Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Man Or advertisers.
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You are now listening to the Jim Colbert Show on
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Dad.
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That's right, guys.
Speaker 5 (00:16):
Here we go on a Thursday edition to 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 banger forty this afternoon. We'll get you
caught up on what's happening in the world, uh not.
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Five luck Out.
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We actually have a special guest, doctor Kirsten Carter will
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Ended up.
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We heard it here first. You're calls, text and caughtbacks
all day long. Welcome to the show. I'm Jim to
my love, my lovely, very Dangerous.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
Co host Ms.
Speaker 7 (00:45):
Lauren Rowe, Yeah, Producer Jack Brot, y'all, good afternoon.
Speaker 5 (00:50):
Comedy Alien, Ross Paget, Imagine, Edible Fortune Cookie, Fortunes, Borrow
seven nine four one, text us at seven seven zero
three one. Find this easily on social Instagram, Facebook, at
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(01:11):
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Speaker 4 (01:16):
That's b I L L S.
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Go over to Real Radio dot fm and send that
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Speaker 4 (01:25):
How you guys doing, I'm doing pretty good.
Speaker 5 (01:27):
Hecky, Laura, how you doing? Good to see you.
Speaker 4 (01:30):
I'm good.
Speaker 8 (01:31):
I'm so excited to be here. I appreciate you guys
having me on.
Speaker 5 (01:34):
Again for sure. Man, are you kidding? Lauren Road? You
guys remember her from Channel six and of course she
was the pio or is the PIO at Sanford International Airport,
so she's been around Orlando for quite a while.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
I have.
Speaker 8 (01:44):
I've been here since two thousand and one. In fact,
I remember when I was auditioning, I actually had to
talk about the recount.
Speaker 5 (01:55):
Oh did you really right?
Speaker 4 (01:58):
Yes? Oh it was hey, chads and everything.
Speaker 8 (02:01):
I remember in I was not from here, I would
I lived in Kansas at the time, and I remember
in my audition when I sat down, they're like chads
and all sorts of crazy things.
Speaker 5 (02:11):
Yea, yeah, man, Florida has some interesting news all the time.
I pretty much all the time.
Speaker 9 (02:16):
That's always a fun time machine for your audition resume
of Like, well, I remember when I auditioned and it
was about the two thousand and eight collapse in Florida.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
You could actually you could met the history of Florida.
Were all these weird happenings, I remember well.
Speaker 8 (02:28):
And you know, at at one point in time, Jim
at the station, they would have me talk to people
who were considering coming to the station, right, and I
would come to them and I said, listen, here's the thing.
If you want an actual resume tape, you have to
come to Florida. Oh yeah, yeah, because you're not you
(02:49):
had more stories. It's crazy, all right.
Speaker 5 (02:52):
Four seven nine four one texts seven seven zero three one.
You actually already referenced it. Today was an interesting day.
I think it was the edible fortune cookie fortunes. Well,
the Drump administration today said that they're gonna reclassify marijuana
as a Schedule too drug. Here goes that news story. Yeah,
well it doesn't matter. We don't talk about it at length.
You can give us all the details. But an interesting day.
(03:13):
And by the way, how are are wheat stocks doing awful?
Speaker 4 (03:17):
How is that even possible?
Speaker 7 (03:18):
The entire world is focused towards not that terrible cough.
Speaker 9 (03:22):
Good god, Je sounds like he's dying. Showed up on
a nimbus three thousand.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Well, how many years ago did you give him money
for these weeks? Five? Yeah, which takes a long time,
which is.
Speaker 5 (03:33):
Swimming and weed cash.
Speaker 9 (03:35):
I don't know if that's how it works, Jim, you
know these things got it? Yeah, you know, Miss Road
just dropped a dime right there. It takes time.
Speaker 5 (03:43):
Yeah, it takes No, it doesn't, budd, It looks takes time. Okay,
So what happened was about four or five years ago.
I gave Ross four five hundred dollars and I said,
go invest this money. Because Ross was talking on there
about what a great investor he was, and how and how?
I said, I was getting in jam how well he
was doing? And I said, let's see how you know,
let's see your acumen. I want to see how good
(04:03):
you are. So I gave him five hundred bucks and
I said, go invest this, and immediately I'm going to
go for weed stocks.
Speaker 7 (04:10):
No, but to Ross's credit, it wasn't the weed business.
I think it was the land that the weed businesses
were on. So it was really a real estate investment.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
It was real estate. It was a real it was
real estate investment.
Speaker 5 (04:22):
Well, let me reframe, then, let me reframe. How is no,
how are our real estate investments doing? Ross?
Speaker 9 (04:28):
You know, I'm so happy that you asked, because are
you I'm in beating to bring something up.
Speaker 5 (04:33):
I owe you like a lot of apologizes.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
How is that? Uh?
Speaker 9 (04:37):
So, first and foremost, one of the weed stocks was
definitely real estate for weed. Okay, he gave me five
hundred dollars. I transformed it into a large part of
my purchase was a real estate for like weed farms. Okay,
I thought it was thought it was the future. Sure, yeah, yeah, yeah,
all right. I don't like the word thought. Yeah, I
don't think it anymore. It applies for direct I don't care.
(04:58):
I don't care for the past tense and this situation. Buddy,
Uh yeah, it's uh. And that was one of the
I bought three stocks with your five hundred dollars. I
remember the other two straight up weed. The other two
were like straight up like we.
Speaker 4 (05:11):
Like, you just bought weed straight like a bag.
Speaker 7 (05:14):
You just buy it and resell it and profits from that.
That's a better invest Probably dollars is not a large amount.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
It's not, but I mean, are you giving more than that?
Speaker 4 (05:24):
She's on my side. Look at him and we just met.
Look at him.
Speaker 8 (05:28):
Great, say five hundred dollars. I think you're right turning
it on the street. Probably would have been there for you.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
I should have brought a brick. Yeah, I see you
looking at your phone.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
Where are we?
Speaker 9 (05:39):
I'm looking at it. I gotta crunch some numbers. I
gotta run some numbers real fast. How are you going
to crunch them? I guess I gotta log in. Oh
my god, no, no, I'm logged in. I'm logged in.
Speaker 4 (05:48):
Here we go.
Speaker 5 (05:48):
There's a log in for the weed. Well, it's a
whole new world, Laune. It's my goodness, a password to
get high? Now?
Speaker 10 (05:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (05:56):
Yeah, I bought weed through Fidelity. Welcome to twenty twenty six. Yeah,
so here's the confession. And I didn't even think about
this until right now.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
You said, here's your confession and then put your phone
face down on the counter.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
All right, so you are down? All right?
Speaker 9 (06:17):
One of the stocks is down ninety two one of
them was ninety two percent. One of them is seventy
one percent. Okay, northward? Oh but a complete northward so
NORRISO it's like south south Oh.
Speaker 8 (06:35):
Yeah yeah yeah, like the full three six question, why
are we not why is this not legal yet?
Speaker 4 (06:40):
Like what problem?
Speaker 5 (06:42):
Politicians? Lord, it's all politician problem.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
Why are we not legal yet? I understand that, yeh.
And then what's that last one minus twenty eight? Wow? Buddy? Plus?
Speaker 5 (06:52):
So you took five hundred dollars down to what eighty
bucks I'll.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
Give or take.
Speaker 9 (06:57):
But here's the thing, here's the confession. One of the
stocks has actually done very well because I didn't know
this at the time, but this was five home.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
Man.
Speaker 9 (07:08):
This is so funny that this is real life. Five
years ago. I didn't know what I was doing. And
guess what, Jim I still don't. Okay, Edgewater Family Wealth, Okay,
here I come. I'm waiting for the answers. One of
those stocks was apparently a very high dividend paying stock.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
Why do you keep laughing while you're talking.
