Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Advertisers, You.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Are now listening to The Jim Colbert Show on Real
Radio one four point one.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
That's right here we go on 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 good one for you this afternoon.
We'll get caught up on what's happening in the world.
Dou will do that around three twenty with JCS News
and guys. That is it until trivia. It's a whole
bunch of us until trivia. Today we are out at
the six o'clock hour preempted for the Tampa Bay Bucks game.
(00:38):
But we will have a good time today talking about
a bunch of good stuff. Plus we do have some
stuff to give away from trivia for sure. Welcome to
the show. I'm Jim. To my left, my liberty and
very dangerous co host is Dev Roberts. Hello there, Sure
had producer Sea Lean guy look at it.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Well and double duty on a Monday, right four.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
A seven nine one, Dave I went for the news jockey.
This show could never make it on the Right to God,
It's like every other week we're bumming like half of
his employees to get our show on the air. Welcome
to the show. Seven seven zero three. One is how
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(01:17):
out on YouTube. And if you'd like to get him
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thousand dollars cash. Guys, that is your three o'clock You work,
good luck, get that money. How you guys doing today?
Doing good? Doing good? Already already ripped a four hour shift.
(01:38):
That's fun. Ready to go at it? I get I
got at less hour less hour break to that. That's
very nice. So we'll have no branding cravits for sports.
No Ray Trendley this this Monday. We'll try to fit
him in later this week so we can get to
to Ray. I always like talking to Ray for sure. Doubleheader,
Yeah for sure. It's Night's Monday night, football man. What
a weekend? Did you guys do anything fun. I went
(01:59):
up to petro Forrest. Did you guys do any Halloween
festivities this weekend?
Speaker 2 (02:03):
No Halloween festivities. A lot of home stuff, a lot
of preparing for We got a big birthday party to
throw next weekend. Really the boy will be two years.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Believe.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
And then a lot of my weekend was just bitching
about the poor water pressure because we had last week
my pool resurface. And so they finished Friday morning and
dropped the hose in there and turned it on. Oh yeah, yeah,
and I turned it off last night at nine thirty
for the whole weekend. It took the whole weekend, and
(02:39):
that whole time, anything else that I wanted to get
done that required water was just like dripping that episode
of Seinfeld shower heads on that if.
Speaker 4 (02:50):
You have a toddler to bathe or laundry.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
Absolutely, yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
I decorated for Halloween. We finished up our decorations, which
consists of, oh, we have lots of purple lights, red lights,
We've got hanging witches, pumpkins, light up tombstone.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Nice.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Yeah, so some wreaths on the window and on the door.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
That sounds good.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Yeah, it was fun. It was fun.
Speaker 4 (03:11):
And it's interesting because you'd think it would be the
little kids that anticipated No, it's ours. Hey, what are
you going to be putting up your holiday lights? We
look forward to it every year.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
Well Halloween, it's like seventy thirty adults kids. Now it
used to be fully kids. You know what, We've told
the kids just to go away. Exactly, We're going to
use this as the adult way to spend I mean
an untold amount of money. Matter of fact, I actually
have that number. Did you see what it was going
to be?
Speaker 4 (03:36):
Oh no, that's my kicker story for today. No, I
get that story. And then Saturday night we went to
the Fall Festival that was taking place in downtown Mount Door.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
Yeah, the monsters right, yeah, exactly did the scarecrow thing.
Speaker 4 (03:49):
Yep, to help raise money for the Karla Kue cancer
Screening Fund. Yeah, so the mayor homage was out there
doing some judging as well. It was it was a
fun event because was it was cool, the.
Speaker 3 (04:01):
Weather was great, beautiful, I bet it felt like fallout
it did.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
And seeing little kids running around with their faces painted
and painting pumpkins, it was a.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Great family Yeah.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
Yeah, look man, that place is like Mayberry though, I mean,
it's exactly where you go to experience stuff like that,
for sure.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
You know where I have never been where Petrified Forest.
Oh really, I have never been to Petrified Forest.
Speaker 2 (04:21):
I think I have an aunt mon. Yeah, I think
I've been once. H And I'm I'm hesitant to say
because it was it that or a competing forest.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
I don't think there's a competing forest in that area.
There used to be a bunch of haunted houses that
were run by radio stations back in the day that
were in thiss llaneous like abandoned or I had houses
had to have gone to Petrified for if it was
a forest, if it was like an outdoor thing. I
don't know if any others in the area. I think
there's some like on the in Polk County there's one
(04:55):
that was very famous for a while, and in out
Lake County there's a couple of them. If I got
free tickets from this radio to it was Petrified it
was definitely. Yeah, three trails this year, and which is
kind of the norm. And they added this thing, well
they say added they said it was last year. It
was there as well, but I didn't see it. And
I've been every year for the last like maybe five
or six seven years. Did you get scared? Yeah, I
(05:16):
mean they were good. They were always you know, they
always do a good job. You know, it's a local haunt,
so you know, I see what you did there. You
go in there and you just kind of understand and
it's it's put together by, you know, people who don't
have billion dollar budgets and stuff. So it was very good.
It always is packed to the gills, I mean absolutely packed.
We got there what would be primo time, what would
(05:36):
be what like.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Nine o'clock was that Friday night?
Speaker 3 (05:38):
Yeah, that's it. Went to dinner after the show, and
then went over to roll through the roll through the trail.
Saw Kimmy there. She's one of the owners, a very
nice woman. She's been very sweet the entire time. All
the trails were good. The ride thing wasn't as good,
you know, it wasn't like the greatest thing ever, but
still they gave it a shot. It was fun and
a good couple hours to blow. We had no Sabby
and Angel went out there night as well. Cool, but
(06:01):
I didn't get to see them that packed. Huh. Yeah,
I was slammed, absolutely slammed. We got lucky to get
into one of the lines to kind of move quickly.
But I have to tell you though, they do move fast,
way faster than you think because of the way they
queue the lines up and the fact that they can
send you know, ten twelve people through at a time.
You really don't wait that long. I think the most
we wait it was like fifteen minutes, twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Do you think they go every year to various other
things in the name of research, you know, just kind
of write it off and say this is how we
can make our line better. They just steal ideas here
and there.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
They have to. I mean, if they don't, I mean,
they're really kind of losing out because there are I mean,
they have plenty of like infrastructure there to make it
as good as you want. Really they do. I mean
they there are plenty of little rooms, little scenarios. Like
I said, they do a good job. And if they
even piping music, they have laser effects back there. I'm
gotta tell you. One of the effects that they had
(06:52):
a couple of years back was so good. I think
it was maybe bitten by one of the bigger nights. Really, yeah, yeah, yeah,
it's this thing. What they do is they took an
area and they filled it up with smoke, and then
they shoot a laser across it, so it looks like water.
And what what you can't is you can't it creates
a false top, right, so you see the smoke and
it looks like the top of a pond. So you're
(07:13):
just walking through smoke. But the laser gives that that effect, right, right.
So the cool thing is what happens is is people
that are working there hide in the smoke and with
the laser, you can't see anything. All you can see
is the smoke bubbling and then they just pop up
right next to you and then you just absolutely you know,
blank your diaper. That sounds pretty cool. Yeah, it's very cool.
(07:35):
And then it was it nerd.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Me going back the next day and.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
They did it again this year, but they didn't have
enough smoke in there. But what they had is somebody
laying under there and tickling you with a palm frond.
So when you walk by, you get hit with a
palm fron. You had no d to hell what was
going on. You have to be like smoke that kind
of lays low. It just lingers, It just lingers there. Yeah,
it's just kind of wild. And when they shoot the
laser across there and you kind of fre it's a
false top to it. And uh, when people pop out
(08:03):
of it, it looks like they're just coming out of
the ground. It's wild. Yeah, yeah, and very inexpensive. But
they figured that out for sure. Good for them. Yeah, yeah,
good time we've had. I have to ask, are we
waiting for the third celebrity death? Oh? Ace Freely, Sam
Rivers from Limp Biscuit passed away this weekend. Of course,
Ace Freely we lost on Friday, correct, So I guess
(08:24):
we're awaiting the third. Do we know of anybody else?
Speaker 4 (08:28):
Does that include football players?
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Oh? That's right.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
I have a story coming up in JCS News about
a Buck's great that pass.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Yeah, I think it would. I think it would have
to be an entertainer though, right, that's the same genre.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Could argue musicians musicians.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
True, Yeah, guitar player and bass player. What we needed
is a drummer.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Now, I'm sure if an actor were to kick it,
you know, they would throw that in there.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
Yeah, it's a wild Sam Rivers from Limp Biscuit only
forty eight, Yeah, forty eight, forty eight years old. But
I guess he had had a liver transplant before because
he'd you know, maybe had some alcohol issues. But uh,
we don't really know musician. Yeah, which is kind of
wild right, Yeah, tonight is the last episode or I'm
watching the last episode of Task tonight. Have you checked
that out yet?
Speaker 2 (09:08):
Celing, I'm a couple episodes in the Task, but we've
had a couple other things distract us from finishing it.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Do not let that happening anymore. It's very good, It's
it's beyond good. I really like him. Yeah, what's his
name from? Uh the played the Hulk for a little bit. Yeah,
Mark Ruffalo. Yeah, I like Ruffalo.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
I think uh it's it started out a little slow,
but I gave it the time, dude.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
You like, we're watching the last episode tonight Saturday, and
I have had a we have a task text change
right now because we're so geeked out over and it's
such a good show. Uh. And have you seen Wayward yet? No? Yeah,
that's another one's kind of wild out there. She's watched
the entire thing. I've got to catch up on that.
But we're looking for something new because after Task tonight,
we're waiting for season two to come back. Yeah, all
(09:55):
right four seven nine one six one four one text
us at seven to seven zero three. There is some
crazy stuff in the news today. We'll get to all
of it. Debd have for news.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Well, speaking of crazy, we're going to talk about Paris
police probing a brazen jewel heist at the Louver. Closer
to home, the Secret Service finds a hunting stand with
a possible direct line of sight to Trump and Halloween
spending stores. We'll talk about that and more coming up
next during JCS news.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
You got I guess DeAngelo would be maybe the first
one of those. So maybe Sam Rivers was the third.
Oh yeah, it would be.
Speaker 4 (10:28):
Well, real quick, we all want to know one thing,
and one thing only. Who screamed more at petrified forrest?
Speaker 3 (10:32):
You or your wife? Oh? We you know what our
friend did more than anybody. Uh, because we push her
out in front. Okay, yeah, we're not dumb. We push
her out in front and we just get completely We
let her get just RiPP scared and we laugh at
her the entire time. Oh good, that's what that's what
it costs with the free ticket.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
Good people?
Speaker 3 (10:47):
All right, seven seven zero three one. That's how you
text us. Don't forget. Your three o'clock keyword is cash.
That's c ash. Just slide over to Real Radio dot
FM and send that away for your chance at one
thousand dollars. Take a little break back on a second
news and more the Jim Colbert Show. Welcome back to
(11:09):
The Jim Colbert Show, Real Radio one oh four point one.
Thanks so much for tuning in today. Guys. We appreciate that,
as we do every single day. A lot of choices
out there. Thanks for picking us. We appreciate it. Your
three o'clock keyword is cash, cish. Go to Real Radio
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that money, get you cash. Welcome back. I'm Jim Sea
Lane is right over there and deb has your news.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
It's time for JCS news.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
Wow, this guy got a cut his name on everything.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim
Colberg Show.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
All right, JCS news is brought to you by that
mortgage guy Don. A brazen jewel heist at the world
famous Love Museum is under investigation. Thieves broke into the
museum Sunday morning, shortly before it opened to the public.
They're thought to have gained entry through an upstairs win
using some type of mechanical lift. From there, they were
(12:03):
able to break into two display cases in a gallery
that held France's crown jewels. Think Napoleon Bonaparte and the
Queens of France. They made their getaway in broad daylight
and motorbikes. Do you guys know how long this theft took?
Speaker 3 (12:17):
No, I don't think we talked about that.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
The picture I saw of the outside of the louver,
it looked like they were using almost like a like
a firefighters ladder.
Speaker 3 (12:27):
Yeah, yeah, you got there. It was a ladder, and
then I guess the saws all to cut through the
wall and then they got in. I want a six minutes.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Four four minutes.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
That was yeah, and practiced it was.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
And now they're saying that they may never be found. Wow, really, yeah, exactly.
Chances are they can't be remain intact. Maybe they'll take
the jewels out and fashion new jewelry on it.
Speaker 3 (12:48):
That's the thing is, I never understood the whole idea
of stealing, you know, prizing effect. What are gonna do
with them other than your prize other than just you
having them, you can't show them to anybody.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Well, you can give them a hobby lobby.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
You can. If you're a certain type of person, you
had to find a black market for it.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
No.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
I meant, like you said, you can't show them to anybody,
like you have them in your private collection, and like
say it wasn't jewels, Say it was a painting, right,
you know? And you have say you're not a savory person,
you know, in addition to being either a thief that
that pulls off these laborate heights or the beneficiary of
(13:24):
said theft, if you're like a drug dealer, cartel kind
of person who already yeah, does bad stuff.
Speaker 3 (13:31):
Yeah yeah maybe so Yeah, that would be wild though.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
Wouldn't it.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Yeah, Hey you want to see my secret stand?
Speaker 3 (13:38):
Yea.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Also, I wouldn't know if if I walked into your
house and you had a stolen painting on the wall
and be like nice painting, Broka.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Exactly got that?
Speaker 3 (13:46):
I got five? I'll show them to you later.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Did you get that at home?
Speaker 3 (13:49):
Goods?
Speaker 4 (13:50):
Uh. The FBI is leading the investigation into a suspicious
hunting stand near Palm Beach Airport, where President Trump exits
Air Force One. Spokes for the US Secret Service confirmed
the discovery was made Thursday during advanced security preparations before
the president's arrival in Palm Beach. Security teams found no
individuals at the location, but officials noted the team's quote
(14:13):
identified items of interest end quote. The agency confirms the
elevated hunting stand had a direct line of sight to
the landing area for Air Force one. Trump traveled to
Florida Friday to spend the weekend in West Palm Beach,
apparently entered the plane through another door on a shorter
set of stairways and made a rapid run up the stairs.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
Wow, take no time. Yeah, it's crazy, isn't it. Here's
the thing, I mean, there's you know, there's been what
now three legit situations where we know one shot and
then two people considering it. So you can't, like, you
can't rule that out. I mean, I don't think there
is a coincidence now with this guy no there campaign.
