans, but when you

(01:44:34):
combine them, you have a complete protein. Really, so all
animal based proteins, all of them, whatever they are, the eggs,
the fish, the red meat, the poultry, they're all complete proteins.
And dairy the way is coming of course from dairy.
That's why they're telling you that, because it's more bioavailable.

Speaker 1 (01:44:52):
So what about the proteins that also have Like you know, again,
we've heard the egg thing for so long and then
people are like, oh, don't eat eggs because there's so
much cholesterol in eggs, or don't eat this because don't
eat beef because there's so much fat and beef it's
bad for you. But they can't all be like that,
right because we get as a species, we made it
here eating these foods, eating these products. So is it

(01:45:13):
just the balance of those things? I mean, do you
do you think red meat is all bad for you?
I mean, do you do you look at it like that?

Speaker 7 (01:45:19):
I think I'm going to sound like a broken record.
It's quality and so red meat back in the day
our ancestors were killing a wooly mammoth or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:45:29):
They also needed all that fat because they didn't have
availability to convenience stores to load themselves up with chips
and stuff like that.

Speaker 7 (01:45:35):
Right, and that was a non process, you know, straight
from the way that it's meant to be found. Then
we realized, oh, we can put cows into factories and
we can feed them corn and grains to fatten them
up and keep them not moving as much. So red meat.
I'm going to say, are you eating grass fed beef?

Speaker 5 (01:45:53):
Are you one.

Speaker 7 (01:45:54):
Hundred percent grass fed? Because of course calfs are getting
hay and all.

Speaker 1 (01:45:59):
And they finish it too. Right, you can have a
corn fed beef that's been finished with grass or whatever,
and they can that way, they can print that. But
what you want is from the very onset grass fed
beef from the beginning.

Speaker 7 (01:46:08):
It's a little complicated, and I don't want to get
into that, but I do have a blog if anyone
wants to read more about it. I write a whole
blog explaining all of the terms what they mean. But
the basics is a cow that's out there in pasture
eating grass that's not heavily sprayed as opposed to the
ones that are that factory farmed. To me, that's going
to make a difference. And eggs are the same thing.
Are these chickens that are out on pasture eating bugs

(01:46:31):
and worms and what's closer to their natural diet or
are they these factory.

Speaker 1 (01:46:37):
And just getting fat like going from a chick to
market and what twenty days or something like that, something
ridiculous like that.

Speaker 7 (01:46:44):
And that's harder for our bodies to recognize. It can
cause inflammation. So it's going to again come back to
the quality of the egg, the quality of the red
meat will make a difference of all of the downstream
effects in your body.

Speaker 1 (01:46:56):
Wow, that's really cool.

Speaker 5 (01:46:58):
It's cool, but it's also it's it's frustrating because that
the minor foods are sometimes harder to find. They're definitely
more expensive. You know. I try to eat as whole,
you know, as I can, and you know, yes, I
enjoy nice pizza every now and then, or I'll have
a protein bar. But you know, real food tends to win,

(01:47:19):
but sometimes the cost of it.

Speaker 1 (01:47:21):
Yeah, it's just wow. You know, we eat that hell
of fresh thing, Jenna, I know, you know, and I've
talked about this before. I we and we love it
because it is a relatively balanced meal and they're almost
always under a thousand calories. Actually some of them are
under seven hundred calories. You get plenty to eat, they
give you a lot of they'll give you a lot
of carbs to fill a little bit sometimes, or you

(01:47:42):
get like carrots and things like that to eat. But
we do find that, like you can tell, your body
is taking these these foods in well. I mean, it
seems to be relatively well balanced. And we found it
easier to eat that way because, like you're saying, it's
harder to go out and buy ground beef and then
ground pork or you know, chicken or turkey or something
like that and have it last in your fridge be

(01:48:02):
able to kind of create those meals because time is
so hard to come by. And I think, like you know,
what Sarah does and what I know that you can
go on your website and see them on you right now,
is you do have plans there where you can you
can actually kind of build a diet for yourself that
maybe give you those things that you want and not
have to sacrifice so much because it is hard man
Like if you grew up eating process foods like that
all the time, you just get in this rut where

(01:48:24):
that's the only thing that seems to fill you up
or saciate you know.

Speaker 7 (01:48:27):
I will say protein is remarkably satiating. What it is
not is something that we crave for most people. So
most people are craving carbs or craving sugar. They're not
over eating protein because people aren't sitting there craving three
chicken breasts.

Speaker 1 (01:48:42):
Right right right. Crave a steak, yeah, I do, crazy steak,
almost have one the other day. I craved it so bad.

Speaker 7 (01:48:47):
It is generally very good for society, which is one
of the reasons we're pushing protein right now. Along with
all of the things that protein does in the body,
it also pushes you away from the sugar. Is the
empty carbs, the alter possible foods. If you're feeling full,
full and satisfied with a steak in your belty.

Speaker 1 (01:49:03):
Right right right?

Speaker 10 (01:49:04):
Do you?

Speaker 1 (01:49:05):
I mean how about carbs? Like when it comes to that,
because when you pair of like we talk about protein,
of course, you know what your proteins are. You fish,
you get some chicken or steak or whatever, but you
know when it comes to adding carbs to a to
a meal again, potatoes or what and rice are those
things that kind of go through that like, don't eat that,
that's terrible for your carbs, turn right into sugar. Don't
But it can't all be that bad, right again, we
as humans we've had this, we say it's not bad.

(01:49:29):
Well for millennia we have been eating those things and
getting away with it and doing Is Is it just
that we just out of stupidity or accessibility, we've we've
not changed our habits.

Speaker 7 (01:49:40):
I think people are eating more and more carbs because
they're eating more and more processed foods, are getting more cravings,
are wanting more of that hit that you get from
the simple carbs. So maybe our grandparents were eating are
pretty balanced meal, a small sized grass fed steak with
vegetables and then modern amount of potatoes. Part of it

(01:50:01):
is how people are setting up their plates now. I
always encourage people to look at your plate. The ideal
thing would be fifty percent maybe a third vegetables and
then a good amount of protein. But you don't need
a giant steak and a moderate amount of carbohydrates, preferably
in a form that is the way that they are found.

Speaker 5 (01:50:20):
In nature, So not French fries.

Speaker 7 (01:50:23):
You know, if they're baked, are they baked in avocado oil?

Speaker 1 (01:50:28):
Did you actually just say that to avocado oil? Have
we met on Jim? I don't make anything in avocado oil.

Speaker 7 (01:50:36):
Next time I come in. My husband makes amazing homemade
fries that he bakes in avocado oil and they are delicious.
I'm telling you, I'll bring you some, my promise.

Speaker 5 (01:50:45):
It's possible. I like it.

Speaker 1 (01:50:47):
I have hope.

Speaker 7 (01:50:50):
But again, French fries that you're making at home, even
if you have a home fryer, you have an air fryer,
versus what they're giving you in a lot of these
fast food places. A lot of the problems I think
that we're having or coming to this overprocessed food that's
causing gut disruptions, that causeing cravings.

Speaker 6 (01:51:07):
Yeah, we have a texture with a question, says dear Sarah.
I've been told to watch my potassium intake, but they
looked into what they should and watch and found that
all things that they would consume are not good, like salmon, asparagus,
et cetera. What is the best way to watch potassium intake?

Speaker 7 (01:51:28):
I'm assuming maybe this is a kidney related issue. I
don't know if they specified. And that's actually one of
the things I wanted to bring up with this over
protein eating is if you have any kind of kidney disease,
you have to be very careful with what protein you're taking.
Why is that because it's it's very hard on the kidneys.

Speaker 1 (01:51:44):
Oh, I didn't do that.

Speaker 7 (01:51:46):
Oh my gosh, you didn't do anything.

Speaker 5 (01:51:47):
I promise you.