Speaker 9 (07:28):
Because I, off of your five hundred dollars have been
making a lot of money, but the stock has stayed down.
Speaker 5 (07:36):
Like I was kind of like an angel investor on one.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
Of these things.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
How much is a lot ross? I mean probably close
to one thousand dollars?
Speaker 4 (07:47):
How is it?
Speaker 7 (07:47):
How are you making money off of his money? But
he's not making money off of his money?
Speaker 9 (07:52):
Because because I didn't know what it was, and it
was it was like a monthly dividend paying stock, and
just like a couple of months ago, I was.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
Like, what in the smokes is this? What is this?
Eleven undred dollars dollars not coming to your address? Why
are we going to his address?
Speaker 5 (08:12):
That's a very good question, Lauren. Lauren asks a very
valid question.
Speaker 4 (08:16):
Why are we not going to gyms? Yeah? What's going on?
Speaker 8 (08:19):
So?
Speaker 4 (08:19):
Where's my cut?
Speaker 5 (08:20):
I don't know what do you mean? Well, here's the thing.
Speaker 7 (08:23):
You're a self parkmit. Have you ever heard of the drip?
Technique for coffee. Yes, no, no, nimbus here he comes.
Uh no, drip you know you got to invest drip style.
You haven't heard of drip style investing the drip technique.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
You haven't heard of it, I have, no, you haven't.
You're making this up as we speak.
Speaker 5 (08:46):
No, No, this is what stay. I forgot what that.
I don't know what it stands for. But so I
have a stock that's made you one thousand dollars and
made me zero dollars.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
Yeah, it's down, it's down a lot. Well, hell am
I going. I'm new to this. I'm new to this. Banter? Also,
I was here, he wasn't here. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (09:07):
There's no banter, Lauren, What the what the banter you're
hearing is?
Speaker 4 (09:11):
He wasn't here last time.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
He is a very benevolent guy getting ripped the f off.
That's exactly what's happening here. We got to reinvest, reinvest
the drip though. The thousand dollars is going back into
the weed stocks RUSS, the ones that are down ninety
two and twenty or seventy eight percent, respectfully.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
You got to buy, load sell. My god, dude, oh
my god, never remember it was a five hundred dollars investment.
Speaker 5 (09:35):
Lauren, this is not a pond in. This is one
thousand dollars pond.
Speaker 9 (09:44):
I mean, I do have to look into exactly how
much the dividends was paid.
Speaker 4 (09:49):
But yeah, I had no idea. I had no idea.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
Well then where's the money? Is it in your account
in your portfolio? No, it's going through the drip. Oh
my god, dude, it's the drip.
Speaker 4 (09:59):
Drip that's my thing. Now I'm going to talk about
the drift. Yeah, the one.
Speaker 5 (10:03):
Dripping how that happened is gonna be coming out of
his nose during this break, There's gonna be a drip.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
It's gonna be coming out of your face. Yeah, yeah,
well yeah, did you know that?
Speaker 9 (10:11):
See I thought the little d next to the companies,
I didn't know that that actually stood for anything.
Speaker 5 (10:18):
That's Yeah, they're Democrats, Aron, It's too awesome, it's too good.
I was like, same party voters, Come on all right,
four oh seven nine one six one four to one
text dos seven seven zero three. When I have an
Airbnb story that you're gonna love. Also, for you crime
nuts out there, today is a special day also for
you people who love going on YouTube. Today is a
very special day. Plus we have a bunch of really
(10:40):
cool stories to talk about. Do you wash your towels enough?
And did you ever wonder? Now this is I brought
this up. Now, Ross, do you have a Costco or
a Sam's membership?
Speaker 4 (10:51):
I'm Costco?
Speaker 5 (10:51):
You're a Costco guy?
Speaker 4 (10:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (10:52):
Yeah, cool news. How many of those products in the
store at Costco that are Kirkland brand products do you
think are actually made by premium brand companies? I would say,
you think when I.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
Tess are you gonna are you gonna wreck my Costco world?
Speaker 5 (11:09):
When I tell you how how many premium makers make
Kirkland brand items and what they make? You are going
to fall over? I mean, and it's every every audience
member listening is going to be affected by this in
the sense that I cannot believe I haven't been at
Costco buying these for thirty percent less. I've been going
(11:30):
to publics and spending all this money and I could
be going to public So so it's a good story.
It is a great story.
Speaker 7 (11:36):
Okay, what we've been telling you this for years, I've
been telling.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
You, dude, but you don't tell me what it is.
Speaker 7 (11:42):
I bet you don't know how many of those problems,
how you are over spending it public, get out of
there questions, all the hit.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
Costco my wife hit all of you that O today
didn't tell me I love it, didn't tell me it's
a secret.
Speaker 9 (11:54):
She's got to tell me on her own time, which
is all the receipt.
Speaker 5 (11:57):
He met holding everything in her arms. And I was wondering,
all right, four seven text seven seven zero three one news,
Oh baby.
Speaker 7 (12:06):
We're going to free the weed and we get all
the details on that. Governor Ron de said is standing
up for the white man. And all the news that
you can find on social media because that's where the
kids are going these days to get.
Speaker 5 (12:18):
It all right, Very good, We'll take a little break,
come back, get some Jack news and get the more
of the Jim Colbert shows.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Day put Today is Cooler Cooler with Ross Paget presented
by mills Air. Turn to the experts at Carrier and
turn to the experts at Millsair dot com.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
So you talk.
Speaker 11 (12:39):
About Kirkland being like a premium thing on Reddit for
our slash disc golf, there is a mild cult following
for Kirkland golf balls and.
Speaker 12 (12:50):
Golf clubs like people have been rushing out to buy them.
That's how good they are. Like people will compare Kirkland
golf balls to like Proby ones. It's it's insane.
Speaker 7 (13:02):
They got a web set that people trip out about.
Speaker 5 (13:05):
One blae four one texts seven seven zero three one bills.
By the way, that's b I ls. That is your
three o'clock keyword.
Speaker 4 (13:13):
You know what to do.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
Get over to real radio, dout of him and send
that away for your chance in one thousand dollars. Welcome back.
I'm Jim Lauren Row with us today.
Speaker 4 (13:20):
Yeah, I think I just broke my head.
Speaker 5 (13:21):
Fine, you're Jack, we'll get him. Uh ross with us
as well.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
No, yeah, and Jack has your news. Let's get it.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
It's time for j CS news. Wow, this guy got
to put his name on everything.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
It's in my contracted here's.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
The news on the Jim Colber Show.
Speaker 4 (13:41):
Boy. We talked about it at the top of the show.
And it's time to free the wee baby.
Speaker 7 (13:47):
This is something I was dreaming about thirty years ago,
and it happens long after I quit smoking weed.
Speaker 5 (13:53):
Perfect timing.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
Jack is always so disappointed.
Speaker 7 (13:56):
The Justice Department has moved FDA approved and stay licensed
medical marijuana from the Schedule one to Schedule three, recognizing
accepted medical use under federal law.
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Now.
Speaker 7 (14:09):
The change is expected to expend research and ease restrictions
for medical problems, but it does not legalize recreational marijuana.
Does not Federal officials say a broader review of marijuana's
classification will begin with a d EA hearing in June.
Speaker 5 (14:27):
Yeah, but what this is going to do is definitely
give states a much better opportunity to pitch this, and
you know, even some of the strong states in the South,
I think Georgia, South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama. Still it's still
completely illegal, but I think those needles are going to
move a lot after this. And the other thing too,
is is the deregulation allows them to go in and
(14:48):
really start medically studying what THC cannabis can do for
patients up and down the medical spectrum, which I'm very
interested to see.