I think you have to take everything into consideration.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Do we just never pull Air Force one up to
a jetway? I guess not every place the Air Force
one lands, they get the steps out and he comes
down the steps and it's it's a big photo moment.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
But they can't have the security. The security nightmare of
walking a dignitary of that level through an airport would
be overwhelming. They can't pull the motorcade right up to that,
so you know that he could just get right out
of the plane into the protected car and then off
you go. And there's no way they're walking that dude
through an airport. Not a chance.
Speaker 4 (15:26):
Yeah, Well, Homeland Security.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
Secretary, if they did, hilarious.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
Homeland Security Secretary Christy Nome talked about her agency's immigration
enforcement efforts while in Branden Center in Sarasota. Nome says
coverage of protests against ICE is drowning out the stories
of Americans victimized by criminals and the country illegally.
Speaker 5 (15:47):
They're not covering the victims anymore that we've lost because
of these crimes. They're not covering the individuals that have
been brought to justice. Instead, they're trying to demonize our
law enforcement officer.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
Nome praised Florida's strong cooperation with ederal immigration enforcement and
said the state leads the nation and law enforcement agreements.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Meanwhile, NOAMA is denying a.
Speaker 4 (16:06):
Report that the Coastguard bought two Gulf Stream jets for
her use. She says, Hey, they're for the whole agency,
authorized by Congress as part of an upgrade of obsolete aircraft.
Speaker 5 (16:17):
Congress appropriated the dollars and paid for them in the
big beautiful bill, and we're grateful that we're able to
move forward.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
The New York Times says, the jets are for use.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
Vitn't. Mine's been in that appropriated money.
Speaker 4 (16:29):
By the Secretary and senior DHS leaders. Government contracts quoted
by the Times show the cost of the two Gulf
Stream G seven hundred jets.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
At what do you think.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
Both of them together? Yep? Were they new?
Speaker 1 (16:43):
I not sure.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Oh, if they're new, those things are eighty million apiece.
So at forty sixty, I'll go one hundred and twenty million. See, then,
what do you think. Let's go one hundred and twenty
one million.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
How about one hundred and seventy two million?
Speaker 3 (16:56):
He showed me, I did you did?
Speaker 6 (16:58):
He?
Speaker 3 (16:58):
Oh wow? He shot Channel my inner show.
Speaker 4 (17:02):
All right, Orlando could add nearly three dozen new red
light cameras within the city. I thought most cities were
done with these, but the proposed expansion would add thirty
five new cameras, bringing the total to eighty. They'll be
installed at busy intersections to reduce traffic violations, crashes, and fatalities.
The city Council is expected to vote on the ordinance
(17:23):
during a meeting a council meeting this afternoon.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
I have a feeling they're going to be putting them up.
Speaker 3 (17:28):
Yeah, all right, they're probably gonna make it through.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
Yeah, we had moved on to the speeding camera. Yeah, yeah,
that was that was kind of you know, rubbing people
the wrong way because they they thought they they got
the ticket when it was in the school zone. A
couple couple of different little problems.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
Oh yeah, my daughter's the queen of those tickets. By
the way, Chris just got one too, Queen of the
red light ticket. Oh really Oh yeah yeah, yeah, crown
and all awesome. Yeah, only once for me, well.
Speaker 4 (17:55):
Florida Attorney Florida Attorney General James Uthmeyer is issuing a
criminal pena or criminal subpoenas to Roadblocks, accusing the gaming
platform of helping predators target children. Uthmeyer alleges the site
fails to verify users, ages, allows explicit content to slip through,
and lets predators use in gaming currency to exploit miners.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Roadblocks profited off of our kids while exposing them to
the most dangerous of harms.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
They enabled our kids to be abused.
Speaker 4 (18:25):
Now, in a statement, Uthmeyer says, platforms like Roadblocks have
become quote breeding grounds for predators to gain access to
our kids, end quote. And this marks the second time
Uthmeyer has subpoena Roadblocks as part of an ongoing effort
to hold tech platforms accountable.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
Yeah, and they got a straight lied to our face
when they called in. We had the security guy from
Roadblocks call the show. And by the way, they reached
out to us, like we did not send out our
media requests for interviews from Roadblocks. They contacted us when
this original story hid and said, hey, we'd love to
tell our story, and of course we would have. Well,
and this dude gets on and tells us the most
(19:02):
corporate story of all time. And I think less than
three or four months after that, they were right back
into the same exact frame, exactly where we are right now.
And I praise Uthmeyer for bringing lawsuits against these tools
because they are using that exactly like that, And from
what I've seen, Roadblocks has done nothing to stop it,
literally nothing.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
A lot of people think it's through social media, but
what a lot of parents don't understand is that these predators,
because they can, you know, directly contact your kids through
their headset through the game. It's a lot easier to
go that way because you're paying attention to the social.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
And don't give me another in city as part of
it too. When you're on social media as a kid,
you can automatically assume that other people you're talking about
may not be your age. You don't think that when
you're playing Roadblocks, right, Yeah, you don't think that there
are grown ass men trying to groom you. On the
other side of that, it's a child's gaming platform for
the most part. So I think it's even worse than that. Yeah,
in the open Internet, you can kind of be aware
(19:54):
that people of ages or people are you know, have
insidious thoughts or nefarious thoughts. But in a gaming you
feel kind of safe there because it's just supposed to
be people like you, right exactly, pervs out there trying
to lure you in, you know, right exactly. I would
think a parent would say the same thing.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Yeah, And it's like a safer environment than maybe just
like a Facebook or some other chat room. The guy
that you talked to, the security guy, how do you
sound on the air?
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Oh do you speak well? Yeah? Oh yeah, yeah yeah.
Do you think he was really a security Yeah? I
don't know the answer to that, buddy, he said he was.
Actually I never checked his They reached out to us
with his name and his accolades. Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
We should find some nerd questions. Dear the witness of
why Dear, I love it all right?
Speaker 4 (20:39):
Central Florida and the US Drug Enforcement Administration are teaming
up for National Prescription Drug take Back Day. It's going
to take place this Saturday, October twenty fifth. Folks can
drop off their unwanted or expired medications, vaping devices, even
pet meds at various locations. They'll include via clinics in Orlando,
Lake Baldwin, Vieira, and Daytona Beach. And a lot of
(21:00):
like my mailbox two, your Walgreens, your CBS pharmacies. A
lot of times they had those already, those big boxes
that are there all the time. Bikers from around the
country are boosting the economy in Vlusha County. The thirty
third annual by Oktoberfest wrapped up this weekend. Thousands attended
the four day event in Daytona Beach. The Daytona Beach
Area Convention and Visitors Bureau helped organize the event. In
(21:23):
one official tell Spectrum News thirteen, it's designed to attract
visitors to Daytona Beach between summer and spring break, and
it does exactly that.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
All right.
Speaker 4 (21:32):
Florida drivers are seeing a slow but steady drop at
the pump. The state wide average is now two eighty
nine a gallon. You ready now in two cents from
last week and twenty five cents from a month ago.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
We had to get gas in today. Yeah, I'm here
LA seven to eleven out in Mount Dora two dollars
seventy nine cents a gallon, damn to seventy nine. Filled
up for fifty bucks today and I was dead empty.
You know that thing to tell you how many miles
you got left? Yeah, it just said it quit like
I was done done. I was like all the way
on the Orange. Oh wow, do you trust that thing? Yeah?
(22:07):
I figured it out to the mile. Yeah, yeah, I
figured it out. I don't know about it. I don't know.
I don't trust it. I mean, there's like a we
can talk about this little b later. I believe that
when you get too empty, you still have a gallon
and a half or two reserve that it doesn't tell
you about, and it's just kind of a warning you.
I always thought that too, but I wasn't sure. Well, yeah, yeah,
I think so, man. But I've been dead at the
I've been where it said zero miles left and I
(22:29):
still able was able to go like fifteen more miles. Well.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
Triple A says prices are at their lowest level since
December twenty twenty three, thanks to a strong oil supply
and lower seasonal demand. Filling up a fifteen gallon tank
now costs about forty three dollars and fifty cents, nearly
three dollars less than a year ago.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
All right.
Speaker 4 (22:47):
Speaking of Triple A, they say a record this number
of Americans are expected to take ocean cruises in twenty
twenty six. How many Americans do you think are going
to take to a cruise next year?
Speaker 3 (22:59):
Cruising is so much plug and play, man, I love
it so much.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
I wish that my wife had your share your your
thoughts about cruising, yeah, because then we would probably go
on them once in a while.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
I'll go twenty million, that's hi, doesn't Are you gonna?
Are you gonna sean? I don't know, but which direction?
Nineteen million?
Speaker 4 (23:20):
Twenty one point seven shot in the wrong direction?
Speaker 3 (23:25):
Retion triple Yeah.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
Twenty one point seven million Americans expected to take ocean
cruises in twenty twenty six. That's up from twenty point
seven million this year, continuing.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
A four year surge and cruise travel.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
The Caribbean remains the top destination, and the busiest cruise
ports are all here in Florida, Miami Port, Canaveral in
Fort Lauderdale. Most passengers are older adults, and nearly half
are cruising as couples.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
The fact that the Caribbean remains some of the most
popular destinations, does that tell you that a lot of
people stay on the boat?
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Yet most of the people I know that are cruisers,
frequent cruisers, rarely get off the boat. Yeah. The reason
why it's I tell you, I tell you one of
the other reasons as well. But God, I believe that
that a lot of people like paying one fee and
understanding there's gonna be no surprises after that. Absolutely, like
you're not gonna have to pay for drinks. You're gonna
if you buy the packages. Only thing you're up to
is like the extursions in gambling. Outside of that, you're
(24:20):
all set and good to go. And I think people
find great solace in that. Yeah, you pay that price,
you know, you get on the boat, you can blow
it out and have a good.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Time, especially when you pay it months and runs in advance.
And then once you get there, you're like, you've already
recouped that money. You've got a couple of paychecks right
behind you, and you go, all right, now, I'm just
gonna get on.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
A boat and let the good time. And you make
a great point. That's a great way that a lot
of people who don't who think you just pay for
it all at once. Man, they have programs or you
can start paying for a cruise. You're gonna take a
year now, one hundred bucks a month or something like that.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers aren't morning. One of its former players,
former running back Doug Martin, passed away yesterday at thirty six.
His family said he passed away over the weekend and
that the car of death is quote currently unconfirmed end quote.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
The man known as the Muscle Hamster was voted by.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
The organization, Yeah the Mussele Hamster Muscle Hamster.
Speaker 4 (25:09):
Doug Martin was voted by the organization as one of
the fifty best players in Buck's history. The Bucks drafted
Martin out of Boise State in twenty twelve and played
six seasons in Tampa Bay. The Bucks say the fan
favorite made a lasting impact on the franchise. Another football
news the Gators athletic director and interim football coacher, speaking
for the first time since Sunday's firing of Billy Napier,
(25:30):
UF athletic director Scott Strickland praised Napier as a person,
but said Gainesville needs championships.
Speaker 6 (25:38):
Obviously, he did a lot of really good things, and
just at the end of the day, we didn't win
to the level we needed to.
Speaker 4 (25:42):
Strickland says Florida has hired a search firm to help
with recruitments.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
My sense is we will have a wide variety of candidates.
Speaker 4 (25:51):
Napier was in his fourth season in Gainesville with the
worst winning percentage by a Gators coach in over seventy
five years. His buyout is less than twenty millillion dollars,
but cbssports dot Com reports Florida State University could soon
fire head coach Mike Norvil too. FSU lost its fourth
straight game Saturday at Stanford. The school would have to
pay Norville fifty five million dollars.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
The wrong fired him, I mean the wrong business run
college football Golden Parashie's Louise. Yeah, it's what a travesty,
you know. Look, it's all the boosters, I get it,
but God, the idea of these universities have to be
like sat if you're a student there, how do you
feel about that? As you're pouring money into a bachelor'sgree
you'll be paying off for the next twelve years of
your life. You see this goober who had a couple
(26:35):
good high school seasons get a thirty million dollars payout
right because he couldn't come through for the Gators.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
Forty five million, isn't it? Yeah, while you're paying five
hundred dollars.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
You know, an hour book and your lab books are
like seven to fifty apiece. And this hillbilly just does
how to coach a little oh Man.
Speaker 4 (26:52):
Tropical Storm Melissa could form in the Caribbean Sea. The
National Hurricane Center has identified a tropical wave that is
a high chance of developing. It's currently moving westward and
is expected to slow down in the Central Caribbean. The
storm has a fifty percent chance of forming over the
next two days. Forecasters say it could potentially threaten areas
from Jamaica to Hispaniola. But again, yet another storm that's
(27:14):
just expected to stay off the e stay off the.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
We've been really lucky that it's got about banana banana
ingyt into the Atlantic.
Speaker 4 (27:22):
It's just it's almost like you don't want to talk
about or don't all right, you know, we have our
seasons here in Florida, right, We've got hurricane season, wildfire season,
rainy season.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
We have summer and light summer.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
Exactly, We've got fall for one day. Well, did you
also know we have a spider season?
Speaker 3 (27:37):
No, I did not know.
Speaker 4 (27:38):
Yeah, it's spider season in Florida. Some of the state's
most prominent spiders would be more visible over the next
several weeks. That's partly due to increase mating behaviors in
the fall and the fact that it's the Halloween holiday.
Doctor Lisa Taylor with the University of Florida's Institute of
Food and Egg Sciences tells New six. This time of
the year, people are thinking about spiders, so they're noticing
(27:59):
more and more of them are round.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Some spiders to be wary of.
Speaker 3 (28:02):
Those psycho somatic it's not okay.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
Because spiders to be wary of include black widows. My
brother used to have those all over his garbage cans
when he lived in Saint Cloud. It was crazy how
many black widows he had. And then my spider. I'm
terrified of brown recluse spiders. Now they say recluses are
rare in central Florida. Excuse me, but they have been
(28:27):
found in Orange, Osceola, and Polk Counties.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
Yeah, yeah, I one, yes, I have. I've actually seen both.