Speaker 7 (01:51:49):
If you have kidney disease, you have to be your
nephrologist is going to tell you how many grams of
protein you have, and you have to be really careful.
So that's one of the one of the concerns I
wanted to bring up.

Speaker 1 (01:52:00):
But I don't get it closer it there you nice
and close there you.

Speaker 7 (01:52:07):
That's one of the things that I like to bring
up to people is if you don't know you have
some type of beginning stage kidney disease in your overeating protein,
that can be a problem. But to loop back to
the question depending on why they're doing this, if they're
being told by their doctor not to eat these foods,
then you can still get the adequate nutrients and protein

(01:52:27):
that you need. You're just going to have to be
a lot more careful with your diet, find those complementary proteins,
a lot of plant based proteins. I wish there was
an easy answer. It's going to take a little bit
of research or working with a healthcare professional who can
help you.

Speaker 1 (01:52:44):
Yeah, And but that's the that's the thing too, is
it's just those urges, right, It's it's getting yourself into
the habit of eating like that. And that's what's so difficult,
because what Jana just said, she like, you go, You're like, man,
I ate great this entire week. You know what to deserve,
I'm gonna go get a pepperoni PiZZ I'm gonna fold
in half and eat it like a giant pantataco. You're
talking because you feel you deserve that, Like, how do

(01:53:04):
you how do you get yourself like how do you
give yourself a treat that doesn't take you off the
rails after kind of implementing a diet that you think
is gonna be good for you, and then for that reward,
you go, well, I mean, obviously I'm gonna need forty
hot wings and a basket of fries after this, and
a quart of blue cheese naturally up.

Speaker 7 (01:53:22):
Wings have blood protein. Let me just start that.

Speaker 5 (01:53:24):
And you can do it. A good air fry on that.

Speaker 1 (01:53:27):
Yeah, you're right. Air fry wings are good as hell.
They are.

Speaker 7 (01:53:29):
They are French fries are not as bad as you think.

Speaker 1 (01:53:32):
I tell you, man, a little cheek code for real.
This is what I was eating when I was trying
to kind of, you know, get myself in much better shape.
Is man, If you have an air fryer, you are winning.
One chicken breast cubed up where the cubes are like
just an inch inch and a half. Olive oil, smoke, paprika,
garlic powder, onion powder, salt, pepper into that thing and
then just on a salad of any kind is so

(01:53:54):
delicious and it's really filling. And I find myself doing
that when I want to get into that world where
you kind of feel like you just are beating yourself
up eating fried food or something and you want to
do something better.

Speaker 7 (01:54:05):
Yeah, I agree. And to get into your question about
cravings and rewards, it's a difficult. There's a lot of
psychology behind it, of course, I think it. You have
to start asking yourself, what do I need? What makes
me feel good? I feel my best when I eat
this way. There's a lot of psychology and reward system
behind it, but part of it is also the more

(01:54:25):
that we get used to eating these foods, the more
that we get gut disruption, my biome disruption, which then
leads to cravings. So you feel like you have to
reward yourself with this sugary food. Maybe for example, I'll
have clients that I'll do a ten days sugar detox,
just nothing with sugar in it for ten days.

Speaker 1 (01:54:44):
I can't even think about this.

Speaker 7 (01:54:45):
It's hard. It's not saying otherwise. I feel amazing at
the end, and all of a sudden that craving goes away.
And then they do eat something sweet and it resets
your taste buds and it tastes really sweet and you
can get away with less. So I think some of
it is unfortunately in this cycle.

Speaker 6 (01:55:01):
Wow, Sarah, I can't see you from here. Can you
see what that bag is under gym's monitor over there?

Speaker 7 (01:55:06):
Come on, it's a bag of air fried chicken wing.

Speaker 1 (01:55:11):
No, that's not it's a bag of Doritos that I'm
washing down with a pepsine. I know it's bad for myself.
I'll put the gun in my mouth. As soon as
you leave.

Speaker 7 (01:55:17):
Well, I would like to say I don't ever think
that people need to eat perfectly all the time. We've
talked about this before, Jenna, when you weren't here, that
I try and do eighty twenty. So work on your
protein and take your vegetable intake. If you're really craving pizza,
maybe eat less pizza than you instead of eating the
huge pieces.

Speaker 5 (01:55:38):
I'm one slice girl, now, so the whole thing, one slice.

Speaker 7 (01:55:43):
You big self, have what you want and modify quantities. Yeah,
and you compare it with if you start with a
full chicken breast first that this is just an example.
I don't know. May people are eating a chicken breast
and the pizza, but you have a full something with protein,
and then you might want a little bit less of
that other.

Speaker 1 (01:56:02):
You just want the flavor of it, right, You want
the cheese and the pepperoni and the delicious crust. You
want all that.

Speaker 7 (01:56:11):
Which These things were easy. And your affordability question is
a really valid one. Healthy food has a real issue
with affordability. There is no way around.

Speaker 1 (01:56:19):
Yeah. Well, Sarah, it's always good seeing you believe or not.
We're out of time, But tell people how they can
find you and make an appointment. Maybe have you helped
them out and getting back on track when it comes
to their nutrition.

Speaker 7 (01:56:28):
Yes, Sarah ga Wellness dot com s A R A
H G e h A sarah ga Wellness dot com.
The same thing on social media's.

Speaker 5 (01:56:37):
On the Gram.

Speaker 1 (01:56:38):
Yeah, she's on the Gram. Yeah. And her website is great.
It's very interactive. So you go in there and find
out what she's all about, her credibility, uh, what she's
done in the past, some diet plans, another thing like that.
The blogs are there, so check it out. It's sarahga
dot com. That's Sarah s A R A G e
h A dot wellness Wellness Sarah. This is now.

Speaker 23 (01:57:02):
A right.

Speaker 7 (01:57:03):
Always get to me and I will say my website,
people can sign up for a free twenty minute discovery
call with me, as well as reading my blogs and everything.

Speaker 1 (01:57:10):
Very nice. Always good seeing you, Sarah, Thank you, thank you.
Four seven nine four one text us seven seven zero
three one. Load them up. It's trivia time. We'll do that.

Speaker 2 (01:57:17):
Next real radio is the Chokey.

Speaker 21 (01:57:21):
I'm down to share my body with science and you
could you could play around my body after I die.

Speaker 1 (01:57:25):
Poke me with a stick or whatever.

Speaker 10 (01:57:27):
I don't know. Oh, I just heard from Science they
said no, go dog.

Speaker 1 (01:57:31):
It's a no from Science.

Speaker 2 (01:57:34):
Weekdays. It'll eleven on Real Radio one oh four point one.

Speaker 10 (01:57:38):
This is former Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn.

Speaker 23 (01:57:40):
Here's what's trending from the iHeart Sports Network presented by Austin.

Speaker 3 (01:57:43):
For Magic, will try to Take and Commanding Wait over
Detroit when they how's the Pistons?

Speaker 1 (01:57:47):
That I it's game four.

Speaker 10 (01:57:51):
Sidegoats?

Speaker 7 (01:57:51):
Shall we call?

Speaker 3 (01:57:52):
With little baseball caps and you can put your kids'
names on there, and at the top it says, thanks mom.

Speaker 10 (01:57:58):
For not swallowing us.

Speaker 7 (01:58:00):
Happy Mother's Day.

Speaker 10 (01:58:02):
I almost fell out of my desk chair.

Speaker 24 (01:58:06):
It's an inspiration. All this talk of protein inspired me
to mix up a little family recipe. Actually it's a
it's a protein smoothie. I like to call it the
milk mustache.

Speaker 1 (01:58:20):
Okay, this sounds bad to have you in.

Speaker 24 (01:58:23):
The protein and I like to add my own secrets ingredient.

Speaker 1 (01:58:27):
But a love potion.

Speaker 24 (01:58:28):
Really, Jimmy, I'm gonna have to send you some over
enjoy it, refrigerate what you don't drink?