Speaker 4 (14:56):
That's huge.
Speaker 7 (14:57):
And I know the President over the weekend signed allowing
some psychedelics to be used more for testing, which I
think is absolutely fantastic, especially when it comes to PTSD
and UH and you know, trying to ease the burden
carried by our military members as your eye.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
And there's so many there, there were so many problems.
Speaker 9 (15:19):
There were so many problems when marijuana was type one
and I just like there's a laundry list of just
predicaments that they would run into. I remember one that
they couldn't like all of their cash couldn't go to
a bank, right.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
Yeah, yea yeah, because it was a FDI C.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
You couldn't none, None of the businesses could do businesses
with banks because it was that was they was considered
illegal because the banks are federally insured and under federal
law it was still class one.
Speaker 7 (15:44):
So it's going to be interesting to see what other
changes trickle down from today's announcement there. Uh. Well, governor
to say it, this signs the DEI band for local government,
saying white men are the real victims.
Speaker 13 (15:58):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (15:58):
The governor signed two new Wednesday in Jacksonville, one banning
Florida counties and cities from funding or promoting DEI programs,
another blocking local governments from pursuing net zero emission policies.
DeSantis called DEI an ideological construct and specifically named white
men as a disfavored group that has faced discrimination. The
(16:22):
DEI band takes effect January first.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
Just who's glad we can do? I feel it's better now.
Speaker 5 (16:30):
I can't walk one day through my life with other
people going look at that guy.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
Gosh yeah, I.
Speaker 5 (16:39):
Mean outside of getting cast in Hamilton, Jim, I.
Speaker 4 (16:41):
Think right, I think right here, that's fabulous.
Speaker 14 (16:47):
Now.
Speaker 7 (16:47):
The thing that truly affects us all the anti card
as old farmer, the anti carbon tax law kicks in
July first of this year. The governor also gave himself
power to remove local officials officials who violate the law.
Accountability Descenta said, we'll make politicians toe the line so
(17:07):
to recap. No more DEI officers, no green energy mandates,
and the governor can fire your city commissioner. Welcome to
the free state of Florida. Right duly elected.
Speaker 4 (17:19):
That was fun.
Speaker 8 (17:20):
That was a fun, fun little news block there, Jack,
Thank you. I really enjoyed that.
Speaker 7 (17:24):
Snap goes on the diet. We talked about this a
little earlier in the week, Jim. And this goes into effect,
actually it did on Monday that we're now with the
Snap benefit. You can no longer buy soda, candy, energy
drinks for all food stamp users.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
And no prepped desserts either like your.
Speaker 8 (17:45):
Twikeyes, or I have to be honest, I've read that
I agree with you. Sure, I totally agree with that one.
The ultra process deserts. Florida is among the very first
states to act on new federal authority allowing states to
restrict what can be purchased under the pro Officials say
the movie is about public health. Critics say it's about
public shaming.
Speaker 4 (18:06):
It's not. Yeah, I think the bigger.
Speaker 7 (18:08):
Concern are the people in the what they would call
the food deserts, where they only have accents, they're only
in their community, is only the convenience store items, they're
generarily fresh produce.
Speaker 5 (18:22):
The other thing I found interesting about that today and
I read today, But I'm not one hundred percent sure
exactly how they're going to implement this. But I think
one of the questions as well is should you be
able to buy rotisserie chickens with your SNAP benefits? And
I think they're going to allow them to do it,
to buy to buy a pre prepared rotissary chickens.
Speaker 8 (18:39):
Telling me that that's possibly off the table and they're
not allowed to do that.
Speaker 5 (18:43):
Yeah, I think the prepared foods is a thing, because
the cost of preparing the food is built in there.
What they would want you to do is spend every
dime as efficiently as possible and cook the food at home.
But the thing was the rotissary chicken. I could buy
a cooked chicken cheaper than you buy a chicken to.
Speaker 7 (18:57):
Cop of course, especially if you do it Costco because
only four ninety nine.
Speaker 4 (19:01):
Baby, you gotta go to Costco. Welcome to the free
state of Florida.
Speaker 7 (19:04):
Wow, okay, all right, I should be paid, by by
the way, Costco.
Speaker 4 (19:09):
If you're looking for an endorser, I love you. I'm down,
all right.
Speaker 7 (19:13):
Kisibi City Hall is turning into a soap opera. Mayor
and commissioner both under ethics investigation. They voted on Tuesday
to send ethics complaints against both Mayor Jackie Espinoza and
Commissioner Jeanette Martinez to the ninth Judicial District, where a
special prosecutor will be appointed. It's one hundred uh page
(19:33):
complaint against the mayor alleging conflicts of interests, self dealing,
and failure to disclose financial interests man all apparently stemming
from the February firing of the city attorney.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
So there's some drama appen I have there. This is
one in the best on the back of Lopez. All
of that soff happening in all Sield count is crazy.
They've had a really interesting last two years.
Speaker 7 (19:55):
And then the acting sheriff had to come and complain
about using his daughter as a vendor on something.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
It says, Okay, simmy.
Speaker 5 (20:04):
What are you guys doing.
Speaker 4 (20:06):
Oh so, we've been telling you about the story.
Speaker 7 (20:09):
We've been following the Orlando IVF clinic and it was
the couple we told you earlier, Steven Mills, Tiffany Score.
White couple had a brown baby and they're like, wait
a minute, can you guys check on this and found
out it was not biologically theirs. However, the mom did
give birth. They mixed up the embryos. They have since
found they've identified the genetic parents of the baby. They
(20:35):
will remain anonymous. They also said they are keeping the baby.
They are going to raise the baby. Now there's a
new lawsuit with different people using the same clinic. It's
just been filed alleging that they use a mentally ill
woman as a surrogate without proper consent. It claims the
woman had a long history of involuntary mental health commitment
(20:58):
commitments and lack of psychological capacity to agree to surrogacy.
And she was approved and she was used anyway. She
was also promised more than twenty two grand and allegedly
only received a portion of it.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
That's a great question. How is it still open?
Speaker 4 (21:18):
Shut down and they are facing a multitude of loss.
That's good to know that they're shut down.
Speaker 7 (21:23):
Yeah, both cases involve overlapping defendants and have triggered an
emergency court ordered investigation into embryo handling at the clinic.
Speaker 4 (21:31):
That's gracious. Yeah, can you imagine wrong fridge? Yeah, wrong fridge,
And that's.
Speaker 7 (21:37):
Just unbelievable, right could you make and good for those
people though, I'm going to raise that child, give you them.
And but anyone who had a baby with the help
of that clinic. Now you're like, is this my child
looks like you and can't be anything worse?
Speaker 5 (21:52):
Honestly, No, But I mean reality you think about Jack saying,
I mean they got lucky that the child was brown.
That they know, because in reality they could have gotten
the wrong embryo with the with a white child, or
they would never know.
Speaker 9 (22:05):
No, man, So like that first five minutes must have
been just odd. That's gotta be jarring, Like do they
it's all like every baby's like that.
Speaker 8 (22:18):
Well, you know, and here's the other thing. I mean,
just again, can you imagine anything worse? Like you go
through all of that and you end up with such
an interesting end.
Speaker 7 (22:30):
Result by results, and it's not cheap. That's the thing
is like getting IV is not cheap, is inexpensive at all,
and sometimes it doesn't work. You have to do it
over and over again.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Well, you can't mess that up, man, you can't mess.
Speaker 9 (22:43):
Up, right, I just imagine like a doctor, you can't
mess up or like some person in a white white
lab coat with just like a bunch of containers and like.
Speaker 4 (22:53):
You cannot mess that up. That horrible. No, I'll label
them later. No worries with the marbles here, this puzzle's
missing one piece. What was the name? Martha? Mary Mills?