I'll tell you a black widow story. I was pressure
washing my front porch and saw an egg sack and
didn't realize what it was. And as I was pressure washing,
the mom was around the corner comes around and I just,
you know, I was just I just sure. I have
two kids, you know, I'm just blowing the I just
blew the spire out of there and then I pressure
(28:51):
washed the eggs and how of them? Oh my gosh, that,
my friends, is what nightmares is. Oh oh yeah, yeah,
have you ever seen Charlotte's web. Yeah, when that egg set,
when the eggs kind of just stay started, there were
I mean hundreds of them. I don't know, I mean,
I don't The sack was no bigger than the tip
of your pinky, but they were just pouring out of
(29:13):
there like a clown car.
Speaker 4 (29:14):
There's one spider that carries her eggsack on her back,
I've heard, and that when you step on her, that's
what disperses the spiders. That's not creepy, No, not creepy
at all. And then finally, Americans. I know you know
this number, but Americans are set to spend a record
amount on Halloween this year. According to the National Retail Federation,
Halloween spending is expected to reach so sea lane, I
(29:37):
will ask you, what do you think Halloween spending nationwide?
Speaker 1 (29:40):
It's going to turn out?
Speaker 3 (29:41):
Okay, this is and this is the tiebreaker?
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Yeah, okay is it?
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Yeah? Oh yeah, he's got one. I got one.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
Okay, nationwide we're spending on Halloween.
Speaker 4 (29:51):
Yeah, how much money do you think Americans overall are
going to spend on the spooky holiday?
Speaker 3 (29:56):
A billion dollars? Dude, it's way more than that. Oh,
you're so cute, dude, it's thank you. I want to
say I said it. I want to say. It's like
seven and a half billion.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Oh, you're so cute, is it really?
Speaker 4 (30:06):
No, it's thirteen point one billion dollars in twenty twenty five.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (30:12):
Yeah, that's up from eleven point six billion dollars last year.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Now, this year's total.
Speaker 4 (30:18):
Includes three point nine billion dollars on candy and four
point three billion dollars on costumes.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (30:28):
Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows the cost
of candy has jumped eight percent compared.
Speaker 3 (30:35):
To last year. Yeah. Man, have you.
Speaker 4 (30:38):
Guys bought any candy? Well, I suppose I yet.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
No, no, no candy, no Halloween plans at all.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
My uh my wife was a Costco fan, and so
we went and she stocked up on full size bars.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
We have to be at full size bars.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
But she got it, you know, like ahead of time,
waited for the deal and then we're just sitting on
the full size bars until the embargo on opening them.
Speaker 3 (31:03):
I get it. Very funny.
Speaker 4 (31:05):
It's funny though, because we did that story that found
that people sometimes go through their Halloween candy two to
three times before Halloween actually shows up. So they have
to keep going back to the store.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
Because people have problems yet times. If you're ripping through
four bars, if you're ripping through full bars at a
rate where you have to reload two or three times,
got almighty.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Either way, that concludes your JCS news.
Speaker 3 (31:34):
Yeah, one, you're three o'clock. You were just cash C
A s H. Just slide over to real radio douhim
and send that away from your chance at one thousand bucks.
Back on a second with more of the Jim Colbert Show.
(31:57):
Welcome back to the Jim Culber Show or where you
one four point one? I'm Jim. There's dead ceiling here
with us today. Greatly appreciate it. Yes, oh you're welcome.
Cash is your three o'clock keyword? C A s H.
Get over to a real radio dot fimsen that a way
for your chance of a thousand bucks. We'll have a
freshy for you at the top of the hour. So ceiling,
you said, Jax is two years old coming up here soon, right, Yes, sir,
(32:20):
So does he have any allergies? Any food allergies? Were
you ays lucky enough to avoid them? Yeah? I think we.
I think we pretty much avoided it. So an interesting
CBS news story regarding regarding children's allergies specifically to peanuts,
has shown some really really interesting results, you know, and
of course that would be terrifying. I couldn't imagine having
(32:43):
a young child that would could be deathly allergic to
not only you know, peanuts would be the worst, simply
because it's so you know, so available, and peanuts or
peanut oil or some derivative of peanuts are in tons
of foods.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
Yeah, you can, I mean easily have peanuts by accident
in a bunch of different scenarios. And I haven't known
anybody too close that's had an allergy like that. Yeah,
but I did, you know. I was playing a gig
for somebody one time and I had ordered at this
restaurant and the singer's mother was like, oh, keep it
away from her. She'll, you know, she'll have to go
(33:18):
straight to the hospital if she gets near the shrimp.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
I was like, Yeah, my dad has that allergy for shellfish.
Really yeah, yeah, or beeste he always have it. Yeah.
The one thing it's so funny, I tell the story,
I never saw my father run. In my entire life.
I never saw my father run except one time, and
that's when we were on a construction site and they
were doing some demo and like a thing of bees
(33:45):
flew out of there. My old man set the forty
world record at that point. Yeah, because you know, again,
you're out in the middle of a bum blank nowhere
in Alabama building something and if you get popped in
the nearest hospital as a you know, a seventy mile ride.
He could not roll those diets. And that's the only
one I remember. He couldn't have shrimp or shellfish of
any in any way, shape or form. It would be gnarly.
(34:07):
Do beastings? Does that? Does an EpiPen cover a beastings? Yeah?
I think EPP's supposed to cover most of that stuff.
Of what I understand, But what they found here is
about sixty thousand children have avoided developing peanut allergies after
guidance first issued a twenty fifteen appended medical practice by
recommending introducing peanuts to infants starting as early as four
(34:31):
months old. Yes, which we did. Which you guys did that?
Did you do that cognitively? Yes? Oh you did. Yeah,
so you followed this guidance.
Speaker 2 (34:40):
I don't know that I read that exact guidance but
I know that that there had been talks about the
introducing of allergens to babies at a young age. I
think maybe even our pediatrician recommended it.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
And so I sought out snacks for him that were
in the baby aisle. You know, not just feed in peanuts,
because four months old is a little young to just
start popping in.
Speaker 3 (35:03):
Peanuts, but like peanut butter on your finger.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
Peanut butter on your finger is one or just They
have snacks for babies that are basically like really fluffy cheetos.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
Oh really that.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
Melt in their mouths, you know, if they having trouble
crunching on them. Oh, and they have them in all
different flavors, and one of them is peanut and it
even tells you that it contains peanut, so that you
know that if you want to try this out on
your child, well, this is a good way to introduce
them to that and see how they react to it.
Speaker 3 (35:35):
Yeah. The researchers found that peanut allergies and children ages
zero to three declined by more than twenty seven percent
after guidance for High Risk Kids that was first issued
in twenty fifteen, and then by more than forty percent
after they expanded those recommendations in twenty seventeen. When you
think about that number, that's insane. I mean, that is
a crazy number when you're reducing peanut allergies and kids
(35:59):
that age.
Speaker 1 (36:01):
Yeah, it's a big difference.
Speaker 4 (36:02):
I wonder if eating them while they're in utero would
have a difference as well. Yeah, I'm like, if you
introduce spices.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
And flavors, maybe, I mean you say that everything that
happens to mom happens to baby, right, Yeah. But like
another thing, and I mentioned this earlier, we also made
a point to give him avocado because my wife.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
Is allergic to it. Oh wow, really, oh wow.
Speaker 2 (36:24):
That's not something she could have done in utero, right,
exactly right, It's just something we kind of got to
try out, and you know, just kind of cross our fingers.
Speaker 4 (36:31):
I don't know if you've ever seen those commercials coin Flip.
Speaker 3 (36:34):
Let's hope he makes it.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
I know it's terrifying.
Speaker 3 (36:36):
Also, yeah, you throw me some bees exactly. It gets
some beastings.
Speaker 4 (36:42):
But the commercials are terrifying. You know when they show
kids hanging out with their friends and you know, one
grabs the wrong drink and you know, one just grabs
your drink to take a sip out of it, and
it just reminds you of how many different ways your
child could be exposed to that one thing that they
can't they can't be exposed to, and.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
How much you have to rely on the diligence of
other people, even as an adult, when you think about
that doctor that went out there to Disney Springs and
you know, on top of already pre calling to ask
if the menu was free of that, then while they
get there reiterating, I don't know if you understand, but
we can have like zero peanuts zero, it cannot be
any right, and they guarantee or is it peppers or
(37:24):
peanuts or something like that. I thought it was a shelfish,
Maybe it's something like that, and they basically just reiterate
it even then, and even after all of that, she
got failed by someone in that organization and it cost
her her life. Yeah, it did, so it really, I mean,
that's why it would be so terrifying as a child, because,
like you're saying, I mean, you know, your kid could
never spend the night with somebody. Your kid could never
(37:45):
go outside of what I mean, you could never let
anybody take your child and and go like even a
brother or sister, because you just can't roll the dice
that that child couldn't just grab a bag of peanuts
or or you know, or eat something that the mom
made unknowingly having something in that it could be detrimental.
Speaker 4 (38:01):
Somebody just texted us at seven seven zero three two
and said I dated a girl that was allergic to coconut.
You'd be amazed at how many products are stain either
coconut or coconut oil, which.
Speaker 3 (38:11):
Is imagine eggs, what imagine being allergic to eggs? Oh? Yeah,
that's incredible. It says here that peanut allergy has caused
when the body's immune system mistakenly identifies proteins and peanuts
as harmful and releases chemicals that trigger allergic symptoms, including hives,
respiratory symptoms, and of course sometimes life threatening an flaxix,
(38:32):
which is when your throat is you know, basically just
shuts up. Yeah huh.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Now, it says the person or the the items that
they ordered broccoli, corn, broccoli and corn, fritter, scallops and
onion rings. There's not a way to allergen free your scallops.
Speaker 3 (38:47):
Well, I don't I don't think it was a shellfish thing. Yeah,
I mean, I'm trying to figure out what exactly the
I thought it was like a pepper of some sort,
because I know there are some people that have an
allergy to some type of the what is the chemical? Sorry,
darien nuts? Is it darian nuts? She was severely allergic
to darien nuts. Unbelievab Yeah, yeah, that would kill me
(39:07):
and they and they didn't really it kill her.
Speaker 4 (39:09):
I mean, you know, can I drink there? I mean,
I am a dairy queen.
Speaker 3 (39:13):
Yeah. Yeah, that lactose thing is crazy too. Right right
around the corner from me. Ah, four oh seven nine
one six one four oh seven nine one six, I've
been having that all that one pause you heard all.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
Because it took me a second.
Speaker 3 (39:28):
I was like, wait a minute, all right, I gotta
tell you there is a stat out there regarding kids
that is absolutely mind numbing, and I'll tell you what
it is. Next. We got another keyword for you right
now as well.
Speaker 7 (39:40):
Fresh Welcome back to the Gympobra Show Rolle Radio one
oh four point one.
Speaker 3 (39:54):
You're four o'clock. He warn his credits.
Speaker 4 (39:59):
C R E.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
D T go over to real Radio dot him and
send that away for your chance at a thousand bucks. Guys.
Credit is your four o'clock keyword good luck. We hope
you win for sure. If you like to send a
talk back on anything we're talking about going into the show,
you can do that easily. Just grab the iHeartRadio app,
go to real radio and use that mic to send
your comment over to Sea Lane. We will get you
on the air for sure. Welcome back on Jim. There's
(40:22):
deb ceiling here with us today. Gladly appreciated. It's nice
to be here, you know. It's nice to hang out
every once in a while. Always good to see you dog.
Are you great? Yeah? All right? Man. So I do
scan a number of websites every single day to pull
stuff for the program. I found this one on UPI,
which is a United press, and it is a very interesting,
slash kind of sad story. All right. As of right now,
(40:49):
about one in ten preschoolers or toddlers do this. Only
one in ten preschoolers are toddlers do this way? Only
one intent?
Speaker 2 (41:01):
Only one in ten say only one. It sounds like
there should be muld Yeah.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Only one in ten preschoolers and toddlers do this on
a weekly basis, read is not the answer. Bathe bathe
is not the answer. Rush your teeth. No, ummmm, it's
an I think it's unbelievably sad. Most people from our generation,
DEB would maybe even from ceilings as well. Matter of fact,
(41:27):
I'll go ahead and give a definite for the ceiling
thing as well.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Eat a home cooked meal.
Speaker 3 (41:31):
Oh, that's a really good one. That's not it. I
was going darker in my head. I was saying to
eat in general. Yeah, I was like.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
Man, you know, I don't think we're getting really I
don't think we're getting dark enough for this story.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
I could give you one hint that'll definitely give it
for DEB. It's something we weren't even allowed to do
as kids. It's so funny I said that. That's a
total screw job, right or what I just said to you?
Speaker 1 (41:54):
We were not allowed to do this as kids.
Speaker 3 (41:55):
Well, no, it really it's a it's the it's the
other side of this argu One in ten preschoolers and toddlers,
only only one in ten go outside to play once
a week or less. Oh wow, Only one in ten
preschoolers or toddlers go outside to play once a week
(42:16):
or less. In other words. There are some weeks that
the kids like your age, you know, Jack's age, you know,
Toddler's five years old, two years old, three year old, whatever,
they don't go out to play anymore. They stay inside
the entire time. And when I say that we weren't
allowed to as kids, I don't know about uc lane,
But man, when I was a kid, this when the
sun was up, and after you've got some breakfast, you
(42:37):
better get the blank out.
Speaker 4 (42:38):
Of the house because if you didn't, that meant you
wanted to be put to work, That's right.
Speaker 3 (42:42):
So we either leave or get to work. Most of
the time by eight o'clock in the morning, nine o'clock
in the morning on a Saturday and Sunday. When I
was a kid, we were nowhere to be found. We
would not be near the house. And you know, part
of it is exactly what deb says. But we just
didn't want to stick around. There's nothing to do in
the house, right, you know, there's a problem, so much
to do.
Speaker 1 (43:01):
That's the problem.
Speaker 3 (43:02):
Though. It's gaming systems, right, that's gonna be what it
is like iPads block, tablets roadblocks.
Speaker 4 (43:07):
And isn't vitamin D really important for bone development?
Speaker 3 (43:11):
Essential? Essential?
Speaker 4 (43:13):
So at that age, you want them outside sucking up
as much sunlight as they can.
Speaker 3 (43:17):
It says playing outside has been shown to improve children's
mental and physical health. Also contributes to good eye health
as well. It says parental anxiety maybe one barrier, with
one and four or four and ten parents polled admitting
they feel nervous when their child's trays too far or
climbs too high. Well, you know what, there's a good
way stand out, there's any just stand out there with them. Well.