Speaker 1 (01:58:33):
What is happening?

Speaker 5 (01:58:35):
I don't want to know.

Speaker 1 (01:58:37):
Sensing a theme. Does this happen to you over at magic?

Speaker 5 (01:58:41):
It never no, not magic, not excel on any of
my stasis. We don't talk about this. I talk about
justin Gieber.

Speaker 1 (01:58:48):
Four text do seven seven zero three one. You're oh
my god, dude, you do? You love it? You love
the form?

Speaker 5 (01:58:58):
Right now? Me's come out a hard hard spot.

Speaker 1 (01:59:01):
He was here just the other day when he was
like twelve or so.

Speaker 5 (01:59:05):
He was a baby weddly.

Speaker 1 (01:59:07):
He was still a team. He's still like a little
baby thirty two. Yeah, I know, but I mean he
asks me a baby.

Speaker 5 (01:59:13):
Well, that's true.

Speaker 1 (01:59:14):
He's a little coddled little baby of a man.

Speaker 5 (01:59:16):
I see where this is going.

Speaker 1 (01:59:17):
Oh yeah, it's not jealousy.

Speaker 5 (01:59:18):
Im married to a billionaire.

Speaker 3 (01:59:20):
He is.

Speaker 1 (01:59:20):
Oh she's a billionaire.

Speaker 5 (01:59:21):
Billion with a bee?

Speaker 1 (01:59:22):
How's that?

Speaker 5 (01:59:23):
What did she her cosmetics company?

Speaker 1 (01:59:25):
Oh? No way? Really wow, buddy, step aside. Sorry, welcome
back on Jim. Jana is here with us today. And
so it was Jack yep and Jack has a Jackie seck.
What's in there? Buddy? All aboard Uga choo, look at
it black there we go awesome, all right, here we
go prizes today. It's an option okay. The winner could.

Speaker 6 (01:59:49):
Pick up our of tickets to the Orlando Pride versus
Washington Spirit at Intern Coast Stadium, May second.

Speaker 1 (01:59:56):
That's this Saturday, folks, Little Soccer.

Speaker 6 (01:59:58):
On the Pitch wo or a pair of tickets to
the Dave Matthews Band at the Mid Florida Credit Union Amphitheater.

Speaker 1 (02:00:05):
Happening May twenty six. Those are the prizes in the
Jackie s Tech Today. Back to you, Jim, very nice,
give me one quick second.

Speaker 5 (02:00:14):
Oh boy, Well, while he's doing that, I just want
to throw out eight. Let's go magic.

Speaker 6 (02:00:18):
Oh yeah, Tonight tonight we're talking after the game. Here,
we're gonna be talking to Brandon Kravitz, who's live from
the key Is Center, and he's going to preview tonight's
match game.

Speaker 1 (02:00:29):
Four absolutely eight o'clock start. What does Surprise win the
other day? Huh?

Speaker 5 (02:00:33):
Very awesome?

Speaker 1 (02:00:34):
All right, Jenna, one, two, three, four or five five
five is the answer. Let's go to Nathan. Nathan, how
you doing.

Speaker 3 (02:00:41):
Good?

Speaker 1 (02:00:42):
Jem, how you doing doing good?

Speaker 10 (02:00:43):
Buddy?

Speaker 1 (02:00:43):
Wanna play little game with us? Let's do it?

Speaker 2 (02:00:47):
Is he the puzzlemaster or is he the guy who's
currently writing today's game? Can he be both. Let's find
out time for JCS trivia.

Speaker 1 (02:00:56):
Yo yo, all right, Nathan, this is a real easy game.
Ball's gonna questionere for you have four answers. One of
these answers is a lie. It is not true. But
if you can find that one, I'll send you over
to see Jack and the Jackie's sack and you can
find something nice for yourself. Are you ready? Here we go, buddy.
It's National Gummy Bear Day. That's right. The mentioned today
is National Gummy Bear Day. Here are three fun facts

(02:01:18):
about gummy bears and one throbbing jaw of a lie.
All right, buddy, which one of these is not true?
In regards to gummy bears. Number one, Harrabo gummy bears
were introduced to the US in nineteen seventy seven. Number two,
The famous Harrabo gummy bears got their name by using
the first letters of the inventor's name, Hans Regal Bond

(02:01:40):
h a ri Ibo. Number three, the original name for
gummy bears was actually dancing bears, inspired by the Dancing
bear shows of the nineteen twenties. Or Lastly, the green
gummy bear isn't lime flavored, It's strawberry, which of those
is a lie. Let's go with number one. That's the one. Jeez, Louise,

(02:02:03):
I thought most people would think that that gummy bears
were in the States way before nineteen seventy seven. Do
you know the year they actually made it into the States?
When I'll say twenty seven. Nineteen eighty two, Wow, is
when gummy bears made it to the United States of America.
I wouldn't have thought in a million years that he

(02:02:24):
would have guessed seventy seven, because it seems like those
things have been in America since the fifties, but they
have not. They were invented in the twenties, but they
didn't make it here into the eighties. Really, yeah, true story.
Nineteen eighty two. And I remember because in Platka they
opened up a mall around that time, and it was
the only it was our big that was the biggest
deal in the world. That black had a mall, and

(02:02:45):
it did not need one, by the way, but they
had a candy shop there, and that candy shop was
the only place in town where you could order gummy
bears by the pound. So they had a big scoop
and they would scoop the gummy bears out and scoop
it in there and you could buy them. And people
were wait in line for hours to get a Harrobo
gummy bear because they were so hard to find. They

(02:03:06):
were introduced in the market eighty two. The famous Harrabo
gummy bear did get their name from using the first
letters of the inventor's name, hans Ha Regal r I
E g E L bond b o n n horrorbo.
There you go. They were called dancing bears, not gummy bears,
and they were inspired by the nineteen twenties traveling shows

(02:03:28):
where bears would dance and juggle and stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (02:03:31):
Not grateful Dead, No, I was thinking too, dancing bears.

Speaker 1 (02:03:34):
And the green gummy bear is not lime flavored. It
actually is strawberry. It's strawberry. What is the clear one?

Speaker 5 (02:03:42):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:03:42):
It's pineapple.

Speaker 5 (02:03:43):
It's tasty.

Speaker 1 (02:03:44):
Yeah. Yeah, Like a couple of other things you may
not know about gummy bears. Before we get to the
top of the hour, we have Brandon Kravitz for sports.
We'll talk about the magic and the Draft a little bit.
Disney's very first animated series was called The Adventures of
the Gummy Bears. That was Their very first major animated
series was a gummy bear cartoon. Interesting, what heavy metal

(02:04:05):
artist do you think has had gummy bears on his
concert writer his entire career? Think so far out of
the box? Rob Halford, that's a great guess. Crazier and
wilder than that once, Cooper one of the most good one.
That is a really good one, that that guy. But modern?
What's thet MA? Marilyn Manson is the answer?

Speaker 7 (02:04:25):
God?

Speaker 1 (02:04:26):
Both of those were great answers. By the way, Harribo
gummy bears were introduced to nete and eighty two, the
biggest gummy bear ever produced? Wait how much? Uh? One
eighty pounds?

Speaker 5 (02:04:40):
I've seen the picture of it. It's massive, But I
can't even I'm terrible at that stuff. What's killing me, though,
is it's nineteen twenty two, Jimmy, what it's not nineteen
eighty two. It's nineteen twenty two to the US.

Speaker 1 (02:04:53):
No, it says they were not. They were not introduced
into the US market until nineteen eighty two.

Speaker 5 (02:04:57):
We had to wait sixty years.

Speaker 1 (02:04:58):
That's what it said. Nobod on a boat, that's what?

Speaker 10 (02:05:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:05:03):
Did you read something different?