Speaker 5 (23:06):
Got it?
Speaker 4 (23:07):
We're good.
Speaker 7 (23:08):
Over to Polk County where a sex offender hit a
runaway team in his bedroom closet. What Ah Jack, seventeen
year old girl reported missing out of Orange County, found
hiding in the bedroom closet of a registered sex avender
in Dundee that's over there in Polk County, Grady Judges
Nick of the Woods, after deputies followed a tip, Alex
(23:29):
Diaz Toledo, thirty years old, initially told detectives he hadn't
seen the girl in days and refused to let them
search us home. Detectives did come back after finding him
in violation of his sex offender registration requirements. He hadn't
reported two vehicles at his home. Yeah, and that's when
they found the teen.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (23:49):
Can we go back to the pot now? Honestly, can
we go back to pot? Because we just we just
went into a really dark space.
Speaker 5 (23:56):
And by the way, this guy, I believe if I
remember this guy, also, oh god, what was something else
this guy did as well? He hit her in the closet,
god well, but always also prostituting her. I think he
was tricking her out as well. I think he was
putting her out on the street.
Speaker 7 (24:11):
Yeah, the Grady judge said, a thirty year old male
sex offender is not the kind of person you want
giving a seventeen year old girl a place to say,
suffice to stay. We gave him a place to stay
for a while at the Polk County jail. The girl
was safely returned to her family. So there ending on.
Speaker 4 (24:29):
A thank you, thank you Jack, thanks for the for
the Okay, you want a story to feel good about,
I got a couple.
Speaker 7 (24:37):
We're going to close out on a good note. Let's
think these are all good? Yeah, pretty much. Oh except
for that one, but we'll save that.
Speaker 4 (24:46):
Next time. Oh ahead, great good, that'd be great. Uh.
Speaker 7 (24:50):
New Smarton Beach homeowners race to bill Florida's first coquina
rock sea wall before turtle season. This is interesting, and
then you have to ask why were we not doing
this all along? A group of New Smyrna Beach homeowners
has exactly ten days to complete what will be the
city's first ever natural coquina rock revetment. It's a race
(25:11):
against the May first start of sea turtle nesting season.
After a three and a half year permitting battle with
the Stton County officials, now the residents finally got the
green light to ditch conventional concrete sea walls and go
with the ancient, naturally occurring Florida material instead. About eighty
truckloads of large cookina rocks will be brought in, stacked
(25:33):
and covered with sand to create a slope barrier designed
to absorb wave energy rather than fight it. The homeowners
say it's more cost effective than the concrete wall and
should last a lifetime. And but it's done okay with
the fort.
Speaker 5 (25:50):
Castillo Desa Marcus is built out of Coquina, and that's
been there for four hundred years. Why were we not
doing all those buildings in August, all those roads all
built on of Cocina. Matter of fact, the reason they
did there not only was it great, unbelievably durable, it
would soak up the impact of cannon bowls. In other words,
it wouldn't bounce off. It would literally go into the
Coquina and just basically stay there.
Speaker 7 (26:10):
You can see him as an artising I wonder if
it has a better effect on or it might lessen
beach erosion based on how it absorbs the wave as
opposed to the way instead of just reflecting the wave back.
But anyway, they have that deadline to get it done
by May first, so they are working hard over there and.
Speaker 4 (26:29):
S B and again it's new smart of beach. They
can afford it. Yeah, they're good, they're good. It's all good.
Speaker 7 (26:36):
Have you met radar? The Orlando Belgian malinoa who sniffs out.
Speaker 9 (26:41):
I thought you were talking about that Cuba Gooding Junior movie.
Speaker 7 (26:44):
Radar is an Orlando Belgian Malawa and he sniffs out.
What do you think he smells?
Speaker 4 (26:49):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (26:49):
So he is he working at the airport. He is
not okay. Explosives nope, Shoes nope, high end shoes.
Speaker 15 (26:59):
No.
Speaker 1 (26:59):
Drugs.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
Drug is not drugs incorrect. Babies no, Oh, very specific.
It's something that can help something in your home that
you don't know.
Speaker 4 (27:11):
Is there missing seventeen year olds? How about mold?
Speaker 5 (27:17):
It's mold.
Speaker 14 (27:19):
Mold.
Speaker 7 (27:20):
Yeah, he's working with a multitude of multiple mold inspectors,
uh finding hidden in dangerous mold behind walls, under floors,
and inside area homeowners never check. He has a handler
of mold testers. Four oh seven says the dog uses
the same scent detection training as military law enforcement dogs.
But your target is mold. One case, homeowners spent enormous
(27:43):
money on assessment, and after assessment and the renovated a
thirty thousand dollars bathroom and Radar walked in, pointed directly
to a tile wall.
Speaker 4 (27:53):
A leak of.
Speaker 8 (27:54):
Mold cannot come to my house, guaranteed would be all
over my bathroom.
Speaker 7 (28:00):
Ye real quick, a Jim. If you see the traffic
on I four all heading west, guess what BTS is
about to descend on Tampa?
Speaker 5 (28:10):
Are they really?
Speaker 4 (28:10):
Are you ready for it?
Speaker 5 (28:11):
No, I'm not. I thought you I'm not. I thought
you are really in the Korean boy bands?
Speaker 4 (28:17):
Well I know you are.
Speaker 5 (28:18):
Okay, you got a look. I've seen your history folder.
It's my wig collection.
Speaker 7 (28:23):
The thing is, I thought you kind of dismissed them
as being not relevant, amore.
Speaker 5 (28:28):
I didn't say that it was a it was a
fake news story that I read. I'd said that people
were not doing it. And the reason they wrote it
is because they sold out like every single date on
this tour in like eight seconds.
Speaker 7 (28:39):
They are kicking off the North American leg of their
Ara Range World Tour this Saturday at Raymond James Stadium
in Tampa, their first tour since the group went on
hiatus from mandatory South Korean military service in twenty twenty two.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
Let's bring that back. Yeah, no joke, I'm down for
that right now.
Speaker 7 (28:55):
Tampa will host three shows Friday, Saturday and No twenty fourth,
twenty fifth, and twenty eighth. And this city is already
in full army because you have the BTS Army mode.
Tampa Bay Boulevard closed Wednesday to set up massive merch
tent the Arragang album drop mark twentieth.
Speaker 4 (29:14):
They are they're they're shutting down the city.
Speaker 5 (29:16):
You're thinking about three dates in a time.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
I'm sorry. Are you guys not in radio? Do you
not have free tickets to get out of here?
Speaker 5 (29:22):
I'm going to BTS.
Speaker 7 (29:25):
We do have a station that was definitely promoting it
and definitely giving away.
Speaker 5 (29:29):
Get a whole party over there? Was crazy?
Speaker 8 (29:30):
Oh my god, Yeah, that's crazy. Shut down the city.
Speaker 5 (29:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (29:34):
Arrarang album dropped on March twentieth, and demand for tickets
has been astronomical.
Speaker 5 (29:40):
I can't imagine what the secondhand market looks like over there.
Speaker 9 (29:42):
Oh my, Jim, you can name all the band members, right?
You want to give you your best shot?
Speaker 5 (29:47):
Man? Oh man, let's get fired real quick.
Speaker 4 (29:50):
Let's do this.
Speaker 5 (29:51):
Can you does any do any of them?
Speaker 16 (29:54):
End in?
Speaker 5 (29:54):
Agh?
Speaker 4 (29:59):
Man? I don't know any of them.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
Yeah, I couldn't tell you a single band number.
Speaker 4 (30:02):
I'm not gonna even give it a shot, buddy.