Speaker 4 (43:40):
The other thing too, when you think about it, is that,
you know, that's how kids learn how to operate in society. Right,
they learn conflict resolution, right, they learn how to make friends,
they learn how to not hit, say plea. You know,
that's where you learn that kind of tribal behavior.
Speaker 3 (43:57):
Your social construct starts there.
Speaker 1 (43:59):
Exactly. The playground is on the playground.
Speaker 3 (44:01):
Absolutely, it's his activities like climbing a tree, riding a bike,
or sliding down a pole. Of the program are opportunities
for growth. Those are things that we look we had.
I gotta tell you when I was a kid, you know,
we didn't have a whole bunch. There was no video
game consoles or anything like that we had, you know,
a couple bikes and stuff like that, but we had
a public park and we were able to go there
and our uncles and aunts and moms and dad. We
(44:22):
would like gather up all the cousins and we would
go to the public park and dud for like four hours.
We would terrorize that place like a cartel.
Speaker 4 (44:29):
So what's interesting is we had done a story last
week about iHeartRadio CEO Bob Pittman talking about this study
that they had done and finding that, you know, more
adults really love the fact that, you know, radio is
human created content.
Speaker 3 (44:44):
Sure.
Speaker 4 (44:44):
Yeah, Well something else that that survey found that stunned me,
you guys.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
So, despite a desire.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
To socialize in person, children age eight to twelve face
parental restrictions. Survey children reported that sixty one percent have
never made plans independently.
Speaker 3 (45:02):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (45:03):
Forty five percent have never walked even an aisle away
from a parent.
Speaker 3 (45:08):
Damn.
Speaker 4 (45:08):
Really, seventy one percent have never used a sharp knife.
Speaker 3 (45:13):
By what age? This is? Age eight to twelve? Oh
my god, I was cooking. I was legit cooking full
meals for myself at eight at ten years old.
Speaker 4 (45:23):
And here's the problem with that say, parental anxiety. Right,
kids still want to find independence. So where do you
think they're finding it?
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Online?
Speaker 1 (45:31):
Online?
Speaker 4 (45:31):
Seventy percent say a past bedtime on devices. Thirty three
percent have chatted with AI bots and they're finding that
that chat with kids is leaning romantic. And then twenty
five percent have messaged messaged strangers online.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
How many have never been more than an aisle away
from their parents forty five percent. Could you imagine twelve
years old having a kid that's never been out of
your eye sightde It's like an amoeba. I'm just thinking
about me as a kid. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
There were if we were going to the store, it
was my mom and I I would she would leave
me in the magazine section buy my request. Oh yeah, dude,
you know it's not like you know here she was
using it as a some sort of child sitter. But
I wanted to stay there and just like flip through
magazines while she did the boring shopping stuff.
Speaker 3 (46:19):
Yeah, and then she'd come find me and we're out
of here.
Speaker 7 (46:22):
There.
Speaker 4 (46:22):
How many of us were left in the car with
the windows down and told to just behave.
Speaker 3 (46:25):
I was gonna say that that was like nine times
out of ten with with us. Just stay here. Yeah,
I'll be right out doors not locked, windows down. Oh,
it was like an abduction mall. You can just pull
up a duct what you liked exactly. Yeah, so those
are some crazy stuff. Windows were down. Yeah, dude, I
gotta tell you something kind of crazy, you know, and
when you look back at it, you get a reminiscent.
(46:47):
I would get up in the morning, we'd do the
whole breakfast thing, watch cartoons, and I would take off
on my bicycle and like, hey, I'm going to Jimmy's
house anybody named Jimmy, right, and I'd go to my house.
I would come home like like two or three o'clock
in the afternoon, right, and my mom would have the
balls to go where you been. I'm like, you're just
now wondering that I've been going six hours and all
of a sudden you're freaked out.
Speaker 4 (47:07):
Well, remember they play that ad? Do you know where
your children are? Exactly ten pm at night?
Speaker 3 (47:12):
But you know, the funny thing is is like I
see and hear of a lot of you are. Of course,
a lot of this is online. You see you know
through Facebook how people are parenting their kids. And I
gotta tell you, man, what they're saying about. The whole
idea of like climbing the tree, riding a bike, sliding
it on a pole. It's his parents understandably worry about
their safety, but children need opportunities to test their limits,
find out, you know, what they're afraid of, what drives them,
(47:34):
what makes them happy. Climbing, swinging, exploring unfamiliar areas. That
was like one of my favorite things to do as
a kid. I lived in West Virginia for like a
summer and a half, right and behind our house was
just this jungle, just just Appalachian jungle. But it was
a dream space for a kid who's like eight nine
years old with a great kind of imagination. There were
(47:55):
there were streams with craw dads and rocks you could
climb on and stuff you could climb. It was like
a gigantic play area for somebody with the right mentality.
But man, if you weren't in that mentality, because once
you got back in the wood, you couldn't see anything.
There was nothing out there. You could hear anything or
see anything, but just kind of knew how to get back. Man.
Those are the things I remember the most, Like never
(48:16):
sitting in my house playing video games or doing stupid
stuff like that. It was always outside.
Speaker 1 (48:21):
Yeah, that was that was again.
Speaker 2 (48:24):
It was like, I'm kind of halfway between you and
what my kid will be, you know, indoor boy. You know,
I did some outdoor things, I I But you guys.
Speaker 3 (48:36):
Take him everywhere, though, Chris. That's the thing. That's the
thing about you guys, wouldn't. I mean, you guys have
been taking him out to loud stuff, fireworks and me
and around people and correct, different people roll up on
him and he's just got such a great demeanor. Correct.
Speaker 2 (48:48):
But I'm just saying, like, as far as how I
wanted to spend my time in that that range of
age there, you know, with eight, what was it, eight
to twelve? Like I did do plenty of bike riding
and my neighborhood just you know, for there was no
way of tracking me, and there was no way of
me getting a hold of stuff, getting a hold of people.
Speaker 4 (49:09):
But every parent knew where the hangout house was because
you just looked for all the bikes in the frontyard.
Speaker 3 (49:14):
Right. Yeah. I come home and I'd tell my dad like, hey,
I said, somebody kind of kind of looking at me.
Weird today and he'd be like, dude, he would say, like,
let me give you ten dollars when he abduction, he
has something to pay for, you know, pay for food
the whole time.
Speaker 4 (49:26):
Somebody just texted us at seven seven zero three one
my girlfriend's thirteen year old daughter couldn't cut her own meat.
Speaker 3 (49:41):
And they say risky plays another thing like parents get
freaked out and there are kids in the playground who
liked to do kind of crazy stuff. Go stay away
from Jimmy. You know, he's out there doing monkey swings
like a you know, ten feet in the air man.
What you do exactly what you do.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
It's what you do when you think you're invincible.
Speaker 4 (49:54):
That's when you go down that slide in shorts in
July and realize you might want to wait till the
evening when it's a little bit.
Speaker 3 (50:01):
Yes, says play doesn't need to be perfect or educational
to be beneficial. Letting kids lead their own play encourages curiosity,
creativity and independence. And look, I will tell you I
think as much as that is part of but what
you said earlier is equally as valuable. The idea that
you're hanging out with people from different mindsets. You know,
maybe their parents are Jews, or maybe they're Islam, or
(50:23):
maybe they're black or brown, or maybe they come from
a house where culture differences don't really add up, and
you learn about different things. You learn how certain people
roll because of their backgrounds, or how dads and moms
are when it comes to certain things. And I've told
the story one hundred times before. My kids had a
hard time getting people to spend the night with us
over at our house because we demanded that you say
yes sir, no sir, yes ma'am, no ma'am, please, and
(50:45):
thank you. And once the kids, my kids would tell them, hey, look,
when you come to my house, you gotta say yes
ma'am and no ma'am. You gotta say please and thank you.
That the kids would bail, like they did not want
to adhere to just saying satan, thank you and yes
and no ma'am. They just couldn't take it. They have
these kids called their parents but their first name, which like,
(51:06):
it's just one of those things I just never understood. Mom. Bro, Yeah,
that's infuriating, isn't it. That's kind of That was one
of the first tells that I was that that was
like that. My family was different because I remember going
in high school going over to some of the guys
that played baseball with their other friends, and the way
that they talked to their parents. I would just marvel
(51:27):
at it. I'm like, man, I would have already been
four teeth down by now easily. You just snatched up
and beat in front of your kids for talking like
that to your parents, And it would be I would
be aghast. I would run home, like, Mammy, are gonna
believe this?
Speaker 5 (51:42):
You know?
Speaker 3 (51:43):
So and so said this to the mom and dad,
and we would just sit there and laugh at how
unbelievable it was that a child could talk to their
parent like that. That's how I realized we were so different.
I definitely.
Speaker 2 (51:54):
I don't know that my parents ever required that amount
of respect from friends spending the night.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
Oh yeah, but I was.
Speaker 2 (52:02):
I was the one that was like the overly polite
kid at sleepover, so much so that in fifth grade
at a friend's house, they made the parents made dinner,
and it was like, I was taught that you finished
the dinner like you.
Speaker 1 (52:19):
Yeah, they're starving in China.
Speaker 2 (52:21):
My parents didn't do that. Get I want to get
the I didn't get the starving kid speech. But it
was just like, you know, somebody made you food. Sure, yeah,
the polite thing to do would be to eat it. Well,
they made green beans, and I didn't like green beans,
and so I asked for ketchup. And this kid's dad said,
what do you need to ketch up for? Because he
had he had eyed the meal and decided that nothing
(52:43):
was ketchup worthy on that plate.
Speaker 3 (52:44):
And I said, for my green beans.
Speaker 2 (52:46):
That's how I like to eat my green beans, because
I figured I would at least get them down if
I douse them.
Speaker 3 (52:51):
In in some sort of lucan you know, delicious ketchup.
And uh and and the guy said to my mom
when she picked me up, good needs green beans would
cut up?
Speaker 2 (53:02):
That's weird and a blue my cover.
Speaker 4 (53:07):
No, Then he realized that you took one for the team,
and he shouldn't have been such a jerk.
Speaker 1 (53:11):
What a thing to tell a child's mother.
Speaker 3 (53:13):
Yeah, the kids used to like the parents of kids.
My kids would or excuse me, the parents and kids
that would spend the night would call or say, you know,
how do you get your kids to do that?
Speaker 1 (53:22):
I don't understand that.
Speaker 3 (53:24):
It's just one hundred percent.
Speaker 1 (53:25):
Yes, you do not spare the rod.
Speaker 3 (53:27):
We just listen, man, We just it's just one of
those things. And uh, it is. It was just so
bizarre how and then when somebody would come over and
they would if I'd ask him a question, they just
go yep. My kids would just tense up because you
could see them just tense up, and they would bump
them yes. And then uh, and I realized the kids
didn't come over a whole bunch anymore. Oh, that is
(53:48):
so terrible. They didn't like it. They didn't like doing that.
They didn't like the strict rules of the Colbert household.
Speaker 4 (53:54):
Wait till you get into the real world where a
common courtesy is not just expected like it works, it
was demanded.
Speaker 3 (54:00):
Especially when you think about as we learn about, you know,
things change corporately, and now the degree thing that that
kind has been blown, that's been blown completely out of
the water. You know. The degree has value, of course,
but not the value of you know, being well liked
in your workplace, which is now the number one asset.
Are you effective? But are you well liked? Does a
team want to work with you? Do sales reps want
(54:20):
to go on calls with you? Do do other clients
look forward to you coming over and doing a sales call.
All of those things are considerably more important than what
you know, how well you can make friends, and how
well you can get people to like you as the
number one asset in the corporate marketplace.
Speaker 2 (54:36):
Right now, and how well you could do the job
versus you know, sometimes that matters more than how well
you've been trained on it or or gone to school
for it.
Speaker 3 (54:45):
But if you can motivate people around you to be
better at what they do, and uh, corporations love it
all right for a seven nine one six one four
one text us seven seven zero three one.
Speaker 4 (54:54):
It's perfect text to wrap up this segment. Someone parents
won't let them out of their site, but then give
them full access to the internet.
Speaker 3 (55:01):
Which isn't much better and much more dangerous place to
be pretty dangerous.
Speaker 2 (55:06):
You said at one of those stats, was like, here's
how many kids have a messaged with a stranger on
the internet. And I was like, I was a kid,
that was all there was was strangers when I was not,
you know, until some of my friends started getting the
dial up services too, that was the only option was
talking to strangers.
Speaker 4 (55:22):
You know, kids will get their independence, no matter where
they can, where they can get it.
Speaker 3 (55:25):
You're right, one hundred percent right, all right. Your four
o'clock keyword is credit CR E D. I T kick
it over to real radio Data FM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Supreme Court
is looking at a pretty important decision. It's kind of odd, though,
I'll tell you what it is next. Suck. They also
(55:48):
did they lobbily get the love? We need to call
inspector clues? So you felt the big panther he'll stumble
into this.
Speaker 2 (55:58):
One could only.
Speaker 6 (55:58):
Hope he brought up red light tickets. I've never had
a red light ticket. I run red lights kind of
a lot, especially even if I'm just sitting there and
there's no car in sight and you're just sitting there
like an idiot. I just go, I don't care anymore.
Uh never got a ticket for anything.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
You could hear the I don't give a f and
you not. He gave up years ago, God bless you.
But it not one single left in the room, not
even a little bit. Have you ever seen that video
of that bar being robbed? And uh, I mean it
is being robbed at shotgun point, right, This is the
guy at the bar while it's being robbed. They come
up and try to snatch his cell phone. He snatches it,
(56:39):
back sets it on the counter, and then lights a
cigarette and he sits there and smokes it. And dude,
he's not a badass. This is a like a regular
Joe Schmo. And they try to take his phone again
and he ain't having it. Everybody else is hitting the deck.
They're running for their life. This cat just sat there
and chugged that stick the entire time and didn't do
it nothing. It was great Like that is a I
(57:00):
who was done with life exactly. Look, man, if it's
gonna happen, I'm gonna have to smoke, and you're just
gonna do it, or you're not gonna do it. Your
four o'clock key were to credit ce R E d
I T slide over to real RADIOFM and send it
away for your chance at a thousand bucks. Guys, remember,
if you're playing the game and your phone rings with
a number you do not recognize or it says no
caller ID, you gotta pick it up. That's how they
tell you won super important stuff.
Speaker 2 (57:21):
Somebody probably saw that video and said to the man
if I could just be you for one day, and
he goes, no, you don't, you know you know what
that death inside?