Speaker 5 (02:05:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:05:05):
No, I mindset eighty two. I looked at it twice.
How big was the fattest one? Twenty six pounds with
thirty two thousand calories. I gotta double check that during
the break. Now, yeah, all right, we're both right, all right,
you're right all right, Brandon Drive. It's up next.

Speaker 2 (02:05:19):
Your chance to win a grand in your hand is
minutes away on Real Radio one oh four point one,
brought to you by Mills Air.

Speaker 9 (02:05:26):
The roadways are busy, and so are emergency crews clearing
up a couple accidents around the area. Dean Road at
Lake Underhill Road, Colonial Drive at Avalon Road. On I
for eastbound at World Drive.

Speaker 6 (02:05:38):
E epos I T deposit Enter it now on our
website Real Radio dot FM.

Speaker 1 (02:05:45):
Good luck.

Speaker 2 (02:05:52):
You're listening to the Jim Colbert Show. It's time to
get your game on. As The Jim Colbert Show brings
you the man who brings the heat, the insight, and
the takes you didn't even know you needed. From the
biggest headlines to the stories flying under the radar, We've

(02:06:14):
got you covered. So buckle up, because the sports world
never sleeps, and neither does this guy. The most popular
sports broadcast on ninety six nine, The Game He gade
us to say that Brandon.

Speaker 1 (02:06:25):
Provate broadcasting live from the Kia Center. Will the Orlando
Magic take on the Detroit Persons.

Speaker 10 (02:06:39):
Game four live from the Key Club.

Speaker 3 (02:06:42):
We are out here in front of the Magic faithful
breaking it down and we'll be doing it clean through
the nights.

Speaker 10 (02:06:49):
Glad to be on.

Speaker 1 (02:06:50):
Yeah, Buddy, I gotta tell you, man, it's so excited
to talk to you today. A lot of happen, a
lot happening. The NFL Draft just went through, And even
though it was kind of a weird, kind of odd
vibe for the draft, That's how I felt this year.
But this Magic vibe we got going right now is
taking the city over. I love it. I heard that
after the win the other night, the city went bananas
downtown like it was great, like we won the championship.

Speaker 10 (02:07:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:07:12):
I mean, I'm not in my goal out downtown after
the game phase of my life anymore. So I'll take
anybody's word for it that that is partaking, but I'm
sure that it was. I have been fortunate enough to
broadcast many many games. I'm in the hundreds now out
here at Kia Center, dating back to twenty eighteen. That

(02:07:34):
was the most electric atmosphere I've ever been a part of.

Speaker 10 (02:07:38):
On Saturday, it was phenomenal.

Speaker 3 (02:07:40):
I think part of it is that it's the playoffs,
and the playoff vibe is just simply different.

Speaker 10 (02:07:45):
The Magic are playing a team that.

Speaker 3 (02:07:47):
Doesn't have the same sort of fan base that takes
over the arena like we've seen, like last year the
Magic played the Celtics. There are way too many Celtics
fans in the building. And that's not just an oral problem.
That's almost anywhere you go, because the Celtics have such
a massive fan base. If you played the Nicks, like
the Hawks are dealing with this right now in Atlanta,

(02:08:08):
there's let's go Knicks chants that are breaking out in
their stadium, and that's not the case when you play
the Pistons, Like they've got great fans, but they're not
everywhere like you know, like these Celtics and Knicks cockroaches
that are out there. So easy that to it because
it's it's all Magic love. And it was one o'clock
in the afternoon, and I don't know about everybody else,

(02:08:31):
but I've got way more energy at one o'clock in
the afternoon than I do at eight o'clock.

Speaker 1 (02:08:35):
At night. So I mean, obviously this is kind of wild.
I think this is kind of shocking the NBA. I
think that first win really kind of maybe set those
guys back on their heels a little bit. Of course,
they came back and had a great game and tied
it up, and man, I mean, and by the way,
you called that win, and I kind of like, man,
I don't know teams like this usually they play super
physical when they get a loss like that, they're playing

(02:08:56):
with a lot of pride. But the Magic really if
did they ever trail? I tuned in like four times,
and I never saw them even close, Like, they were
always about seven ahead. And I think that's what the
final score was probably about, beating by seven. I mean,
is it just that they match up so well with
this team or are we just having a moment.

Speaker 10 (02:09:15):
I think it's that they match up well with this team.

Speaker 3 (02:09:19):
The Pistons did have a four point lead at one
point in the game. The Magic had a fifteen point
lead in the fourth quarter and squandered it.

Speaker 10 (02:09:28):
The Pistons came.

Speaker 3 (02:09:28):
All the way back, actually took one or two point
lead late in the game. The Magic were able to
get it back a couple of big shots from Franz
and Pallo. But the thing with the playoffs is that
it comes down it's not about how deep your roster is.
That stuff matters a lot in the regular season, the rotations,
the minutes, everything shrinks in the playoffs, and you see

(02:09:50):
starters play significantly more time than in a game, in
a forty eight minute game than what you see in
the regular season.

Speaker 10 (02:09:58):
It's because these games mean more.

Speaker 3 (02:10:01):
The Magic starters did not play together very much during
the regular season. Either Franz was hurt or Pallo was hurt,
or Jalen Suggs was hurt. There was always somewhat important
missing from the rotation, so we never really got a
true idea of how good this group was.

Speaker 10 (02:10:17):
Now they're back together and we're.

Speaker 3 (02:10:19):
Seeing them play a larger allotment of minutes per game
than what they would in the regular season, and what
that is producing is.

Speaker 10 (02:10:27):
Wins for this Magic team.

Speaker 3 (02:10:29):
I believe, and I know that I've got my Magic
shirt on and this Magic board behind me. So I
sound incredibly biased, But the reason why the Magic are
leading in the series is simple. Their starters are better
than the Piston starters. On Saturday, the Magic starters outscored
the Pistons starting five ninety six to eighty five. There's

(02:10:50):
your difference in the game, and that stuff matters a
lot in the playoffs. Having these five together has made
a world of a differen It's.

Speaker 1 (02:10:57):
Going to be a very very good game to night
starting in around eight. Of of course, you will be
on the radio call, as you are all the time.
I do like to listen to at least a five
minute block of the radio call because you guys are
very very good at it, and it's fun to listen to,
and I think it. You know, if the talent is
good there, it really brings the game alive. So we'll
hope for another magic win tonight and then we'll move
forward and see what comes from there.

Speaker 3 (02:11:18):
I mean, I cannot credit the guys that are on
the broadcast with me enough. The energy part of the
reason why I felt the I felt like I was
on I honestly felt like I was on drugs doing
the postgame show it, I mean I was, I was
on a different level. Jake Chapman, the play by play voice,

(02:11:38):
does such a great job as burying the energy. And
because there's no local TV broadcasts, we have Jeff Turner,
former Magic player, current color analysts on the TV side locally,
who's there with us? So we have the two of
them that are providing the in game analysis, the play
by play, and then I just sort of sprinkle in

(02:11:59):
bits of wisdom route. But it's just it's it's been
a phenomenal time so far. Hopefully the Magic you're able
to get another win tonight and if they do, boy
back to Detroit on Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (02:12:11):
Yea. All right, let's move on to the draft. I mean,
kind of an odd draft this year. There were no
no gigantic names outside of the number one pick. Give
us a draft grade for the teams that we like here,
Tampa Bay, Miami, Oakland, and Green Bay. Who's your NFL teams?

Speaker 3 (02:12:28):
The Chiefs? Sorry, there we go, give us some grade.
I love the Chiefs draft, the Chiefs said. I thought
the Chiefs said one of the best drafts. I like
a team. The great thing is so subjective because it
basically comes down to, here's the peak behind the curtain.
Any draft grade that you read comes down to did
the analysts like the player pre draft? And then how

(02:12:51):
many of those players landed on the team that they
are grading. And the more players that they like. The
higher the grade is.