Speaker 5 (30:04):
It's gonna be a fit in front of me. Yeah,
don't do that, Okay, our final story. It's either a
band member or a menu item. Our final story. We've
heard it before, and there's more proof. Half of Americans
now get their news primarily from social media. Horrifying new
Pew research survey funds that social media has overtaken television
(30:25):
is a primary news source for nearly half of all
American adults. That's horrifying, and for Gen Z and millennials
the numbers are even more extreme, at sixty seven and
sixty one percent, respectively. Unbelie the top platforms people used
to find news, what do you think they are?
Speaker 7 (30:40):
It's gonna be Twitter, It's gonna be It's gonna be Twitter, Twitter, Instagram, Yeah, yeah, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube,
and Reddit? No Twitter, No Twitter? Oh well yeah, thank
god honestly, thank god.
Speaker 4 (30:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (30:54):
Study also found that most Americans stumble on the funny
posts and opinions about the news by accident, rather than
seeking them out, which explains roughly ninety percent of your
social media experience now. The Pew researchers also note that
people who seek out in depth information tend to be
better informed than those who come across the news by chance.
(31:16):
The translation people who try to learn things, no more
things and that's.
Speaker 8 (31:25):
I will say this though, and it has been kind
of interesting. You know, we have a screening business, as
you know that patios, doors, windows, whatever. But we have
found AI is making people do more research. It doesn't
help us because we want people to just be like, oh,
(31:45):
we're stick.
Speaker 4 (31:46):
On us right away. But AI has changed things.
Speaker 8 (31:49):
People do take a look at things more in depth
than they did before.
Speaker 5 (31:54):
The problem that I have with people getting news from
social media is social media has nothing to lose, you
know me, there's there's there's no integrity in it. If
you if you just go to social media and you
find a news story, if you read the news story
and you go, oh, that's really interesting. I'm going to
go and search out that news story and see who
else is writing what about it? And you know, find
a reputable news source like Reuter's or the AP or
(32:15):
or any of those news sources that, like are internationally
understood to be non biased. You're not going to really
get the full story. The problem is most people read
the social media thing and then consider that the actual news.
Speaker 4 (32:27):
The horses out of the barn, right.
Speaker 8 (32:29):
Like my kids, my daughter, my seventeen year old, she
will come to me and say, I saw this on TikTok. Yah,
it's all TikTok really, frankly, and that's what they they
I saw this.
Speaker 4 (32:39):
I'm curious about that, but they be.
Speaker 5 (32:42):
You got to be curious, though, Lauren. The problem is
if you're not curious about it and you don't do
any other research and you take what you read on
TikTok is as the gospel, that's bad news. But that's
justly uninformed public.
Speaker 8 (32:54):
I agree. But the problem is these kids don't know
the difference. Right in my house, they know the difference
because I'll say, what are your two sources?
Speaker 6 (33:02):
Right?
Speaker 4 (33:02):
And then the worst thing and double sores.
Speaker 5 (33:04):
Then the worst thing is they share that are they
they take pieces that they like and then they make
their own posts, continually purporting something that is only a
third true, half true, whatever the case may be.
Speaker 9 (33:14):
I think there's even more nuance to the problem to
it because getting news from social media, sure that sounds
really really bad. NBC, every mainstream, Fox, CNN, every single
one of these have a TikTok page. They're on social media.
I think one of the scarier things for me is
that you can scroll see an honest piece of journalism
and then scroll again and then not yeah, right screen.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
It's all mixed together.
Speaker 9 (33:39):
It's all mixed together one usually back in the day
it was one channel, and then it was at the
at the very least going through one same filter.
Speaker 5 (33:47):
All right, four seven nine one six one four one
text to seven to seven zero three one. You're three o'clock. Heywards, bills,
that's b I LS got about fifteen minutes or so
to get over to real radio OUTFM and send that
away for your chance at one thousand bucks. Let's take
a little break, come back in a second. Do more
than Jim colvertchows.
Speaker 17 (34:03):
Hey, how's it o'honna? Well, let's get into this coquina thing. Yep.
Cokina is just primarily found in Florida, uh Saint Augustine,
the West Palm, and most of the cokina used in
building seawalls harvested and Anastasia Island yep, which Jimmy, you're familiar.
Speaker 5 (34:20):
With that I am yep.
Speaker 17 (34:21):
Strongest defense against erosion and too bad. All these renourishment
efforts in Bavard County has covered our bar beautiful reef
system down here. All the Cokaina rock is buried for
the most part, Aloha.
Speaker 5 (34:33):
Aloha Brona.
Speaker 10 (34:34):
Hey guys, I hope you guys are doing well. So
I wonder what happens with that dog when it goes
back to the kennel, the caneline unit or whatever. Probably
all the other dogs are laughing at him, like, hey,
that guy smells mold.
Speaker 4 (34:45):
Ha thanks by.
Speaker 7 (34:48):
Yeah, I don't think you're go'll be finding any Belgian
melonwaws at the at the shelter, but baby who knows?
Speaker 5 (34:53):
All right, Welcome back to the Jim Coward Show RO
Radio one O four point one. I am Jim Lauren
Row with us today. There you know Jack's here is yep.
Speaker 9 (35:00):
And along with the ross, that dog seems like like
a like an insurance nark dog. Yeah, you know, like
an insurance agent would show up.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
To your house with that dog. I think I don't
think the dog should be ashamed of mold. No, the
dog's not gonna be ashamed of the dogs.
Speaker 5 (35:14):
And by the way, I just read a story the
other day about a lot of people in Florida that
believe they have allergy issues because in this state, it
just goes crazy, comes down, goes crazy again, and you
never know. Actually, Jack, I thought my thing initially was
an allergy attack because it had all the earmarks of
that that weird dry cough and that sneeze but then
again turned into something gnarly like an RSB thing, and
(35:38):
and that cough is still kind of lingering a little bit.
I know, Jack, you're dimmling with as well, something like that.
I mean, he's kind of sticking around. I don't, but
you have that cough and they tell you that that
cough that sticks around for a little bit, it is
some level of that RSB or whatever.
Speaker 4 (35:51):
Yeah, all this is because of this.
Speaker 5 (35:54):
The story that I read said that most people that
believe they have were not most, but a ton of
people that believe they have the allergy issues. It maybe isn't.
It's actually maybe mold in their house. And my wife
is hyper sensitive to that and we have one of
our places over there. Before we fixed it, of course,
did have a leak in the fireplace that was causing
a bit of a mold issue and we and we
found it. Because there's a test you can order online.
Speaker 4 (36:15):
Because you had a dog.
Speaker 5 (36:17):
No no, no, no, no, no, there's a test. Actually you
can get them a depot or Low's or wherever the
case may be. Is Toolsax Hardware has them as well,
and you put it up there and it gives you
a You let it kind of sit out the open
in your home for a few days. Then you package
it up and send it off and they give you
a mold test for your home and you had mold. Yeah,
came back with a little bit of black hole, which
we wound up getting treated and everything was fine. But man,
(36:39):
scary stuff crazy.
Speaker 8 (36:40):
You didn't need a malon wah yeah or whatever that
We run that process back for me.
Speaker 5 (36:45):
You just send your homes air yeah, yeah. You you
basically you feel this thing open, you put it in
the area that you think it's effected. And mostly it's bathrooms, right,
because there's an issue with that hot air staying around
and causing mold issues. But it'd also be a water leak, yeah,
from rain and whatnot. And you leave it there for
a couple of days, and then you pack it back
up and send it off and they give you a
report on how.
Speaker 4 (37:06):
Your air is.
Speaker 9 (37:07):
I'd have to go to headquarters for me to jump
on board before I give a dollar for that little technique.
Speaker 4 (37:13):
Here's my ziplock bag full of air from my bathroom.