Speaker 3 (57:29):
I'm jen there's deb hello sailing with us today for sure.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
And yes the stream is back up.
Speaker 3 (57:34):
Yeah, very nice. So an interesting story today. I'm sure
the other people have covered it today. Supreme Court's gonna
decide whether or not people who regularly smoke pot can
legally own guns. Now that happened here in Florida for
a while, right, does it still stand? I believe so.
Speaker 4 (57:49):
I believe you cannot get your medical marijuana card and
also have a weapon.
Speaker 3 (57:53):
But the thing is, it doesn't really matter anymore. Since
it kind of abolished the whole idea of having a
permit to have a gun, that really doesn't come into
play anymore. It's still your second Amendment, right right, correct,
That's what they tried to do. They tried to tie
your your your carry permit to your marijuana use. So
if you had a card for medical marijuana, you could
not get a card to carry your you know, but
(58:14):
what do they call that thing? Your medical marijuana car? Yeah?
The other one, oh carr carry permit? Right, So you
don't even have to have that anymore. Are you able
to cancel your concealed carry permit? I don't. I don't
say I want the weed more than the guns. Yeah,
I don't think it vowed anymore though, right, I mean,
didn't they say it was a second It was a
constitutional override that any state can't make, you know, buying
(58:35):
a gun or getting a gun. There should be no that.
Matter of fact, they're trying to lower the they're trying to
lower the the age right now to eighteen. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (58:44):
I believe that was a Florida ruling because right, yeah,
so they said, you know, if the founding fathers, you know,
said that you could have access to weapons, then openly
carrying them shouldn't.
Speaker 3 (58:54):
Be a big deal and having them shouldn't be a
big deal. So I don't know that the medical marijuana
card thing is even in jeopardy in Central Florida anymore,
because you don't have to have a concealed carry permit anymore.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
I mean, I know this is the headline today that
they're working on. The one before sometime last week they
were talking about trying to take away your medical marijuana
card if you were caught selling or distributing or carrying
too much with an intent to sell of marijuana or
any other drug.
Speaker 3 (59:23):
I mean they should do that, because it's the idea.
You're not you're supposed to use that to become a dealer.
You know. The whole idea is you're supposed to use
that to use it for your personal use, to take
care of anxiety, pain, whatever the case you want to do,
just make your Sunday nights better. Whatever. This one's way
different though. It's kind of interesting.
Speaker 2 (59:40):
So like if you had, say, you got the concealed
carry permit at some point, and you go, I want
to switch over.
Speaker 3 (59:49):
I don't want. I don't want.
Speaker 2 (59:50):
I don't need the concealed carry permit, but I do
need the medical I want. I want the marijuana more.
Speaker 3 (59:55):
Yeah, I don't know that you can kind of disengage
from the concealed carry thing. Quss your right to conceal.
I don't believe that you can do that. I think
once you've gotten that, I guess maybe once it's expired,
you know, maybe when your card expires, maybe at that
point you could you could make a stab at it.
I don't know, well what the feds are trying to do.
This is a Supreme Court is considering whether or not
people who regularly smoke a marijuana can legally own guns.
(01:00:17):
This is the latest firearm case to come before the
court since twenty twenty two expanded gun rights, and this
is basically takes this argument to a national level. The
thing that they never really explained this is an AP story,
and the AP is usually very good at kind of
vetting out the situation and the information. Oh they had
some internet problems, yeah, yeah, yeah, they never established what
(01:00:39):
a regular user is. Well that's the other thing, man,
is that they never established that. Don't even say anything
in here. What's a regular user? Is it once a week?
Is it once a day? Is that subjective?
Speaker 2 (01:00:48):
If you don't have a medical card, what is even
the barometer for that? Like you just say I'm a
regular user of marijuana?
Speaker 4 (01:00:56):
Ye?
Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
And what do you say I'm not? And what is regular?
Is that once a day? Is it multiple times a day?
It's three times a week? Because with alcohol, if you're
a regular alcohol user, I think they consider that drinking
just three days a week, right, I don't even think
being a regular alcohol user is every day? Really? Yeah,
I don't think so. And I gotta tell you, you know,
this is stupid. If they really want to pinch the
things that create situations with guns, it's alcohol. It has
(01:01:20):
nothing to do with marijuana. Marijuana. Nobody's getting blasted high
and going there was a shotgun and spitting out for
rounds and nobody's doing that. They just want some cheet
It's alcohol, that's the problem. Alcohol and other hard drugs
are causing these issues. If you really want to, if
you really want to quell gun crime, get in front
of alcohol issues. That's the problem. But they ain't never
doing that. They will never tie your alcohol use to
(01:01:43):
your gun owner abilities. That ain't never happening. And how
they do this to marijuana is just because it's all
a Schedule one. Well yeah, well obviously so, and it's
supposed to change and Trump Trumps has said that he
wants to change that, and it should be changed. It's
the most ridiculous thing in America right now, not the most,
but it's damn up there, right. I mean the fact that,
well why was it schedule one? Again? What schedule one means?
(01:02:05):
There was no medical purpose? Right? Right?
Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
Yeah, It's up.
Speaker 4 (01:02:08):
There with heroin, I mean truly addictive, dangerous drugs.
Speaker 3 (01:02:12):
No, I think it's worse than it's worse than coke.
It's worse than coked because coke used to be used
as medicine exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
Oh that's right.
Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
And by the way, morphine or well morphine was the
medical part of that, but it basically a derivative of heroin.
Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
I think the scheduled ones that had no medical purpose.
It was like marijuana and an LSD. It is it's
something for fun ones. Yeah, something where it's like, all right,
it sounds like it's the worst because it's number one,
you know, it's schedule one, and the lesser ones, which
are often worse for you, are only lesser because they
(01:02:47):
were once used as uh, you know, cough syrup or
or or numbing agents.
Speaker 4 (01:02:52):
Yes, so, heroin, LSD, marijuana, ecstasy, those are some of
the schedule one drugs.
Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
Yeah, those are the party drugs, right, yeah, Robbie mushroom,
Yeah yeah, Mushroom's gotta be in there, Solomon.
Speaker 4 (01:03:04):
So, marijuana is a Schedule of one drug under the
US Controlled substancece At Substances Act, meaning it is classified
as having a high potential for abuse. No currently accepted
medical use in treatment in the United States, except for
what thirty plus states and a lack of accepted safety
for use under medical supervision.
Speaker 3 (01:03:23):
It's so crazy. Yeah, it's the most insane thing ever,
like any of these people ever even attempted, like just
getting high a little bit. I mean, it will show
you immediately that nothing. You're like, that's the last thing
you want to do. You don't even want a gun
in the room. As they asked the court to reinstate
this case against this guy named Ali Donal Harmony. This
case is I guess it was a felony case tossed
(01:03:44):
out after the Fifth US Circuit Court of Appeals found
that the blanket ban is unconstitutional under the Supreme Court's
expanded view of gun rights, which is basically exactly what
we're talking about here in Florida. They kind of shot
themselves in the foot, no pun intended when they when
they made the big Second Amendment change and you could
just carry your gun anywhere publics when Dixie Dollar General whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:04:03):
When Dixie doesn't allow.
Speaker 3 (01:04:04):
It, right, well that but either way the fact is
is you you know you can do that now, and
you know they've basically blown out the idea of trying
to leverage your medical marijuana card against your ability to
carry a concealed weapon. It doesn't even matter anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
That's crazy, but it's the Supreme Court and you're right.
Speaker 4 (01:04:25):
So Schedule one, so you've got marijuana, ecstasy, metha quaylone
and Payote.
Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
That's queludes, Payote, payote.
Speaker 4 (01:04:33):
And Schedule two is vicodin, cocaine, methamphetamine, methadone, hydromorphone, demorrol, oxycodone, fentanyl,
adderall riddlin.
Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
Yeah, yeah, so some of the fun ones, yes, Payote,
sea Lane. We don't want any Aztecs out there getting
high and shooting single shot muskets at people. Jesus to
know where I would find Payota? How many? What percentage
of America do you say h has tried marijuana according
to the AP Oh gosh, it says uh vio it
(01:05:07):
says uh, It says argue. Attorneys argue that a broadly
written law puts millions of people at risk of technical violations,
since at least this percentage of Americans have tried pot
according to government health data. A man, I don't want
to go too high because I feel like got almighty, dude,
(01:05:28):
seventy like three out of four people, okaye, are we're
talking here? I need to be in your Facebook group. Yeah,
twenty percent. So one of the ones who ad one
in five Americans have tried marijuana. One in five, Like,
they tried and they failed. They just tried. I know
(01:05:50):
people who've spoken that it doesn't do anything for them. Yeah,
they literally they don't have any reaction to it whatsoever,
not even a little bit does nothing. Then they sleep
and need a gallon of ice cream exactly. I don't
know what's going on. Yeah, another flashpoint and the application
of a Supreme Court's new test for firearm restrictions. They're
coming after it. I can't imagine this is gonna hold up.
I mean, there's no direct correlation between marijuana use and
(01:06:12):
gun violence. My god, almighty. I would love to see
that study in argument.
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Yeah, no doubt.
Speaker 3 (01:06:17):
Yeah, I mean I could draw you about fifteen of
them from alcohol just from Bike week this past week.
Speaker 2 (01:06:21):
We had a story on the show today that was
about a fight that was that broke out and people
were smoking weed, and that was so weird that we thought,
wait a second, they were smoking blunts during the fight.
Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
Those two things don't normally coincide. Yeah, yeah, yeah, but
it's wild. You know, you know a lot of the
inner city gang violence that we see in America. I mean,
we know a lot of those groups, you know, use
marijuana frequently, but that has nothing to do with the drug.
Those that's like gang stuff that's not really powered by marijuana,
you know s in this territorial and turf stuff. Yes,
(01:06:57):
and they just happened to be high all the time.
It's the truth though, right, I mean, you know those
people get high all the time, those gang members and stuff,
the bangers that get high all the time. They're smoking
blunts and singing about it doing all but they don't
you know that. But that violence is based in the
in the culture. It has nothing to do with you know,
them using marijuana or any group for that.
Speaker 2 (01:07:16):
Mass rival gangs or like you said, territory. Sure, somebody, uh,
you know, somebody owes somebody something.
Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
Now, the biker situation is way different because we know
there's a lot of meth in those groups, and meth
is one of those things keeps you up four or
five days and you lose your town mind. Yeah, So
take the whole bike apart. Yeah, completely different machine altogether,
all right. Four oh seven nine one six one four
one Again, you can always text us at seven seven.
Do you guys agree though with the alcohol thing, Like
if you really wanted to tie gun violence to one
(01:07:45):
specific thing, that it would probably more alcohol than any
of those drugs combined. Oh yeah, but I I.
Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
Can see where you're saying, like, uh, obviously some of
the companies would not want you to draw those lines. Yeah,
I mean I but based on their sales, a lot
of them wouldn't. But also I think a lot of
the gun violence that takes over the headlines is not
alcohol related. It's mental health related.
Speaker 3 (01:08:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:08:10):
Sure like that, but I think more if you had
to pick alcohol or weed. Yeah, I think you're spot on.
Speaker 3 (01:08:16):
But if you're talking you know, if you're if you're
talking to Supreme Court and they're trying to find an
overall reason why people die from gun violence, right, and
if it's in a rural area, not as not you know,
not necessarily a city based scenario where there's gun violence
in packed cities. I mean, I would think that alcohol
comes into play way more often than other substances and
(01:08:38):
in everywhere outside of major metropolitan areas, you know, whether
it be domestic violence deaths, whether it be you know,
just deaths from people getting too drunk doing stupid stuff.
I mean, you could even factor that into driving as well.
But I don't know. I don't know if marijuana is
the big I don't know if that's the big villain here.
But their jam sure trying to make it that way,
and they've been doing it for decades, you.
Speaker 2 (01:08:56):
Know, I mean that any any excuse, you know, because
while there's one side that's trying to lobby for the
medical use, you know, there's another side trying to kick
it back down.
Speaker 3 (01:09:07):
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
It's interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:09:08):
I was going to say real quick that in Colorado
they was all the kids, the kids, and it turned
out it was the seniors.
Speaker 3 (01:09:14):
Oh that's all it was.
Speaker 4 (01:09:14):
That's the seniors who made up the most crowded the
dispensary when we.
Speaker 3 (01:09:18):
Went out there. Right after it was, you know, full legal.
You could do whatever you want, right, It's just an
old West. And I remember we landed and on the
way to our hotel, my buddy says, you want to
go into a pawn shop and see what it's like.
I said, yeah, let's go to a pun shop. Let's
go see what what you know, what this whole thing
is about. You know, I just wanted to kind of
see what it was. We pull into one of the dispensaries, right,
you look outside packed, you know, there's a lot of
(01:09:38):
people there, and we walk inside and I was expecting
to see just a whole bunch of ICP fans. That's
what I expected, just a room full of juggalos, you know,
waiting for their weed. And it was exactly the opposite
of that. I think that there were maybe ten out
of the eighty people that were in that place. Yeah,
ten of them were under the age of thirty. Everybody
(01:10:00):
else was fifty and above, looking to get their back
to chill out, looking to go to sleep, looking to relax,
whatever the case may be. A lot of post traumatic
stuff in there from vets looking to remember their high
school day. Yeah, exactly, all right, four seven nine four one, No,
forget your four o'clock keyword is credit that cre d T.
Just slide over to Real Radio dot FM and send
(01:10:20):
that away for your chance at one thousand dollars back
in one second with more than Jim Colbert Show. Welcome
back to the Jim Colber Show. We're already a one
oh four point one and I'm Jim. There's dead ceiling
with us today. Hey, somebody on the texting service said
(01:10:42):
that that weed is still highly trafficked by cartel. Is
that true? Is the illicit weed business still around? Like,
I mean, yeah, I know, it's just so easy to
go to a dispensary and get what you need. I mean,
there're still people to buy it off people in the street.
I mean, the people that live in places where they
don't have access to it, or they still want to
be part of the government database. Possibly yeh, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:05):
I mean it's weird to say that that would be
a paranoid thing, but a lot of pistoners are very paranoid.