Speaker 10 (02:12:58):
Think that's all it is.

Speaker 1 (02:12:59):
How do you think the Dolphins did.

Speaker 3 (02:13:01):
I think the Dolphins did pretty well overall. I gave
them a B plus. They got thirteen new players at
a ton of draft picks. I would have given them
an A. I think it would have been a Grand
Slam had they not moved from their top spot. They
had the eleventh pick in the first round. They slid
back one spot, traded with Dallas. They moved to twelve.

(02:13:22):
Dallas jumps up and takes Caleb Downs, the safety out
of Ohio State, who I thought, pound for pound was
the best player in the draft, and the Dolphins said, here,
you take them. And they got two fifth round picks
for him. Who cares about fifth round picks, so that
they could take a massive project on the offensive line.
This guy Caden Proctor from Alabama, who Nick Saban has

(02:13:46):
called him out for having weight issues and eating issues
at the college level.

Speaker 10 (02:13:51):
If he can correct that great pick. But I've heard that.

Speaker 3 (02:13:54):
Song and dance too many times to feel like you
should be optimistic about it all right.

Speaker 10 (02:14:00):
Otherwise, I think they did really well.

Speaker 3 (02:14:01):
They got this linebacker out of Texas sec his name
is Jacob Rodriguez.

Speaker 10 (02:14:05):
He is an absolute baller.

Speaker 3 (02:14:08):
Was a guy that was at least in the conversation
for Heisman because of all the things that he can
do on the football field.

Speaker 1 (02:14:14):
All right, let's talk about the Raiders. We know they
got the number one pick, the quarterback that everybody was wanting.
But outside of that, did they do all?

Speaker 3 (02:14:19):
Right?

Speaker 10 (02:14:20):
I think the Raiders did great.

Speaker 3 (02:14:22):
Whenever you start with the number one overall pick, your
grade is typically going to be pretty high. But they
got a guy that a lot of the college football
folks that I talked to are really high on. Trading
Stokes out of Arizona is their second pick, and then
they took a swing on a guy in the fourth round.
His name is Jermad McCoy, cornerback out of Tennessee. A

(02:14:43):
lot of people looked at him as the most talented
defensive back in the draft period, but he wound up
falling because he's still recovering from an ACL injury. If
that guy turns into the player that everyone expected him
to be without the injury, that is the steal of
the draft.

Speaker 10 (02:15:01):
So I love taking shots like that.

Speaker 3 (02:15:03):
In around three, round four, take a first round caliber
player that's dealing with some injury stuff, and hey, if
it doesn't work out, you wasted a third or fourth
round pick.

Speaker 1 (02:15:12):
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Excuse me, my Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Speaker 3 (02:15:18):
I gave the box of B minus and I honestly
think I'm being quite generous to them. But I thought
they got pretty creative with their draft. They only had
seven picks, which is not a lot.

Speaker 10 (02:15:28):
They got. It started with a bang.

Speaker 3 (02:15:30):
They drafted Ruben Bain out of Miami, who would have
gone higher than fifteen.

Speaker 5 (02:15:34):
Bad video him with his mom and him getting the call.
I had tears. He's so excited to be a Buck.

Speaker 10 (02:15:41):
Yeah he was. He was so serious.

Speaker 1 (02:15:44):
This guy was all business.

Speaker 3 (02:15:45):
When he walked up, he had his sunglasses on. He
just said, I'm ready to get to work. But he's
got he's got short Dino arms, at least in the
NFL world, which is part of the reason why why
he fell. It's those silly measurable things that it matter.
It doesn't matter on Saturdays or Sundays, but it matters
calm time for the NFL Draft, and that's a he slid.

(02:16:06):
But they also got a linebacker they needed to address that.
Levante David retired future Hall of Famer, and they drafted
a six to four wide receiver out of Georgia State.
Ted Hurst never heard of him in my life. I
just like the fact that they lost Mike Evans in
free agency and said, quick, get us a tall wide receiver.

Speaker 10 (02:16:23):
We need one. So I appreciate the creativity.

Speaker 1 (02:16:26):
All right, Well, good job buddy. As always, we'll be
listening to you to night. What time is? What time
do you guys start?

Speaker 3 (02:16:31):
Start at seven thirty so I've got a little bit
of time here to go and grab a media meal
and then walk in upstairs.

Speaker 10 (02:16:36):
So yeah, definitely listen in.

Speaker 3 (02:16:38):
I'll get it started, get y'all hyped up for about
thirty minutes and then Jake Chapman and Jeff Turner have
you on the call starting at eight.

Speaker 6 (02:16:45):
Best part of that media meal free, yeah, totally free.
Yah yeah yeahs of carbs and they have ice cream.
All right, good luck Brandon, guys there grab you listen
to it tonight.

Speaker 1 (02:16:55):
Go magic butt at it all right for seven nine
textest seven seven zero three one saying little break oury buddy.
Ray Trendley up next from tk law.

Speaker 2 (02:17:03):
Real Radio is on Instagram at Real radio one oh
four one sponsored by the law offices of Anna Jar
and Levine. Accident attorneys call the law Officers of ana
Jar and Levine at one eight hundred and seven four
seven free.

Speaker 17 (02:17:15):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven.

Speaker 4 (02:17:17):
Three seven three three from the Klosmon Law Traffic Center
car crash called Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 1 (02:17:25):
You're gonna get stuck in some slow down to fix.
But when it comes to the death, Oh no, you
don't want to make something that kills somebody quickly.

Speaker 2 (02:17:35):
Wild wonder I five.

Speaker 20 (02:17:37):
It's a good question for Ray Trendley if the government
can use an illegal substance to put someone to death
under due process like tention. But you've got like milk
of amnesia, propobol and things like that, morphine, vallums, plenty
of things again put somebody down.

Speaker 23 (02:17:55):
But I would be interested to see if that's the case.

Speaker 1 (02:18:00):
Is they changed the law from marijuana so they could
study it because it was a Schedule one and federally illegal,
so they couldn't do anything with it. That's one of
the reasons they changed that. That's right, four O seven
nine four one deposit is your six o'clock. Keyred, that's
the E P O s I T slide over to
you real radio out of him and send that away
for your chance of a thousand bucks. Welcome back. I'm Jim,
the very lovely and very wanted here Janna from XL

(02:18:23):
one of points seven. Stop it, Jack, you're the one
who said very wanted here over here. It was a joke.
I was saying a misdeb and I can't wait for
her to get back, and then she looks at me
and she goes, I'm right here, dude.

Speaker 23 (02:18:35):
Yeah, it isn't exactly how you said it.

Speaker 6 (02:18:38):
Though, if something you have to do at least once
a week, I'm sorry about Jim.

Speaker 5 (02:18:43):
That's okay. He was right about the gummy bears.

Speaker 1 (02:18:45):
Okay, thanks, appreciate that. Jack is here as well, and
every single money around this time our good friend. You've
already heard him talk. Ray Trentley drops by TK Law
one firm for Life dot Com offices right there announcement
and downtown to land as well. Good laugh for Ray Trentley.
Good personal injury attorney doing a number of things here
in Central Florida, whether it's an injury, a divorce, and

(02:19:07):
a state planning whatever the case may be. These guys
have somebody in their quiver that can handle that for you.

Speaker 23 (02:19:13):
I'm also willing to come in on Monday and give
you a hard time.

Speaker 1 (02:19:15):
Yeah, yeah, oh what happened? What I do?

Speaker 23 (02:19:17):
I just given everybody the time today. You're a guy,
give her back. I like to stand up for people
and fight for them. That's what I try to do.
How was your How is your weekend?

Speaker 1 (02:19:28):
Buddy? Ooh?

Speaker 23 (02:19:29):
My weekend was an interesting weekend. So in general, my
life is pretty much dictated by my children, and uh,
I thought there's a possibility that we were going to
get some uh some alone time maybe one day this weekend.