Speaker 7 (37:16):
Yeah, I mean why would they, I mean, where would
the scam be. Uh, they're gonna say yes to the
mold no matter what. They don't sell mold services. They're
just telling you what you if you have it or not.
I mean, I don't know if they I guess if
they have a behind the scenes connection with mold removal.
Speaker 5 (37:30):
Maybe yeah, yeah, maybe they're in all right. Today is
a very important day for YouTube birthday. It is kind
of Today was Monday. Today was the very first day
that a video was loaded up on the YouTube the zoo.
Yeah six, I think eight something like that. Now the
biggest platform in the world, isn't it social media platform?
Speaker 4 (37:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (37:52):
Yeah, the most used social media platform is YouTube.
Speaker 14 (37:56):
Jack.
Speaker 5 (37:56):
And it's so funny because you and I grew up
along with Jack watching just network television, and then when
cable hit, we didn't even know how to act. I mean,
going from four channels to forty channels was like heaven,
you just can't. It's like the first time you saw
an HD television.
Speaker 4 (38:11):
Well, do you remember, I did you have like the
cable box? You had a slider box where you had
like it was but like little so I said, we
had two of them. I remember, But one.
Speaker 5 (38:23):
It was no rich no no, no, no.
Speaker 4 (38:28):
Brand late seventies baby, like you actually changed the actual thing. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (38:35):
So for me, it was fifteen buttons and then there
was a rocker switch on the side, so you had
one through fifteen. You hit the switch, then it was
sixteen through thirty. Oh I see, okay, that was that.
I know some people had one where it was more
of a like a lever that would click that you
would slide just.
Speaker 5 (38:51):
Like it was one through one through thirty or something
like that.
Speaker 4 (38:54):
Let me ask you a.
Speaker 8 (38:55):
Question, Jack, Yes, if you went in the actual clicking, you.
Speaker 7 (39:02):
Go to channel one, you get a Phillips head screwdriver,
you tune it in, you get the Playboy channel.
Speaker 5 (39:08):
Are you getting you can hover between?
Speaker 7 (39:10):
You could get it right, yes, my my uh my
sister was in high school. I was in middle school.
My sister was in high school. She had friends over
and they showed me that trick.
Speaker 6 (39:20):
Yes, you could like fix it like and you get
channel tuned it in between channels, you get the Playboy
channel like Hot Hot Wire or cable box for scrambled boobs.
Speaker 4 (39:34):
Yeah, I mean listen.
Speaker 9 (39:35):
I also enjoyed a good scrambled bood back in the day.
But I didn't need a screwdriver. I didn't need to
back in. Your day is not like an hour day, dude.
Speaker 5 (39:44):
I have to say, I feel like I also saw
Scrambled Bob.
Speaker 4 (39:47):
It's a fun time.
Speaker 8 (39:48):
You may have seen this, yeah, but you you you
live in a totally different world than we did.
Speaker 9 (39:53):
I saw, yeah, really resourceful, you know, like a lava
lamp areola statics from Black, Black and White.
Speaker 7 (40:01):
All right, all I got was George Hamilton hosting the
Night at the Mulin Rouge.
Speaker 5 (40:07):
George Hamilton. There you go, all right, all right for
seven nine one six one four one. You always text
us again at seven to seven zero three one back
in a second. With more than Jim Corporate shows, they
put covert crew. You know, I do you.
Speaker 4 (40:31):
Have every tea backing rock Cliffs.
Speaker 18 (40:34):
Today we raise.
Speaker 4 (40:36):
Beard National Movie Theater Day.
Speaker 18 (40:39):
Now, I wanted to know what was the last movie
you were really excited about seeing on the big screen.
I saw a re release of Beetlejuice and it was
like being a child again.
Speaker 4 (40:52):
A good show.
Speaker 5 (40:53):
Thank body appreciate that. Fuck he were his coin c O.
I n slide over two real radio out of Eminson
that await for your chance of a thousand bucks coin. Guys,
that is your fourkl like keyword, good luck, Welcome back
on Jim, there's Lauren, Hi, good to see you. Jack
is here as well. Yeah, saft Daddy's here. Project hell Mary,
Project hell Mary for me as well. Really, that's the
(41:14):
last movie I saw in the theater.
Speaker 4 (41:16):
Really good.
Speaker 9 (41:16):
I haven't seen it. That's just the last movie I
got excited.
Speaker 8 (41:19):
For my my teenager when she's she said, she fell asleep.
Speaker 5 (41:24):
Really really good. I enjoyed it.
Speaker 4 (41:25):
I loved it. I went to the theater shot, I
can't eat.
Speaker 5 (41:28):
I am fully full on embarrassed to tell you the
last time I went to a movie theater to see
a movie fully embarrassed.
Speaker 4 (41:34):
The Green Mile, It's.
Speaker 5 (41:39):
The Rock, the Jurassic Park.
Speaker 8 (41:42):
When was the last time you went to the movies?
Come on, Jim, what would you ross?
Speaker 5 (41:46):
You guess?
Speaker 4 (41:47):
Titanic?
Speaker 5 (41:49):
I've never seen it. You know the better I don't
remain top gun Maverick.
Speaker 4 (41:53):
Okay, yeah, cks you out. You have to go. You
have to go for that, right?
Speaker 14 (41:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (41:59):
Good? That's very predictable.
Speaker 7 (42:02):
Yeah, I love you, But that's very predictable.
Speaker 5 (42:05):
Why is it predictable?
Speaker 8 (42:06):
Because because what because yes, if you were gonna actually
leave your house and go to a movie theater, it'd
have to be Top Gun.
Speaker 5 (42:15):
It was a really fun movie. Actually saw it twice
in the theater. Ross's mom has seen it four hundred
and fifty one trillion times. She basically produced it at
this point. She's in the credits executive producer.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
Ye special things.
Speaker 5 (42:27):
Yeah, she gets a shot out at the end.
Speaker 9 (42:29):
I'm joking, but my mom loves that movie because she
loves planes that go fast.
Speaker 5 (42:33):
And they're making the third one, The Tom Cruise is
already signed up. Oh, rubber face Tom has already signed up.
So good, though better than good. He doesn't make a
bad movie. I'm sorry.
Speaker 4 (42:42):
He does not.
Speaker 8 (42:42):
Whether you like him or not, he does. He does
not make a bad movie. Legit movie star, Yeah you
know he's the legit movie star. Yeah, it's such just
that he'd like chooses the right movies. Every time I
watched Top Gun, Maverick or the original. There's one thing
that always I remember us talking out it on air
years ago, is that they had to recast. I'm not
(43:04):
laughing because this is a serious thing, all right, So
Jack stopped freaking smiling.
Speaker 5 (43:10):
Is this a Kelly McGillis things.
Speaker 4 (43:11):
I'm scared. What's going on right now?
Speaker 9 (43:13):
They had to recast the love Interest, Yeah, solely off
of she just stopped taking care of herself.
Speaker 5 (43:21):
Have you seen Kelly McGillis for a second, This is
this is Hollywood is. Yeah, but Kelly, Kelly, something happened.
Something happened. Don't know what it is, like.
Speaker 4 (43:36):
Some menopause, menopause. Yeah, I've been.
Speaker 5 (43:42):
I've been around women who have had menopause. It did
not do that to him.
Speaker 9 (43:45):
And always by where I was going with this is
not only did they replace her with like this total
smoke show, right, but.
Speaker 4 (43:56):
The other thing.
Speaker 9 (43:56):
But right here comes the funny part. Even she I
believe spoke out and was like, yeah, I get it.
That's the funny part to me. Yeah, I want to say,
like she was like, I'm not offended her.