Speaker 3 (01:11:11):
But yeah, I mean, look again, I mean, you know
people that like, look, if you can find it on
the street, it's I think it's about the same price,
isn't it. I think when you go to a dispensary,
actually maybe a little bit more. I don't know when
the last time I bought weed from a person who was, yeah,
that kind of weed seller, drug dealer. You know, when
(01:11:34):
was the last time I purchased something like that. I
don't even know what it would cost these days from
somebody that wasn't getting it from a dispensary, right, or
somebody who knew somebody who was getting it from a
dispensary or had it shipped in from California. Stuff like that.
I know back in the day. I think a quarter
of an ounce, which is just like a little baggy
(01:11:56):
of pretty good quality stuff, would be around one hundred dollars,
anywhere from like a eighty to one hundred hundred and
ten dollars, And I think that's kind of about average
of what medical marijuana is for. They sell it by eighths.
I guess you can get it in other quantities, but
I think the most I think I used to buy
eights when I bought like flour, Yeah, like thirty five
forty bucks or whatever it is something like that. Yeah,
(01:12:16):
that's about what it is for the medical I believe
thirty five forty dollars. So what I'm trying to what
I don't understand, is like if you can buy it
and not have to go through the illicit nature of
you know, having a guy who knows the guy kind
of thing, why when you do that? The only reason
I've heard from people who I know that are in
that world, or they just simply don't want their name
on a government database with that as part of it,
(01:12:37):
you know, not to mention they're already part of the database.
If you've had a ticket, or you have a driver's
license or a soil security number, you're part of the database.
But a lot of them just simply don't want the
idea of marijuana usage beside their name. They think maybe
it's going to come back to haunt them for something,
and we don't know that it won't.
Speaker 2 (01:12:53):
Right, you know, Yeah, it's I mean interest thing. If
it were me, I would go put my name on
the list.
Speaker 3 (01:12:59):
Yeah, you know you're not you know again, is the
coast guard pulling over subs carrying weed or giant fishing
boats carrying weed? I mean, you know, if you're going
to take that chance, you're not gonna make a few
hundred dollars. You're gonna make a few million dollars in
cocaine and fittanel are going to get that get that
for you're not weed? You know, you know, pound per pound.
I mean obviously what cocaine's fifty times if expensive, maybe more.
(01:13:21):
I mean, why would you go through the idea of
being busted for, you know, trafficking drugs if you're not
going to make the most value. If you hit.
Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
I just think that if they still have a market
for it, I mean, what do they do with all
that grow operation?
Speaker 3 (01:13:36):
Just turn it down? Yeah, I guess not. And I
mean I'm sure there's some people who still do it,
you know, who get it from guys they know, rather
than going to the dispensaries. But you know, again, I
don't know what percentage that is.
Speaker 2 (01:13:47):
I think the last couple of times that I ever
got acquired any sort of marijuana would be from somebody
that I knew that could get it from a dispenser.
Speaker 3 (01:13:55):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, oh really yeah. Yeah. The only I
saw when I was in Sanford, Cisco, h we were
walking around in the you know, and you're obviously they're
on palas for you or like of their crowds everywhere,
and you could hear people talking about it, and they
were saying the same thing that they were just getting
it from people who would get it from dispensaries. Oh.
You kids would go you, they'd get a card, they'd
go and they get Because here's the thing, I mean,
it's depending on your prescription. I believe how much you
(01:14:17):
can get. Yes, So let's say if you you know,
if you can convince the doctor, you deserve this much
or whatever. They'll give you an okay for this much flower,
this many vapes or or gummies or whatever the case
may be. And then I think what they were kind
of doing is just going into the dispensary and getting
everything they could at once and then selling it on
the street for a little bit more money, right, that's
(01:14:37):
all they were doing. It seems like, uh, it seems
like an easy enough transaction. Yeah, could you in a
million years like they thank you? All right? Seven seven
zero three one. That's how you text us. If you'd
like to leave a talk back on anything we're talking about,
you could do that as well. It's easy. Just grab
the iHeartRadio app, go to real radio and use that
(01:14:58):
mic to send your comment over to see link. We'll
get you on the air for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:15:02):
Just got an email that any of the lingering issues
with that system has been resolved in regards to talkbacks.
Speaker 3 (01:15:09):
Oh really good, good, good, glad to hear that. So
scientists have created something for women, deb and I find
it very interesting, and I'm gonna ask you a bunch
of very uncomfortable questions in a minute to see if
you can help us figure out if this is going
to be effective.
Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
Well, let's do that now.
Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
I can't do it next for sure. Dollar d O
L l A R is your five o clock keyword.
Just get your ass over to real Radio dot FM
(01:15:50):
and send that off for your chance at one thousand
of those dollars. Dollar is your five o'clock keyword. Guys,
good luck. We are in a major dry spell. We
need a winys, go get that money. Dollar is the word.
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello, Ceeil ain't here today as well. Hello.
How much shifting with your schedule do you have to
do to accommodate hanging out today? Buddy?
Speaker 2 (01:16:12):
Basically ask I asked ahead of time. I said, Hey,
these are the range of dates. They asked which would
be good for my mother, who watches the baby during
the day.
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Oh, that's awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
So she picked today. It had nothing to do with
Monday night football. She said this one would work the
best with her schedule. Ye, yeah, and so and and
and then and then she actually forgot that we had
to get out of here a little early, and she's like,
you want me to feed him and doing stuff like no, no, no,
I'm going I'll be there six thirty ish yeah, probably earlier.
Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
Yeah, we have to take off a little bit early today.
The Bucks game is on and we are the officials
station of the Bucks. So we are pre empted before
we were preempted by the Tampa Bay Bucks games. We'll
be out of here just after trivia today. We are
going to stake along just a long enough to give
you something though. And we got good stuff. Yeah, we
have good stuff. That's awesome. That one thing or we
are we're done with that, right, done with that? Yeah? Yeah,
(01:17:04):
I think so too. You all right, dev this is
out of newsweek. Vella Bioscience CEO wants to rewrite the
language of this when it comes to ladies menopause, not menopause. No, no, no,
that's a good one though. No, that would be a
good one, is there. Let me ask you a question
about menopause too, by the way, there's okay. So I
hear a lot about this online. You know how social
(01:17:25):
media will go through these stages of talking about something
for like, you know, really hot for like a week,
and then they'll disappear. So I remember last week one
of the big things that was on trend for about
about two weeks actually was paramenopause. That's p E r
I menopause. Like, yeah, what how is that different than
regular menopause? Before menopause? It's before menopause. How long does
(01:17:46):
that last?
Speaker 4 (01:17:47):
It depends really, you have to kind of go with
what you the women in your family.
Speaker 3 (01:17:52):
Oh really, yeah, it's a genetic thing.
Speaker 1 (01:17:57):
It can be.
Speaker 4 (01:17:58):
It can be like I have and my aunt didn't
suffer anything from menopause really, not a single hot flash.
Speaker 3 (01:18:04):
Hot flashes, no anger, no hair falling out, none of
that stuff.
Speaker 6 (01:18:07):
No.
Speaker 4 (01:18:08):
Wow, really, but then my mom has been dealing with
it for decades, right right, right.
Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
So so weird how the how the body differs like
that from person to person. Yeah, my dad had a
cousin who would go in, do a round of chemo
and then hop in the car and drive cross country,
go visit people, hang out like it just did. He
didn't have that effect Wow, that you know you've seen
from other people.
Speaker 3 (01:18:31):
Yeah. Oh that's the realist man of all time. And
I believe he was the he was a Franciscan brother.
Oh wow, really, well that's what projected him.
Speaker 4 (01:18:42):
Perimenopause is the transition period between a woman's reproductive years
and menopause. It typically occurs for several years before menopause
and is characterized by fluctuating hormone levels, particular elite estrogen.
Speaker 3 (01:18:55):
Yeah, the they became kind of mimable, you know, when
women are going through it. You know, men will make
these memes about how they're staying out of the way
of their wife.
Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
There's some funny, super.
Speaker 3 (01:19:04):
Funny stuff, for sure, but you all, you know, also
you feel sorry, you know, because my wife went through
some hormonal stuff. But she had to have a hysterectomy
when she was very young because of some complications. So
she has gone through this her entire life. She had
to have hormone replacement therapy to make sure that she
could keep her sanity. Because you know, and I've said
this before, one of the most impactful things I ever
(01:19:25):
said on the air for my entire career was talking
about my wife's hormonal issues. She has Chagrin's syndrome and
that comes along with these the syndrome there, there's another
one there that's super important. What's the other one, Chagrins
But there's another one, one of those syndromes that is
a major player in that space. But dude, like, when
your woman can't figure out anything like. It is like
(01:19:48):
looks completely infused, can't like rationalize her emotions or anything
like that. And we dealt for that. We dealt with
it for like eighteen months and finally found a compounding
pharmacy that would create the rug or the pill that
had everything that she needed in it Addison's and it
changed her life. It isn't Addison'. I'll think of it
as it's part of that, but it's all within that
(01:20:09):
Chagrin's syndrome thing. But it is a hormonal disorder thing,
and it's a nightmare. Like every dude that was listening
to us when I was talking about that, my wife
is the same one, the same one. Wo'd you go?
Where did you go? What'd you do? And you know
it's it's just a complete nightmare. No, that's not it.
This is something else altogether. Deb he found he co
(01:20:30):
founded this particular clinic in twenty twenty with two industry experts.
Speaker 4 (01:20:35):
So it's a he Well yeah, I mean okay, so
it's going to be something more for he.
Speaker 3 (01:20:43):
You're so boringly perceptive. It sucks trying to do anything
secretive around you because you see there, all of it immediately.
Speaker 1 (01:20:51):
Is it something to do with.
Speaker 3 (01:20:56):
Wow, it's a It's basically it's a horny cream. Of course,
what do you mean, what do you mean? Of course,
what do you mean? Of course?
Speaker 1 (01:21:08):
I'm just gonna let your snicker answer it for me.
Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
This is every time you hear a conversation about female viagra,
they're usually talking about a solution for libido, something to
make you horning. But what's not via Uh, but that's
not what viagra does for men. So why is that
the idea we have for women? Because viagra doesn't make
you like hot, it just makes you ready. What it
does is that it increases the blood flood. Sure, yeah, yeah,
(01:21:33):
you still have to get aroused exactly. Yeah, I understand.
And once you get there, it's kind of hard to
back down. It's like a ladder that's stuck.
Speaker 1 (01:21:42):
Just give it a minute.
Speaker 3 (01:21:45):
Five for me. It says, the innovation of the field
of sexual hell typically requires you to put aside common generalizations.
And it's true that that can be the experience and
makes me what it is is it's a women's pleasure serum,
a topic arousal and orgasm cream that increases blood flow
in the same way that viagra does. But I thought
(01:22:06):
they already had something like that. Uh not.
Speaker 4 (01:22:09):
There's a couple of products, but you don't see them advertised.
It's very haphazard if you see the products out there.
Speaker 3 (01:22:15):
It says the serum uses a technology called liposomes, which
are tiny bubbles made of the same fat molecules that
make up our own cells. Right. It says the scientist
figured out how to load these bubbles with a CBD
that can make them stable enough to work on skin
and tissue in that area. I'm not gonna say the
V word because it's weird hoo who dreamt this up?
(01:22:36):
We should It's not a bunch of those limosomes. Let's
let's throw some CBD up in there. Yeah, see lane,
It's it's effective, it's condom safe and designed to enhance
arousal in a way that's truly backed by science. So
he said, is what they said here. It says it
ninety percent of women age twenty three to sixty one
(01:22:56):
reported an improvement in orgasm, and that's sixty reported in
an increase and arousal when using the serum. The other
one they say called tequila. The woman says, look, this
is a fifty ter old woman said the first time
I bought this cream was probably than probably nine months
to a year ago. It just relaxes you and helps
(01:23:19):
you with feeling more sensations.
Speaker 1 (01:23:21):
It says, all right, ceiling sounds like he's a go.
Speaker 3 (01:23:26):
I would give it a shot. Look, aren't there women
out there that can't, like, have a very difficult time
having organized There are.
Speaker 2 (01:23:32):
Very many who say, you know, I've never had one, No,
of course, or I've only you know, had one in
certain situations.
Speaker 3 (01:23:39):
Here we go, I haven't been able to recreate that.
Here we go, Here we go.
Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
What you were saying, No, I didn't say anything.
Speaker 3 (01:23:46):
I just listen to the ceiling tell us.
Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
About But you were gonna say, I've never met one.
Speaker 3 (01:23:55):
I do, but it is Look, it could be very
helpful because there are a lot of because here's the thing.
He me out here because I don't know. I mean,
you know, I talked to some women, but some women
don't like sharing stuff like that. But once you get
past fifty years old, doesn't your doesn't isn't sex different
for women past.
Speaker 4 (01:24:08):
Fifty it can be very painful because again that loss
of estrogen, you know you're you're losing. Yeah, So there
can be some tissue degrading going on.
Speaker 3 (01:24:18):
Yeah, because I mean not everything is getting kind of
to the state where it needs to be to have
to enjoy that right to where it was necessary before.
Speaker 4 (01:24:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:24:25):
Sure, Yeah, So you got to get it high, you
got to do it. So you have to give it CBD,
make sure it understands the party. She said she'd tried
other creams on the market after suffering libido issues during menopause,
but they those only gave her a tingly almost bothersome sensation.
Speaker 4 (01:24:43):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:24:44):
This is a certified sex coach saying this agreed that
while there are other products, this one is as sex
exceptionally powerful. It says she's a former stylist and she's
embarked on a journey to help others talk about and
improve their sex lives after she experienced her own quote
sexual reawakening in her late forties.
Speaker 1 (01:25:04):
Get it, girl, and that could happen.
Speaker 3 (01:25:06):
I mean, look, if you go through your life, and
you go through your life and you can't seem to
find that pleasure, you know, and then you find something
that allows you to have that enhance pleasure, my god man,
that's got to be like a that's got to be
like one of those babies that gets zooglasses.
Speaker 4 (01:25:18):
Well exactly, it would be a game changer, especially if
you know, if you're used to having a healthy sex
life in your marriage and.
Speaker 3 (01:25:29):
That's it. But I mean, if you haven't had that
kind of sensation. And here's the worst part. The worst
part is you remember having it right right, that's the
worst thing. Like you remember all the way through your thirties,
maybe up into your forties, like you could get down,
it felt great and all of a sudden booms like
somebody shut it full of novacne, you know, and then
then other things wouldn't happen to prepare it for sex
(01:25:49):
so that you could have an enjoyable time. This guy's
doing the work of God, says the pleasure serum can
help enhance and then heighten pleasurable sensations, but you help
you get more out of your head and become embodied
and make climax more likely. In other words, when you're
feeling those sensations more vividly, it allows you to kind
(01:26:10):
of stop thinking about not feeling them and actually get
into the moment and kind of let your natural arousal
take its place. And then next thing you know, being
big boem you're damned out.