Speaker 1 (02:19:45):
But that did not happen.

Speaker 23 (02:19:46):
I had I had fever and chills and all the
kid issues that you can imagine that I don't really
want to stay on the air, but sick kids. Yeah yeah,
I tried separating them all over the house, doesn't matter
anywhere when you're close to your brother. Kind of thing
didn't happen, so we survived.

Speaker 1 (02:20:02):
Yeah, that's all right, and it's going around. I'm telling
you that the thing that had me down for three
days was brutally Honestly, my kids had never seen you.
I instantly blamed you. Good time. A lot of people
escape goat you're perfectly good.

Speaker 23 (02:20:16):
There was some overlapping symptoms, and I said, do you
know what I know exactly where this came?

Speaker 1 (02:20:20):
Super funny? Uh, Like I said, Ray is an attorney
here in Orlando dealing with a number of issues, whether
it be whether you've been injured, you have an a
state you need to get settled. He's helped me from
everything from a real estate matter just by writing a
letter to some action for my daughter that we had
a situation that was real gnarly and we didn't know
how to handle it any handle it as well. So
anything under the roof my man can get down for you,

(02:20:43):
no question whatsoever. Absolutely, And you know, when you came in,
I always ask you know, what are we talking about today?
And we didn't get a chance to talk to this
afternoon before. But when you walked in, you mentioned this
Fourth Amendment case and just so happened. I read it
today and I couldn't figure out what the hell was
going on. It had something to do with police forces
want to get access to your cell data if they're

(02:21:06):
looking for you or something. Let's talk about it.

Speaker 2 (02:21:09):
So on.

Speaker 23 (02:21:09):
It's not even they want to get it. They get it.
They get access to all of this data. And so
here's how that happens. We're gonna say that a crime
is committed here at iHeartRadio.

Speaker 1 (02:21:19):
And Jana stealing again from the company. Again me where's
are worth it? Though? People hear this, She rifles through
all the desks of the sales reps after hours every
single day.

Speaker 23 (02:21:32):
Started this is and somebody ends up in handcuffs and
then I gotta get a fun out.

Speaker 1 (02:21:37):
That's right, geo. So what's happening is, uh.

Speaker 23 (02:21:41):
There's a a a rash of gummy bear disappearances, and uh,
somebody calls the cops. Cops say, we don't know exactly
who it was, but we have a general idea of
the time of which it occurred in the location of
which it occurred. So what they do is they apply
for these geo fencing warrants because Google won't just divulge
your information, your your geographic location without a warrant, so

(02:22:04):
they got to get a warrant. So they get these
geofencing warrants and they say, Okay, we're gonna put a
pin here on iHeartRadio. We're gonna go anywhere within I
will say one hundred and fifty feet from the building, okay,
and we want any cell phone data that's been pinging
at this time or this timeframe. We want all that data.
We want to know what devices are in that area.

Speaker 1 (02:22:23):
So at that time, so we know the crime was
committed between five and six. They can drop a pin
on the building and they can say we want all
the information from anybody that came within the circle for
the last hour. That's right.

Speaker 23 (02:22:36):
And so they don't know who they're looking for. They
have no identifying information. They just say we want information
from that timeframe in that general location. Then they get
let's say, let's say they get four phones. So they
get four phones. They are opinion in this and they say,
you know what, Jimmy kind of looks like the guy
that somebody said that they saw rifling around these desks

(02:22:57):
and looking for gummy bears. So they'll say, we want
more information. We want more information from his phone. So
they'll get a news new warrant for your phone specifically,
and then they'll go all the data through your phone,
and then that's when they might find evidence of the
crime that you've committed. Be they will Oh, absolutely they will.
I don't know why he said all this stuff on

(02:23:17):
the air. There's hours and hours of record.

Speaker 1 (02:23:19):
And if there's anything I love doing, it's recording myself
committing crimes and then admitting to it on the air. Sure. Yeah,
who wouldn't do that? Uhm.

Speaker 23 (02:23:28):
So so then that happens, and then they arrest the
person and and now there's a case for the United
States Supreme Court on this exact issue. There is a
person that was within a geographic location of a one
of those cash advance loan places that was robbed, and
they pulled this guy's data, they find that, you know,

(02:23:49):
he was in the area at the time. They go
through his phone, they find some other evidence of crime,
and now they've arrested him.

Speaker 1 (02:23:55):
Okay, was the crime that they found evidence of part
of the crime that they were looking for? Yes, okay,
it was Okay they messages. You know, if they get
a warrant for that and they start ripping through your
phone and see that you got like a pound of
coke at your house and you're cutting it up, they
can't do anything for that, right, uh because they didn't
get the warrant specifically for that, correct, Right? I see

(02:24:15):
I'm tracking. That's correct, because see that's the thing that's
kind of weird for me when you start throwing this
wild ass net out there. Now you have access to
the general public's information and you're looking for a needle
in a haystack. But in that same sense, now you're
rolling through all my personal data looking for a needle
in a haystack, when you have no evidence up committed
a crime at all.

Speaker 23 (02:24:33):
And you're going an innocent people, I mean, the rest
of us on the show are innocent, yes, And so
they've got all of our data too, because we were
also in your geographic area when they launched this geo fence.

Speaker 1 (02:24:46):
In this in the in the final the fourth Amendment
is the search and seizure thing is that's the one? Yeah?
So what what?

Speaker 23 (02:24:51):
So normally I warrant requires specificity. We need some details
about what the warrant is searching for and why, and
and the why becomes really important.

Speaker 1 (02:25:02):
That's a part of this.

Speaker 23 (02:25:03):
You know, we can't just you know, Jack looked at
me funny, and when I was mentioning how great the
Dolphins draft was, I can't thine to get a warrant
to arrest him for that.

Speaker 1 (02:25:13):
Yeah, we need some more details, but we can. Let
me ask you what excepent? This is fascinating. Okay, So
let's say you were to use the same thing. You
drop the pen here and we go and the witness says, well,
I think I saw them pull off in a gray sedan. Okay, Right,
So if they were to pull all the data from
everybody who came in that area, couldn't they isolate it

(02:25:34):
down just to that and maybe find that and not
have to go through every single aspect of the data.
And it's access to photos and everything everything. So sod
that is that's such a slippery that is crazy.

Speaker 23 (02:25:47):
That's the problem. That's why we have the constitution. So
you know, your scenario is a little bit different in
that we have additional identifying information before they apply for
this warrant.

Speaker 1 (02:25:57):
Yeah, because the one you're talking about, there's nothing.

Speaker 23 (02:25:58):
There's nothing right. Just need you use the proper analogy.
It's a net. It's a large net that they cast.

Speaker 1 (02:26:07):
You know.

Speaker 23 (02:26:07):
The some of the terminology that was used in the
oral arguments today was it's a drag net, you know,
and we might we might get some of the right fish,
we might get some of the wrong fish.

Speaker 1 (02:26:16):
We don't know. We'll find out. Does it have to
do with severity of the crime. Do they only use
this in situations where the crime is really severe drug dealing, murder,
something like that, kidnapping, or is it for all?

Speaker 23 (02:26:28):
All all crimes are up? I mean, I mean there's
there's no requirement that is, you know, for murder. We
have a different set of constitutional rules. It's supposed to
be we played by the same rules no matter what
the issue is. And so, you know, I agree with
what you said, Jan this is a slippery slope. This
is where you open the door and you open the door,
opened doors box and you can't put it back in.