Speaker 4 (44:12):
It is her Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 5 (44:14):
And then but that's released the McGillis cut.
Speaker 4 (44:17):
Yes, what I say.
Speaker 9 (44:18):
She shoot the same movie with her as the Love Interests,
going after five star Hollywood Tom Cruise.
Speaker 5 (44:25):
At one point, like on the back of that motorcycle
in part one, You're like, my god, and she looks
like she owns a bunch of ferrets, like, oh my goodness.
Speaker 9 (44:34):
She's really grown into the bird lady from Home alone.
But by all means that just it's always made me
laugh of like I'm pretty sure she was like, yeah, no,
super gett it. I understand. I saw I stopped pursuing
Hollywood years ago. I'm not gonna be part of this thing. Yeah,
but I can't wait for Birth three. It looks like
it's gonna be fun. Obviously, any script they write after
(44:56):
that thing is gonna be good, because the first one
I think was as good or better than the first one.
Speaker 4 (45:00):
Yeah, I mean it was really good, really really good.
Let me ask you as a quick question.
Speaker 5 (45:04):
I saw this today on Yahoo Health, and I always
love this stuff because it drives people crazy. Doctors say,
you're probably doing this. You're not washing your bath towels enough.
Here's what they recommend line. Okay, now hold over for
a second. How often and be honest, Ross, I'm gonna
start with you first, because you're the dirtiest of us.
Speaker 9 (45:24):
True, I'm kind of like mcgilli's man, I'm not offending
he let himself go.
Speaker 4 (45:31):
How many times?
Speaker 5 (45:32):
And by the way, I've got an issue with this
as well, how many times do doctors say you should
use a towel before you wash it?
Speaker 8 (45:39):
Oh my gosh, I love this because this is this
is the this is the life I live with my teenagers.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
Oh yeah, oh I have proof now I love this.
Go go.
Speaker 5 (45:48):
I think the science says three. You say three? Yeah, Jack,
what do you think?
Speaker 7 (45:53):
I like that answer because that's the one I was
going to give, all right, like three three days basically,
so you.
Speaker 5 (46:01):
I'm going to make sure we're right here, and I'll
ask more on here in a second. So the two
of you will use the same towel three days or
three showers in a row?
Speaker 9 (46:08):
Yes, before you wash it. By the way, those two
numbers two different numbers.
Speaker 4 (46:12):
What are you doing?
Speaker 5 (46:13):
I don't shower three days in a row.
Speaker 8 (46:16):
Probably ever, well, he's not really a good test subject.
Speaker 5 (46:20):
So my towel is gonna last far more than three showers.
Speaker 7 (46:23):
He's not every day, no, But he's also a good
representation of a portion of our audience.
Speaker 5 (46:27):
I'm also really just an honest person. Yeah, yeah, I
mean I haven't.
Speaker 8 (46:31):
How often are you showering? Just just give me an idea.
Speaker 5 (46:34):
You're all like two and a half on average, and
a half times a week, two and a half days.
Explain the half, yeah, explain the half, because sometimes it's
three days, sometimes it's two.
Speaker 4 (46:45):
Oh, I got joke. Okay, I got it, all right,
but every three days? But bath that sucks. I'm with you.
Speaker 8 (46:52):
Europeans don't shower that much, was it, Jack? Well, he's
a bath guy, aren't you. I am a bath guy.
But I had to retire my bath.
Speaker 4 (47:00):
Your wife shame you out of it.
Speaker 5 (47:02):
No, won't happened. Would you have to retire a bath?
Speaker 3 (47:04):
No?
Speaker 5 (47:05):
A dog came over and told me there was mold.
So that really into that bathroom?
Speaker 4 (47:09):
Watch Jack? Three times?
Speaker 5 (47:10):
You say three or four times? And you shower every day?
Speaker 8 (47:12):
Right?
Speaker 10 (47:13):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (47:13):
Yeah, yeah, you shower every day. You know what I don't.
Speaker 8 (47:16):
Actually I really don't. Really, yeah, I really don't. I
do the dry shampoo on the hair. I did shower
before I came in today.
Speaker 5 (47:25):
And you I appreciate that greatly.
Speaker 8 (47:27):
I really will say. I'm in every other day?
Speaker 5 (47:30):
Are you really?
Speaker 7 (47:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (47:30):
I am.
Speaker 5 (47:31):
I cannot do that. I cannot.
Speaker 4 (47:32):
But I don't go to work every day.
Speaker 8 (47:34):
I'm a contractor, so I'm at home and I don't
go to work every day.
Speaker 5 (47:38):
And I think maybe if that was my scenario, I
probably wouldn't shower every day, but it's part of my
daily mantra, Like I have a I don't know about
you as far as your time goes, and these boys either,
I don't really know. But like everything in my day
happens at a certain time at eleven o'clock, I don't
care what's happening. I stopped pulling the show. I go
and grab a bike to eat. Then I go take
my shower, And it's part of how I get ready
(48:00):
come do the program. If I didn't take a shower
before the show and feel weird, Yeah, no.
Speaker 8 (48:04):
I totally agree with what you're saying. And I will
say this, my kids are crazy. Like my oldest she
showers like obsessively.
Speaker 5 (48:14):
Yeah, it too much.
Speaker 8 (48:16):
Well, she she showers obsessively. She's like twenty eight. She's
my twenty year old. But it was like every like
enough with the uh towels. I would be like, dude,
you cannot use all of these towels every day.
Speaker 5 (48:32):
And I just got out of the habit of doing that.
My thing would be I would use a towel one
time and then it would go in the dirty clothes.
Speaker 4 (48:39):
No, you can't do that. You hate though he can.
Speaker 8 (48:42):
It's insane, especially with teenagers. It's insane. You're insane.
Speaker 5 (48:46):
You're right. I don't do that any longer. I will.
I will use a towel three times now, and actually
that's exactly what three times, three times? That's what doctors
say you should do.
Speaker 4 (48:57):
Yeah, should you do?
Speaker 5 (49:00):
It's this three to four times before you put it
in the dirty clothes. Now, do you, guys, when you
get done with your shower, do you have like a
hook you hang your towel on to dry off or
do you put it over the shower door?
Speaker 4 (49:11):
I have a towel bar.
Speaker 7 (49:12):
I have a towel bar, so it hangs so the
whole thing is exposed to air to dry out, exactly.
Speaker 4 (49:16):
I have a hook.
Speaker 5 (49:17):
You have a hook? Yeah, so it bunches up sometimes.
Do you do you smell test before you use it?
Or do you crispy test it?
Speaker 8 (49:23):
I'm a smell test person, yeah, because I live at
a house with teenagers, right so, and they will stick
everything in the dirty clothes right right, right right, so
I have to smell to see if it should actually
be there, because it's just a constant. Yeah, it's a
there's I believe that I would be actually doing laundry
(49:44):
every day, all day long if I didn't have a
smell tie.
Speaker 5 (49:47):
And when my kids were all at home I have four,
I mean they were all at home. They were all athletes,
so we were they were taking two showers a day,
and the laundry is bananas. We were doing two loads
of clothes, two loads a day, totally some clothes and
then and then owls and whatnot. Next thing, you know,
your kitchen's got ring worm or something. But where I
was in Texan Service judging me for my two and
(50:08):
a half days answers, let me.
Speaker 4 (50:09):
Can I defend myself on the past.
Speaker 7 (50:11):
No, because they say, because you are a celebrity and
you take pictures with people and you get close to
them and put your arms around them, you have a
higher level of responsibility to keep yourself clean. You filthy
pig much. It isn't that an activity scenario with you
as well?
Speaker 5 (50:27):
I mean, You're not gonna do a full shift somewhere
and then come back home I'll dripping sweat.