Speaker 1 (01:26:23):
I'm sleeping over there.
Speaker 3 (01:26:24):
You write exactly, switch it up, all right, seven seven
zero three one. By the way, that's a Newsweek story
if you want to check it out, called Vella Bioscience
if you want to read it. It's a long story,
but it's actually very very interesting. And if you're having
those issues, maybe you will be a customer of this
Vella serum that they're talking about. For sure, you get it.
If you're not having issues, yeah, no, I think you
(01:26:45):
just get on your top lift if you want about.
Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
That's another delivery system.
Speaker 3 (01:26:53):
Instead the chap stick. It'll be chapped, okay, whatever anyway,
and be chapped. Dollar is your five o'clo keyword. That's
d O L l A R. Slide over to real radio.
Out of him and send that away for your chance
at one thousand of those dollars. Back in a second
with more than Jim Colvert, Joe, Welcome back to the
(01:27:17):
Jim Cover Show, Roll Radio one O four point one.
I'm the gym part. There's the deb apart. Hello ceiling
here today, I'm apart. Jackson back with us tomorrow from
this trip. I'm sure we'll all about his exploits in Jersey.
Just landed, just landed here in Orlando, dearly. How do
you know that he just texted you when he landed.
Speaker 1 (01:27:35):
Because no, because I had text you.
Speaker 3 (01:27:37):
I texted earlier and said you asked for his flight information.
You need help with the log today, jack, Uh, you're
five o'clock. Keyword Like I said, it's dollar d O
L L A R. You know what to do. Go
over to real radio, out of him and send it
off for your chance to the thousand bucks just two
doors down.
Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
We don't like to bother though.
Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
Yeah, and you were on the air.
Speaker 3 (01:27:58):
Look, I feel bad even when we have to ask
people to come in and sit with us, because you know,
I don't produce a show, deb doesn't run the board
and stuff. So I feel terrible about it, Like especially
when you guys have to run like you know, eight
hour shifts. It sucks. I have no way to pay
you back for that. No, I legit, have no way
to pay you back for doing these favors. It's fine,
fine with it. I appreciate it. It does. I think
(01:28:19):
I've already used whatever day that I would have gotten
for this. Oh really yeah? Is it what they do
they give you a day off for it? It's kind
of should. Yeah, that's awesome. I didn't know that. I
have to work hurricanes to get that. By the way, well,
this year we got a lot of response about this cream.
That's that says high pharmacy tech here. There's something called
(01:28:40):
scream cream in the pharmacy world where a compounding pharmacy
makes a topical cream for women's orgasms that does the
same as cialis for men, that brings blood to that area.
It's not well known because it requires a prescription, it
has to be made in a compounding pharmacy, and it's
an out of pocket costs and I can't imagine it's
the insurance doesn't cover a scream cream.
Speaker 1 (01:29:01):
Of course not it should.
Speaker 3 (01:29:02):
Looking when you talk about your well being as a person,
having a good sex life makes you a happier person.
I mean that should be like free of charge and something.
Then one lad he says here, says, I started menopause
in twenty eleven. I still get hot flashes, but I
have zero sexual desire.
Speaker 4 (01:29:25):
Well again, you know when your progesterone and your estrogen
stops or drops plummets, you know that changes things that
doesn't you know.
Speaker 3 (01:29:32):
That's the weird thing is of course. I mean, you know,
I don't does that happen with guys like I will
tell you I've never had a reduction of libido, Like,
I don't have that, and I'm waiting for it, trust me,
because I hear people talk about it all the time.
I'm like, oh, yeah, you know, when I got to
be about fifty eight fifty nine, I started kind of
losing interest. Well, I'm fifty seven, I'll be fifty eight
and a month and a half or so, and it
hasn't hit me like that yet. So I'm just kind
(01:29:54):
of waiting on edge to when that thing looks at
when my wife walks across the room naked, where I
just keep doing the crossword. I don't want to get there. Yeah,
but I think it happens. I think.
Speaker 2 (01:30:07):
I guess I probably just don't know too many people
that are in that age range ye that that I
would be close enough with to talk about something like that.
Speaker 3 (01:30:16):
Yeah, I mean, who wants to talk about it? I mean,
nobody's gonna come up here and go, hey, dude, how's
how you doing? Uh? Yeah, man? Then but you are
playing great today. I don't get horny anymore. You don't
just you know, guys as a rule definitely can't talk
about stuff like that. Women, I think maybe have been
a little bit more open with friends and fam Do
you guys talk about stuff like that to your girlfriends.
Speaker 1 (01:30:36):
When you're in that age group?
Speaker 3 (01:30:37):
Yeah? Really?
Speaker 4 (01:30:38):
The big thing now is that, you know, how is
this such a big part of your life and yet
your doctors don't talk about it, you know, like you're
going into this kind of blind like I guess I'm
just getting hot flashes now?
Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
Is it still kind of a faux pad to talk
about exactly? Is anything there anymore? Is is it just
an open book anymore?
Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
In this sosigny, my wife and I will have discussions
about stuff like that with with friends of ours, you know,
most recently just kind of telling a story about because
you know, when we were trying for a baby, it
took a couple of years, and we were going to
you know, the CRM, the reproductive place to start the
(01:31:20):
IVF process. In fact, we were about to put a
down payment when she said, I think there's a faint
line on this test, and they said, well, all right,
you know, check that out and then call back tomorrow
or the next day and give us the down payment.
Speaker 3 (01:31:34):
Yeah yeah, yeah, But with your age group, I would
think it would be more women dealing with you know,
post pregnancy and things like that when it came to
their sexual desires, like after having a child. I mean,
I know, I've had a number of them, and after
having a kid, you know, I know that you know,
you're it changes the idea of having sex for the
for the woman changes. Well.
Speaker 4 (01:31:54):
Yeah, I mean again, that's another case where her hormones.
Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
Are just off the chart. Yeah, going bat as crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:32:00):
And another thing too though, I mean that cream may
be vela cream, right is the name. Yeah, if you're
taking antidepressants, that also has an effect on labida.
Speaker 3 (01:32:11):
Really yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:32:12):
If you remember an Ozark, her brother stopped taking his
meds because so he could have because he couldn't have
sexual relations with the young girls.
Speaker 3 (01:32:23):
I heard. That's one of the one I mean, I
say one drawback. I mean, Adderall has pushed out there
as a semi miracle drug right where you can it
makes you more aware, more able to do things. But
I've heard the drawback of that is that you could
also lose your ability to you know, you know, get
yourself in that position.
Speaker 4 (01:32:41):
And that's why a lot of people will go off
their meds, because if they're in a committed relationship, it's
you know, he may have taken care of the depression,
but now you have.
Speaker 3 (01:32:50):
A whole new issue you're dealing with. What a juxtaposition, Like, Yeah,
I'm taking my meds and I don't feel as crazy,
but not having sex is making me crazy. Right, It's
the worst thing ever. It's like the biggest catch twenty
two of all time. I didn't know that was a
side effect of adderall. Yeah, I've heard that. Yeah, So
I don't just like coke, like, yeah, yeah, well coke
(01:33:11):
does that too, and coca has the same thing. Yeah,
I think it's more. I think they call it coke
d oh really yeah, yeah, I know the cocaine does.
And of course they have whiskey d you have that
as well. Oh I never heard that.
Speaker 1 (01:33:21):
Yeah, cocaine.
Speaker 3 (01:33:22):
Yeah, yeah, cocaine for sure. Yea, oh wow, yeah, I've
heard it up right, But I've heard it, But I
didn't know that about adderall because that's more that's isn't
that more Aliken with speed than it is coke? I mean,
kind of the same thing. It's an upper yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:33:35):
Yeah, so like if you're taking an antidepressant, an anti
anxiety medication. I remember when I was taking anti anxiety
and depression medications that was prominently on displayed on the bottle.
Speaker 3 (01:33:44):
Oh was it really? Yeah that you did? Do you
remember experiencing that while you're taking it? I mean you
were younger then, right.
Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
I was younger and I wasn't in a committed.
Speaker 3 (01:33:52):
Relationship, so no way to tell really. Yeah, it was
just like, yeah, get rid of the depression first, all right,
seven seven zero three one. You can text us there.
Don't forget your fiblic keyword his dollard la r Did
you know there is a new documentary out and it's
from someone that you and I are very interested in
and actually just found out that she may live here
(01:34:13):
in the Orlando area. Ooh. Nearly twenty years after Dennis
Rader was sent to prison, his daughter Carrie Rawson found
the strength to confront him in a face to face
prison interview. No way. In twenty twenty three, the mother
are two was enlisted by investigators to determine whether or
not the man who once terrorized Wichita, Kansas as BTK. Yeah,
(01:34:36):
as BTK had. Basically, they wanted her to go in
and talk to her old man to find out if
he was guilty of other murders.
Speaker 4 (01:34:44):
Because you know, he's one of those. Ever since, the
media attention has died down, right, I read a story
recently where they uncovered a trove of other trophies that
he had kept from other victims because he's kind of
heart and parcel giving investigators more in information. She's just
trying to keep his name, which is common for these people.
Speaker 1 (01:35:02):
It's very common.
Speaker 3 (01:35:03):
They know.
Speaker 4 (01:35:04):
One thing they hate is when they lose the attention,
they lose the news media. I someone had texted the
station actually and said she lives here in Central Florida.
Speaker 3 (01:35:13):
Yeah, which is crazy. I've never heard that. She's forty
six years old now, and there's a new Netflix dot
coming out called My Father the BTK Killer Come On.
It explores how the Michigan residents struggling to reconcile the
loving father she once knew with the monster that's been
exposed by police. Now. Look, they go through this interview
and it is a wild dude, because she says that,
and I'll kind of paraphrase here, because if you're going
(01:35:34):
to watch the show. I don't want to take anything
away from it, but she says that while she's talking,
apparently he broke down in tears the minute she came
into the room because he hadn't seen her or talk
to her or anything since the entire I mean since
they left right when he got arrested. They never saw
him again, like the family, everybody they just left, the
wife divorce, never saw him again. The kids never saw him.
So she went back in says she was shaking after
(01:35:57):
talking to him about things that she'd kept bottled up
for a very long time. And there were moments where
she talks about seeing him switch between two men, her dad,
denist Raider and BTK. The minute she started kind of
trying to inquire about the possibility of other victims, he
basically shut down and put on this entire facade of
you know, oh, that's what you're trying to do. And
(01:36:19):
then kind of it almost kind of ended. There. There
were moments when she talked about seeing him, like I said,
switch between those two men, and once she felt like
he was her dad, and then the next moment he
shifted where she would ask him a question he didn't
like and he would switch right back to the BTK
and start asking questions. He actually accused her of trying
to use him to gain fame, which which is funny
(01:36:40):
because he's the one that's trying to hold on to em.
Speaker 1 (01:36:43):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:36:44):
I guess he's in a wheelchair now and he's in
really bad shape eighty degrees now. So weird to hear
her talk of him as like the ones loving father
that I knew. Yeah, by the way, oh yeah, And
I mean, but that's how a lot of these people
are that had these dads who had no idea. I mean,
the guy that the Long Island, Oh yeah, the architect, No,
the guy, yeah, the architect guy, yeah, the big dude.
(01:37:06):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
I can't remember something.
Speaker 4 (01:37:08):
Beach killer, right, Gilbo or Gilbo Gilgo Beach killed, the
Gilgo Beach killer, yeah exactly, had like a ten year span.
What's interesting with Raider is that it was a map
that he had printed off the computer at church, left
the metadata on the map, and the metadata was how
they were able. So again, he was a boy Scout leader,
(01:37:31):
he was an elder in his church.
Speaker 1 (01:37:33):
He ran the family Man.
Speaker 3 (01:37:35):
He ran the homeowners association in his neighborhood, where'd they
get the metadata from the printer.
Speaker 1 (01:37:40):
Yeah, from the printer, it left on the printer edge.
Speaker 3 (01:37:42):
So when they when you download the map, he downloaded
a map for map Quest to put onto this letter,
and when he downloaded the map, it left the data
on there, and they could actually go back and see
who downloaded.
Speaker 1 (01:37:52):
That map last and what computer they used it.
Speaker 3 (01:37:56):
And he did it at his church ironically, yep, And
that's how they nailed him, and that's how they us in.
Speaker 1 (01:38:01):
When does this special drop?
Speaker 3 (01:38:02):
It doesn't really say, it just says it says a
new one. She wrote a memoir called a Serial Daughter's
Killer in twenty nineteen, and now they've done this. She
just read one of his notebooks from the eighties and
he talks about writing a bondage game. He talks about
playing a bondage game in a bathtub and it included
her name. Oh so she even thinks there's a possibility
(01:38:23):
that when she was very very young, he started practicing
the not tying thing, which he was really into on
his own daughter. She has faint memories of something like
that happening in the bathtub at their house. My father,
The BTK Killer is already on Netflix. It's on Netflix
now said he's frail, he's in a wheelchair. He was
literally crying so happy to see me, like over the moon,
(01:38:46):
which is so wild. It just shows you how completely
disassociated he is with reality to think that she would
be happy to see him after the legacy that he
left that family with. But that's the narcissism that is Oh,
that is the malignant narsis that lives within people like that. Yep,
literally all about them. They could he would never consider
(01:39:06):
what his actions did to that family or her, And
it's fascinating.
Speaker 4 (01:39:09):
I don't know if you remember, but in his trial,
when he made a statement to the court his first victims,
he had talked about how he had tried to make
them comfortable by putting a pillow underneath the father's head,
like like, listen, I'm still a really nice.
Speaker 1 (01:39:24):
Thoughtful god, right yeah yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:39:26):
I mean I may have slaughtered their entire family and
the daughter, yeah yeah, but in his mind that was
an act of kindness.
Speaker 3 (01:39:33):
When she asked her dad about the cold cases during
their three hour conversation, and he told her, quote, what
are you talking about? Can't we just reminisce? Can't we
just have a father daughter time? Can't we just talk
about memories, reminisce about what buddy?