(02:26:48):
And that's what unfortunately happened to this person. And so
we have some cases from like the early twenty seventeen
twenty nineteen timeframe where we saw some of these geo
fencing cases and where we said, well, you need a warrant.
You can't just apply for it and get it and
not and not have a warrant like you need to
have a warrant for it. So we figured that out
and then we've now are determining how much specificity is

(02:27:12):
required in that warrant. So the fact that they had
a warrant is better than not having a warrant. But
is it specific enough to the people that we believe
are are the ones who perpetrated the crime. And I
think there's a lot of things that we look at
in the law that we need some corroborating evidence of
the crime outside of let's just say a confession, right,

(02:27:32):
we need some additional corroborating evidence of that. And so
why wouldn't we require that before we allow this warrant
that you know, potentially you know, criminates for the rest
of us, for the additional crimes that we didn't commit.

Speaker 1 (02:27:44):
But this sounds like the fifties when they'd be like,
you know, give me round up the usual suspects, you know,
roll all the known criminals through here, so we can
see if we can get one of these people identified
into something.

Speaker 23 (02:27:53):
But and law enforcement is cyclical like that, right, We
do see these trends in the law and sometimes you know,
we go to stings and things like that because some
of the sophisticated ways that we arrest the people isn't
necessary or maybe not as effective. And so we see
that this secles law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (02:28:09):
Do we know how more effective it is? When they
use the geo fencing when it comes to making credible
arrests as opposed to not to. I mean, because you
have to imagine that's going to be argued, right, I
mean when you get you're arguing this in front of
the Supreme Court, and the Court is gonna have to
make a determination of whether or not they're violating the
Fourth Amendment. Sure, and once they do, if they do
decide that's the case, they will shut this tool down federally, right,

(02:28:32):
I mean, that's the whole idea, and.

Speaker 23 (02:28:33):
Then it trickles down to all the states, right, just
the same way way around it though.

Speaker 5 (02:28:38):
I mean, it's it's like the shiny new tool in
the toolbox, like is geo fencing? Like you hear it
all the time now with all my true crime podcast
right right right, And you know, if it gets shut down,
isn't there just a workaround?

Speaker 23 (02:28:50):
So there might be, And that's part of actually interesting.
You don't really see a lot of the tech companies
providing briefs on this stuff. Google submitted a brief which
I've found very interesting, and I was like, I gotta
read this because you know, to your point, technology is
constantly evolving and so even the way these warrants that
were applied for and obtained, we're working, Google no longer

(02:29:14):
stores the data like this in order that would be
an effective way for them to use this. So it's
already changed. Right in the five years it's taken for
it to go from state court to you know, from
state trial court to the appellate court to now the
Supreme Court, the.

Speaker 1 (02:29:30):
Technology has already changed.

Speaker 23 (02:29:31):
Which presents an even more interesting component to this, which
is there's a Supreme Court and they're not supposed to
generally adjust issues that are not in front of them
or before them at that moment, but they take a
more broad approach and how they're going to look at this,
if they are going to make a restriction because the
technology is constantly evolving, or is it going to be
limited to just this piece of technology and how they're

(02:29:52):
using utilizing it at this current juncture.

Speaker 1 (02:29:54):
I mean, there's no way this is going to hold.
I mean, it is a direct vial was stening here
while you're talking about this is a direct violation of
the Fourth Amendment. They are accessing your information without your
for one thing, without a determination that you've actually even
committed a crime. Because you get again, like you're saying,
you could be an innocent guy walking in and out
of this building for a day of business and you're
caught up in this. Now they have access to your

(02:30:16):
internal information and personal information. Then you're putting the onus
of trust on the analysts that are that are dealing
with that information. And we don't know how accurate or
how sav savvy or savory those people are. Sure, So
you're putting everyone's information, the most sensitive information, in the
hands of people that may not know how to treat it.
That is a direct violation of your Fourth Amendment, right

(02:30:39):
all because you're within a certain distance from this show.
But I don't care why or where.

Speaker 19 (02:30:43):
No.

Speaker 1 (02:30:43):
I know as a US citizen, I'm protected by the Constitution.
You cannot just kick in my door theoretically and look
through my house because you think something happened, or you
you're sure that I was in the area and when
this crime went down, you got to do better than that.
You would also be a constitutional violation. Yeah, direct warrant
saying I need access to your phone because we know
for a fact, bet whether it be a witness, whether

(02:31:05):
it be a camera shop, whether it be something that
you are the ID or a tag reader that you're
the person right flip.

Speaker 5 (02:31:13):
Side of that ahead, God forbid your child get kidnapped
and the geotrack who was at the mall at that time?
You want that information?

Speaker 23 (02:31:23):
That's not a bad point. But I think again, you know,
like you said, it's a slippery slope. Don't you kind
of sign away your rights anyways? When you when you
sign into Google and no.

Speaker 1 (02:31:32):
You don't sign away you're right?

Speaker 14 (02:31:33):
No, no, no, THEO like you know you allow us
to use your data and location.

Speaker 6 (02:31:38):
Yeah, you are definitely giving up privacy when you make
these agreements on these user agreements that none of us read.

Speaker 1 (02:31:45):
We just accept because we want to use whatever it is.
But because I want to use Google doesn't mean I
want to go to jail. No, not that you want
to go to jail. But could they handle list just
like you would in this situation where there's a surveillance camera,
if you are in an area, you're going to be
on cap. They're going to be able to see you
and decide whether you are relevant to this situation or not.
But seeing your image and pairing that up with a

(02:32:07):
witness's statement is different than rolling through your photos dude,
or rolling through your phone and reading your text your
personal information.

Speaker 6 (02:32:14):
Well, going that far, but using the net to see
if you pinged in the area, and then it would
it could warrant further investigation because you were in this place.

Speaker 1 (02:32:28):
At that time.

Speaker 23 (02:32:29):
Well, I think the idea too is what is meant
to be private and what's not meant to be private?

Speaker 10 (02:32:34):
Right?

Speaker 23 (02:32:35):
So I think to Jim's point is I don't intend
on all my information on my phone to be used
against me or public material. Whereas if I'm walking through
a parking lot and a camera catches me, you know,
I've got no reasonable expectation of privacy in public. And
so I do think that there's you know, I think

(02:32:55):
there's something to be said about there should be some
probable cause before you start rifling through all of my
what I would interpret as.

Speaker 6 (02:33:03):
Private micra could cell phone providers, could telecoms say that
these phone numbers were people who were in the area,
And then at that point you have to do the
detective work to get probable costs to extend that further.

Speaker 23 (02:33:21):
So you're saying, is cut it off after that first point?

Speaker 6 (02:33:23):
Yeah, because then it's nothing more than a surveillance camera
identifying people in an area.

Speaker 1 (02:33:29):
Yeah, so I just got a text here says nineteen
years as a law enforcement officer, most with investigations. Not true.
Pen trap and trace does not lend all phone info.
Location is what we're looking for, who was at that
location and when and the number dialed. Although also this
is utilized for major crimes, not a misdemeanor. That's what

(02:33:50):
I was asking earlier is do they only employ this
when it's like a felony of major charge because of
the protection of the general community, not somebody like shoplifting
from a dollar general.

Speaker 23 (02:34:00):
You know, Well, so what I was reading in the
brief specifically, I dealt with what you had asked about,
which is they had access to the specific data on
the phone. Oh well, so I know that the first
application for the warrant goes through and gets the geographic
location who's in this area? Then they apply for a
follow up warrants. Was they get the access to the phone?

(02:34:22):
And that's why I think, I mean, that's a part
of the problem.

Speaker 1 (02:34:25):
But you could see though, Ray like if let's say,
you know, let's say somebody came in and robbed somebody
in this building and then ran out. Sure, and a
witness on the other set other side said, you know, hey,
the guy looked like a white male, probably between five
eight and six feet tall, and he got into a
gray truck and sped off. Now, if you threw out
your net there and you kind of looked at the

(02:34:46):
information and you just looked at one of those in
one of the as you're rolling through it, you notice, well,
there's Jim Colbert. He's a fifty eight year old white
male between five eight and six feet tall. So we
can go talk to him just based on his height,
hair color and caught, you know, and in color. Like
you could do that without like really hopping into somebody's
phone and start digging through for other information like did
he just buy a gun? Or did he did he

(02:35:08):
did he text somebody about this crime or something? You know? Yeah,
excuse you with data side interesting all right? Four O
seven nine one six four one text us at seven
seven zero three one say let break will come back
and do a few more minutes with raining the hell
out of here on a Monday.