Speaker 4 (01:39:48):
And you know what's so funny is for him to
accuse her of trying to use him for fame. She
is famous because of him. She's never going to have
a moment's peace if people find out that her dad
is bt Hey. Yeah, man, I mean if she was,
she has to answer for his sins. So how dare
he accuse her of using him for fame?
Speaker 3 (01:40:06):
Man? I would love to talk to her.
Speaker 4 (01:40:07):
I would too, because I mean when you when you
see other specials they've done of them, and you see
the moments. I mean, she had an idyllic childhood. There
was no reason at all. And then when police come
to her and say that they suspect that her dad
is BTK, and of course everyone growing up in Wichita.
My sister in law's from Kansas, and she talks about
(01:40:28):
how haunting that time was when BTK hadn't been caught
and was just you know, challenging the police and the press.
You know, everyone was terrified. No one knew who to
look at.
Speaker 2 (01:40:39):
I don't think I've ever lived in a time where
there was like or I've never lived in a hey yeah,
an area where y yeah, which one?
Speaker 3 (01:40:46):
Aileen warnos, Ah, well, I'm no.
Speaker 2 (01:40:48):
I meant where I was seeing stuff on TV and
going I'm worried that I could be next.
Speaker 3 (01:40:55):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah you would. You're but you're you
don't fit the victim. Well you're not a victim, dude.
You don't fit any but no, no, no, you don't
fit neither am I. I don't fit any of the
profiles that a serial killer is gonna go out there.
Let me find this mad fifty eight year old. He's
got to have no hair, and he's gonna be super
pissed off about everything, and he's got to be in radio.
Let me go find this guy and shoot him. It
(01:41:15):
didn't work like that. You and I are not on
the scale. Bub We don't have the desired setup that
there was.
Speaker 2 (01:41:22):
In general, that there was something going on. Like a
perfect example is the the DC sniper. Yes, oh man, yeah,
that's different.
Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
There wasn't There wasn't a picture of that person's ideal victim. No,
you know, there was.
Speaker 1 (01:41:38):
There wasn't an ideal victim. It was just it was
of opportunity.
Speaker 3 (01:41:41):
He was shooting people to cover up the shooting of
his wife. Right, wasn't that the thing wasn't he wasn't
he trying to make it look random so he could
murder his wife and it made it and try to
make it look like it's almost like that movie there
was a movie along the same thing.
Speaker 1 (01:41:56):
I don't remember that.
Speaker 4 (01:41:57):
I just remember that at the time he was training
a fifteen year old kid with him.
Speaker 3 (01:42:01):
Yeah Malvoy, Yeah, Lebo Malvoy or something like that, Lee
Boyd Malvovo, Yeah, Malvo. But I always thought it was
he was trying to kill his wife, but he wanted
to kill other people around that. It was a Maryland, right,
he wanted to shoot other people, so it made it
seem like a random shooting. But he could shoot his wife. Yeah,
but I'm not one hundred on that. They could be
a movie plot that I'm really twisted up on.
Speaker 2 (01:42:22):
But when that was going on, if you lived in
that area, you were extra you know on Oh yeah,
caution because you go there is somebody literally just randomly
shooting people with you know, with sniper bullets.
Speaker 1 (01:42:35):
Kind of like students up in Gainesville.
Speaker 3 (01:42:39):
Yeah. Yeah, so they were, I mean, because Danny Rolling
had no he was just killing people randomly. I mean,
he killed a football player. He I mean, mostly it
was girls, but he killed two guys as well, and
there were good sized dudes too, Manny de Boda guy
that he killed in that apartment with another girl. I mean,
that guy was like a He was like your size,
budd He's a big dude.
Speaker 4 (01:42:57):
Yeah, it's just like the Fox murders. There were a
couple of good sized guys there as well. But when
people come in surprising you with baseball bats, it doesn't
matter how big you are.
Speaker 3 (01:43:07):
It does not. No, not, not in the least bit.
Guy says, I was living in Gainesville when the Gainesville
killer was doing his thing. You know, man, the little
town I'm from actually isn't far from Gainesville, and a
number of people that I knew were going to school
up there or had kids going to school up there.
And that was a nightmare as well. I mean, did
you remember that whole scene, Like you're guys, people walk
around just handguns, carrying him everywhere, knives, People left campus
(01:43:30):
and wouldn't come back until they got him. And that
dude was whack, I mean whack. The court appearance of
Danny Rowling is one of the most creepy things of
all time, so bad. All right four oh seven nine
one six four one text us at seven seven zero
three one. I just got an email from Adrian over
at the Rosen Hotel for the Hairy Sip and Saber event.
(01:43:53):
We only have about twenty tickets left. Oh wow, Right,
so if you want to join us the Saturday night
coming up down at the Rosan Hotel for the Sip
and Saver six beautiful dishes with six cocktails for only
seventy five dollars. One of the best pairing meal deals
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it is impossible to explain how good the food is
(01:44:15):
and how good these drinks are, and the pairings this
fall are absolutely wonderful. Scallops, oxtail, rigatoni, my ties, mini martinis.
It's gonna be so much fun. It's Harry's Poolside dot
Com slash Harry's Sip and Save or grab your tickets
now before they're all gone, for sure. All right, four
seven nine four one. To take a little break, we'll
(01:44:36):
come back and do trivia, So lot them up. It's
time let's give some stuff away. Welcome back to the
Jim Colbert Show. Real Radio one O four point one
guy's got about a ten minutes for your five o'clock keyword,
which is dollar D L L A R. Just slide
over to real Radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand bucks. Do that easily.
Welcome back. I'm Jim, there's dev Hello, Seilane has the jack. Oh,
(01:45:00):
let's all about chuck a chugga chew choo. Look at it, Glacy.
Speaker 2 (01:45:08):
I mean, we definitely had a really long conversation about
which one of us was chugga chugg and which one
of us was choo choo. Went back, It's okay, Oh,
I'm the one that does this. Yes, yeah, you just
got done to saying how good I was at this.
I have in your jackie sack a pair of tickets
to Jason Bonhams led Zeppelin Evening at Doctor Phillips Center
(01:45:28):
on November And I have a pair of tickets to
see Trans Siberian Orchestra The Ghost of Christmas Returns at
Kia Center on December thirteenth. You can get your tickets
now at ticketmaster dot com. Absolutely, thanks, but we appreciate
that very much.
Speaker 3 (01:45:42):
That's what's in the jackie sack. So back, do you
click any clack. All right, young lady, one, two, three,
four or five.
Speaker 1 (01:45:47):
It's Monday.
Speaker 3 (01:45:47):
Let's go number one, number one? Right up, Doc, Julie,
how you doing good? Thank you? Want to play a
little game with us, Julie, I do. Let's do it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:58):
Is he the puzzle master or is he the guy
who's currently writing today's game?
Speaker 3 (01:46:02):
Can he be both? Let's find out? It's time for
JCS trivia? Y all right, Julie. This is a real
easy game to a question here, for you have four answers.
One of these answers is not true, Julie. I am
trying to fool you, but if you can find it,
I will send you over to Sea Lane and he
has a choice of tickets for you. Are you ready?
(01:46:24):
I'm reading here? We go on this day in nineteen
seventy nine, actor writer, producer, director, known for his role
on one of the most popular TV shows of the
early two thousands, is married to a movie star that
he also directs. He loves his office. Not Steve Carrell, No,
(01:46:48):
John Krasinski. John Krasinsky born on this day. Here are
three fund facts about John Krasinsky and one blunt lie.
All right, which one of the this is not true
in regards to John Krasinski. Julie, here we go. Number one,
he got to start in show business as an intern
for talk show host Jimmy Fallon. Number two, John Krasinski
(01:47:10):
is allergic to red wine. Oh. Number three, even at six',
three he's the shortest of his brothers who are six
eight and six,'. Nine respectfully and, then lastly his first
date with his Future Wife emily blunt was to the.
Gun range which of those is? A lie, number one
(01:47:33):
that's the one right up. The, mate, yeah absolutely you,
guess right there, you go. It was it was really
It was. Conan, O'Brien oh there. You go he was
an intern and a script director or Whatever for conan
O'Brien when he first. Got, Started.
Speaker 1 (01:47:48):
Congratulations, Julie.
Speaker 3 (01:47:51):
Yeah john krasinski and one of the most liked Guys
in hollywood by. The, way, yeah yeah dude is supposed
to be a stone cold minch of. A dude he seems.
That way he did get a start and show businesses
an intern For the conan. O'Brien Show john krasinski is
allergic to. Red WINE and i have to, Tell you
i've never heard. Of that i've never heard of anybody
(01:48:12):
allergic to. Red, wine, now look my wife will tell
you after a bottle and a half she, is yea
but just with. The tannins It never i've not heard.
Of that john is six three and he is the
shortest of his brothers who are six eight and. Six' nine,
ONE'S a doctor i. Think. As well whoa, and then
lastly his first date with, His Future wife emily blunt
(01:48:33):
was a trip to. THE gun range i thought that
would be, The, DEAD giveaway like i thought that would
be the one that everybody would. Guess, FIRST immediately no
i mean use. Everybody out there it's just, like you
know you don't really find gun Friendly. People.
Speaker 2 (01:48:45):
IN keli true i mean there are areas of the
country where our first date to the gun range would
not be out Of.
Speaker 3 (01:48:51):
The, cross, oh, NO no no i mean right here in.
Good old town it wouldn't be the. WORST thing ever
a couple of other things you may Not Know about
john krazinski before we wrap things up here and get
Ready for the bucks to Take On. The detroit lions
before he, went to college he spent a Few months
teaching english To Kids. In costa, rica oh cool that's
actually what he. Wanted to do he Wanted to teach
(01:49:12):
english because he has A Degree from Brown. University and,
english of course that's One of. The ivy leaguers that's
a tough one. To get into he also saved a
woman from drowning when He Was in costa rica. Teaching
those kids she was swept out by the tide and
he jumped out there and got her before it could
take her out to. The deep water guy could not
(01:49:32):
get any. Right or likable and then when you hear
do you ever listen do you listen to? Any? Podcast
healing yes what do? YOU listen to I? Listened, to
SmartLess okay. Stop right there THAT'S exactly what i was about.
To talk about when you hear those Guys talk about
krazinski and they have a little. Group Of people john,
Ham's In there no, back's in there and they. Had
this cam seems like such, a fun time seems like the.
(01:49:56):
Most fun time but they talk about how they all
kind of. Know each other it's almost like. A little
fraternity and They talk about krazinsky like he's at a
different level of humanity than the. Rest of. Them for
sure have you seen? His new show have you seen that.
Is it black what's the New thing? That, bateman's In? Oh,
BLACK rabbit yeah i watched. The whole thing we. Loved
it really?
Speaker 4 (01:50:14):
Is?
Speaker 3 (01:50:14):
It good yes?
Speaker 6 (01:50:15):
How?
Speaker 3 (01:50:15):
Many? Episodes uh eight he says with a question? Mark
is it is it gonna? Be picked up is it
one of those things that can? Be picked up or
is it a? ONE and done i think it's a. One. And,
Done okay yeah so it's kind of weird seeing him
in that kind of role because he Usually Just. Plays
jason bateman He Still plays jason bateman. A little bit
he still makes the, face.
Speaker 4 (01:50:35):
You know is?
Speaker 3 (01:50:35):
That, the face, yeah the flight. Sarcasm and everything.
Speaker 2 (01:50:39):
It's no matter what if he's playing like, a you
know a husband in a rom com or, a serial
killer he still does that that that upwards eyelid thing
where you know you can, tell you're like, oh My
Gosh he's.
Speaker 3 (01:50:53):
Jason. Bateman time yeah when when they talk about him
with episodes and They talk about krazinsky and They Talk
about jennifer aniston, Like that too like she's, a super
cool almost kind of bro kind of. Guy or girl what's. Kind,
of wild actually one OF the reasons i like listening
to it is because of how they talk About. THE
friendships internally i just always found it fascinating who Was?
Speaker 2 (01:51:15):
Friends in hollywood some of the things that people criticize,
that show for or some of THE things that i
like the, most about it like if they have a
guest and they don't ask enough guest questions because they're
too busy ragging, ON each other i kind.
Speaker 3 (01:51:28):
Of like it so the funny THING is is i
have a hit and miss with that because there's sometimes
Will will our net just, won't shut, up You know,
and i'm like there's got to be, a Question eventually
gonna it's. Gonna happen here it's like the platform, for him,
is you know give a one minute long compliment and then.
Ask a question it takes four minutes so that they
forget what they're. Talking, about altogether yeah but. It's still
(01:51:49):
good who's who they? Had on? Recently? You've enjoyed ah
YOU know. WHAT i haven't i haven't listened. TO bit
either i usually it's usually when THE wife and i
are on, like a yeah Say. The TRIP yeah and
i used TO, listen to wtf but of. Course that's
gone last Episode Was. WITH barack obama i haven't, heard
that yet and that's. A bit it my Wife sent
Me Rogan has andrew schultz on this week and then
(01:52:11):
she wanted me to. LISTEN to that I listened To?
Speaker 2 (01:52:14):
Who's the battie also a Lot And the dan dennis
on The Episode for mighty ducks.
Speaker 3 (01:52:20):
Was one of. These. REAL good YEAH i actually i
have to. Answer a text they asked me to come
back and do. THE show again i gotta go back. And, do,
it yeah yeah. Super good. Show all right who do
we have?
Speaker 4 (01:52:29):
To, think today well we Want To thank see lane
for sitting in. With us Today Thank you see little
and then last, But Never leave Sam Bowen and candice
rich for. Running Our YouTube Check.
Speaker 3 (01:52:39):
John krasinskive radio, right there there he, is right, there.
All right praise don't forget to get your Tickets For
the Harry sipp. And Saver Event it's Harry sipp and
savers Slash or It's harry'spoolside Dot Com slash Harry. Sipp
and savor only. Twenty tickets left hope. To see there
it's gonna be a great time. In incredible menu only
seventy five bucks a person and it. Is a blash
(01:53:00):
we'll see us out. There for, sure all right let's get.
Out of here bucks football. Coming up next let me
have Dep. And See. Lane i'm jim we, follow. The
news shookie they follow the monsters in the. Morning after
us it's tom It's Not It's tampa. Bay bucks, Football
that's right, monday. Night football y'all.
Speaker 1 (01:53:15):
See You, tomorrow
Speaker 2 (01:53:45):
Get, leah freaking boy