Speaker 2 (02:35:22):
Coming up tonight on Real Radio at seven, It's a
corporate time with Tom and Dad. We'll watch you by
my eternal vitality Dot com in modern plumbing industry At
nine pm. It's Real Less with comedians James McGill and
Ken and Real Music starts tonight in ten on Real
Radio one oh four point one.

Speaker 11 (02:35:37):
From the ODO dot Com Weather Center. Oh do dot
com the only business software you will need.

Speaker 21 (02:35:45):
I'd be a little out of his room, but I've
got a coworker then at his former company had a
accident and a company vehicle. That former company is now
coming after him saying that he owes money that they
did not cover in the claim.

Speaker 1 (02:36:02):
Can they do that? It seems a.

Speaker 21 (02:36:05):
Little weird to me that they would do that, and
he's no longer an employee.

Speaker 1 (02:36:10):
I mean, when somebody's paid, isn't that done?

Speaker 13 (02:36:13):
Though?

Speaker 23 (02:36:13):
Well, the problem is anytime you're operating a motor vehicle,
it's a dangerous instrumentality, and so there's a lot of
liability attached to the person who owns the vehicle, the
person who's driving the vehicle, and a lot of times
these company policies are very favorable in favor of the
company really well, And so I mean, he can give
him my information. I'd be happy to talk to him.

Speaker 1 (02:36:33):
Yeah, Well, that's easy TK law. Yeah. One firm for
life dot com. Just hop on there and give ready
a call. Damn sure, give a chat you up about
what's going on, because you can only get so much
information in a call like.

Speaker 23 (02:36:42):
That, right, Yeah, and we've been there and done that before.

Speaker 1 (02:36:44):
Yeah, all right for us up in nine one six
four one deposit is your six o'clock keywording about eight
minutes or so to get over to real radio dot
fim and send that off for your chance in a
thousand bucks. Don't forget our friends Tom and Dan. We'll
have a couple of words for you as well. We'll
start right back up tomorrow morning with the monsters around
nine o'clock and hopefully get a winter soon. I'm Jim.
There's Jana. Hi. Yeah, Jack is here. Yeah, and so

(02:37:05):
it is right.

Speaker 23 (02:37:06):
Things are just escalating over here, Jack, I need just
save me.

Speaker 1 (02:37:08):
Hey, everything's fine. Everything's fine. By the way, Thank you
so much, young lady. I really appreciate it. I know
that getting in here this time of days of painting
the ass for you, and I appreciate it so much.

Speaker 5 (02:37:16):
It's always worth it.

Speaker 1 (02:37:17):
I love working with you, I really do.

Speaker 14 (02:37:19):
You.

Speaker 1 (02:37:19):
There a ton of fun and we've known each other
for so long to be able to kind of hang
out and do this at twenty plus and soon we'll.

Speaker 5 (02:37:25):
Be able to promote our next event coming up at
You and I get to host together in the fall,
which is so fun.

Speaker 1 (02:37:31):
It's in your email.

Speaker 8 (02:37:32):
Yeah, it's in the email. I'll find it sometime anytime.
You know, is there a word I should search or something?
Is just a jackass? Or is it something like that?

Speaker 5 (02:37:40):
Janna?

Speaker 1 (02:37:41):
All right again, it's a one firm for life dot com.
The firm is TK Law. There's two offices, one right
there in Altamont and of course over in DeLand, the
brand new office over there. So if you guys are
in Bluesha County need some good sage legal advice, my
man can do that for you. For sure, we can
do it. Yeah, yeah, what else is going on out there? Man?
It's Monday. Magic played a night The Magic played tonight.

(02:38:02):
Magic coming up tomorrow we'll have What'd you Do That's new?
Also we'll have It's Only Money and also meltail or
from j r R.

Speaker 14 (02:38:09):
Very cool there, best time, by the way, Hello for
what'd you do That's new?

Speaker 6 (02:38:14):
You have to watch a video about caves. Okay, that's fine, Caves. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay,
that Ross assigned it. Okay, very good.

Speaker 1 (02:38:21):
Do you want to have Ross call in maybe and
jok about it? It's ship Live dot com right, yeah,
all right, very good. I'll go there and just find
out where it is and do my thing there.

Speaker 10 (02:38:30):
Jack.

Speaker 1 (02:38:30):
Who do we have to think today? Nutrition is Sarah
Gih It's Gia g Yah. Yeah, don't say the ha ah.
I just said, don't say it. Oh, okay, got you right,
trendly and the lovely Jana from XL and Magic. Yeah,
by the way, it's Sarah g Wellness dot com. Yeah, yeah,
there you go, got it. Very good. I like her

(02:38:52):
health tips you said tip right, Wow, he listens all
the time. And of course she did just like Janna
just literally just put her head on her MinC and
went wow, dude, wow, let me really do this for
a living. Wow. Let me save you with the death penalty. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:39:12):
If you had to choose this was our question of
the day. We want to thank Sam, Candace and also
the lovely Alicia Bull where in our YouTube chat they
are moderators and in our YouTube chat we post a
question of the day. If you had to choose one
for yourself, would you choose electric chair, lethal injection, firing squad,

(02:39:33):
or hanging What one do you think came in last?

Speaker 1 (02:39:37):
Hanging correct, Yeah, hanging last, because men, the drama going
into that decision. No one likedulus. Dude, sometimes it doesn't work. Yeah, yeah,
and it's the whole idea. People think it choked to
death that it doesn't supposed to break your next poster. Yeah,
but if it don't, you just dangle there. That's not good.
But what would you take? Then you take the chair?

Speaker 5 (02:39:57):
I would take the injection.

Speaker 1 (02:39:58):
Yeah, I think I would take the as well, because
it's pretty much quiet. Just go to sleep and then
it's done.

Speaker 6 (02:40:03):
Along with sixty nine percent of respondent Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's how they plan to go out you as well.

Speaker 1 (02:40:08):
Six yeah, yeah, I'll take it out of around squad.

Speaker 6 (02:40:11):
Either, second place twenty two percent with firing squad and
with just eight percent the old sparky Yeah, the electric care.

Speaker 1 (02:40:18):
God, imagine man, you're you're just standing there with that
hood on your head and you have no idea what's
happening or when it's gonna happen, and by the time
you hear it, it's done.

Speaker 6 (02:40:27):
I don't even like putt my tongue on a nine
milde battery. I couldn't imagine that.

Speaker 1 (02:40:31):
I'm with you on Alan's right again. That's t K
Law one firm for Life dot Com offices right there now,
Tom Springs. He has helped my family out a lot.
He can help yours out as well. Thanks always, good
see you, Budy, given see all all right, I'll be
having Janna, Jack and Ray. I'm Jim. We followed the
new Shunkie. They follow the monsters in the morning, and
for us it's Tommy Dan with the Corbett Time and
our friends from Real Last. We'll see tomorrow three for
more of the Jim Colbert Showing. Till then, have yourself

(02:40:52):
a fantastic Monday evening. Go magic. It's the Damn Dancers, y'all.

Speaker 2 (02:41:03):
Have you missed any today's show? Check out The Jim
Colbert Show on demand, and for highlighted feature segments, listen
to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are available
for free on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 9 (02:41:14):
A Corporate Time with Tom and Dan is coming up
next on Real Radio one oh four point.

Speaker 4 (02:41:18):
One from the Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash called
Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw dot com.

Speaker 9 (02:41:29):
There's a crash block in the left leans southbound on
I ninety five before Taylor Road that's causing tra
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