Speaker 9 (50:31):
That's where I'm going with this, is that like if
I'm going out and I'm you know, working, if I'm
outside then I'm going to take a shower that night
and door the next morning.
Speaker 4 (50:41):
All right, And I'm not proud of that.
Speaker 9 (50:43):
When when you sleep in today's stew yesterday's vibe.
Speaker 5 (50:47):
I'm not down with that. I don't like that. Yeah,
I don't like that feeling of you know, because in Florida,
you know, you get you know it, you sweat almost I'm.
Speaker 4 (50:54):
A nighttime shower, by the way, I do you really
for you to bed?
Speaker 8 (50:57):
Yeah? I like taking a shower before you go to bed. Yeah,
I wake up, I hit the ground running right like.
So I do like the nighttime shower.
Speaker 5 (51:05):
And I don't like the nighttime shower because it wakes
me up. So I go to bed after day and
some people think that's gross because you're getting in your
bed and you have the day on you and then
you get in bed. I don't like that.
Speaker 9 (51:18):
You gotta wash the Tuesday off, and you gotta wash
the Tuesday off every time I'm off of an airport
airplane experience, I gotta wash the delta off.
Speaker 5 (51:26):
Yeah, you gotta get that off here.
Speaker 4 (51:27):
Yeah, yeah, I don't. I don't want the airport on you.
Speaker 5 (51:29):
Definitely don't want any spirit on your dog. No, you know,
don't get any spirit.
Speaker 4 (51:33):
Don't talk bad about spirit.
Speaker 5 (51:34):
All right, four O seven I went six of them.
About to get a bail out. I'm hoping my flight
is May thirteenth, all right for us seven went six
four one cobt court.
Speaker 2 (51:44):
Next today is Cooler Cooler with Ross Paget presented by
Mills Air. Turn to the experts at carrier and turn
to the experts at Millsair dot com.
Speaker 3 (51:58):
I shower twice a day every day. I always have
and I always will. I don't care if it's wasteful
of water.
Speaker 16 (52:05):
I don't care. I pay the bill. I'm not a
poor person.
Speaker 3 (52:07):
I like being clean. I really enjoy it. It's to
take a shower, shower twice a day every day. Occasionally
I take a third shower on Saturdays if my wife
isn't mad at me.
Speaker 4 (52:19):
Yeah, they got it doing crazy shower crazy.
Speaker 5 (52:23):
Yeah all right, welcome back to the Jim Goober shower'red
you go one to four point one coin is your
four lucky or that co I in slide over to
real radio doti pimenson that away for your chance in
a thousand bucks coin is the word. Guys, go get
that money.
Speaker 7 (52:35):
Have we had a winter yet we have not all week.
No show is Head of Winner.
Speaker 4 (52:40):
It's been it's been keeping me up at night. Wow,
welcome back.
Speaker 5 (52:44):
I'm Jim Lawrence here, so is Jack and Ross as well.
Speaker 9 (52:49):
And when it gets cold out, my showers also plummet.
Speaker 5 (52:53):
You take fewer. Yeah, yeah, yeah, And but I gotta
tell you, dude, you do the thing that I am like.
I I didn't talk about it for a while because
I didn't know how weird it was. I don't know
if Lauren does this or not. Are you a shower
sitter by any chance?
Speaker 4 (53:08):
Shower was? What does that mean?
Speaker 5 (53:12):
Okay, so Ross, when he takes as a shower, he
will turn the water on fully hot and then sit
in the shower and kind of steam. And I've been
doing that for a while, but I've not told anybody
about it because it seems a little weird. But we
we have. We made that connection last week.
Speaker 4 (53:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (53:28):
I am, honestly, I do believe. I do actually have
a gym membership.
Speaker 4 (53:35):
Fancy pants. There's the steam room, so you go in there.
I do.
Speaker 13 (53:40):
I do.
Speaker 4 (53:40):
Oh man, I am a fast, fast shower. Oh you are.
Speaker 5 (53:45):
My wife barely gets wet. She's in the showers really
really really pick you. I am really quick?
Speaker 4 (53:53):
Why are you so funny?
Speaker 8 (53:54):
Because my husband he was quite the I guess at
the end of the day, he does like his products.
But I remember when we first started dating and he
went into my shower and he's like, why do you
not have any products?
Speaker 4 (54:10):
I'm like, well, because all I need is soap and shampoo.
Speaker 16 (54:13):
Right.
Speaker 4 (54:14):
Literally, I'm not. I am a very quick shower.
Speaker 5 (54:17):
That's so crazy, man, I am the absolute antithesis of
the quick shower guy. I am a I am a
an eight to twelve minute shower.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Really.
Speaker 8 (54:27):
Oh yeah, I am I I literally I'm I'm soap.
I will do shampoo. I will not always actually do
my hair because I only right.
Speaker 7 (54:37):
Yeah, yeah, you do the dry shoes dry shampoo thing
a little bit. Yeah, my wife does that too.
Speaker 4 (54:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (54:42):
Well, you're not supposed to wash your hair every day.
Speaker 4 (54:44):
I got my hair today, ye I know, but you're
not supposed to wash it every day.
Speaker 5 (54:47):
Yeah, you're fine, Jack, You're a Are you a short
shower guy?
Speaker 4 (54:50):
Yet? Yeah?
Speaker 7 (54:51):
For the most part, get in and out, usually done
in a commercial break.
Speaker 4 (54:56):
Are you serious?
Speaker 5 (54:57):
You could take an entire shower during the during a
break like a six minute attack.
Speaker 4 (55:01):
I could take it.
Speaker 8 (55:01):
I I'm I'm a three minute shower. I could totally
do that.
Speaker 5 (55:05):
I don't even touch the loofa or soap for the
first four or five minutes.
Speaker 4 (55:09):
You know you gave it away when you said a loofah, yeah,
use a wash cloth?
Speaker 5 (55:14):
Are you a washcloth girl?
Speaker 4 (55:16):
I don't use any of those you just put up?
Speaker 5 (55:18):
Are you a bar soap? Are you a look?
Speaker 4 (55:19):
I'm a bar soap personal. Are you with an army?
I'll be like, what are you?
Speaker 5 (55:23):
What are you?
Speaker 4 (55:24):
I've never people.
Speaker 8 (55:26):
My family right now is like mortified, But yes, I'm
a bar soap person.
Speaker 4 (55:31):
I like bar soap. I just you know, get it
done and I'm out. I just don't care. I'm not
a shower.
Speaker 7 (55:39):
I was having that argument today with myself in the shower,
which extended it for another fifteen seconds. However, is that
what you call it? I am a bar soap. It's like,
I'm like man, body watches. It's easier, but it's so expensive.
But it's not only that, it's also bad on it's
more plastic than you're using.
Speaker 8 (55:56):
It was bad Like my kids have decided they don't
want to do the.
Speaker 4 (56:01):
The actual soap thing. They yeah, they want bar soap.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (56:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (56:07):
We had this conversation a couple of weeks ago, and
I actually bought bar soap the next day. It is
still in the baggage because I don't The thing is
if you if you use bar soap on a loofah,
it's like sandpaper to it. He just eats the bar
soap alive. So I gotta go straight back to like
soap to body, like soap, to the dome scenario.
Speaker 4 (56:26):
Again, you're still talking loofah. It's just a little.
Speaker 5 (56:29):
I'm saying, just like bar of soap and hand And
that's how I used to take a shower when I
was a kid. I would just rubbed the good And
now the cool thing is I have chest hair, so
I'm able to kind of lather up the soap in
my chest hair and use that to take the rest
of my shower.
Speaker 4 (56:41):
Soda is, Lauren, big deal.
Speaker 7 (56:43):
But so with bar soap, are you using the washcloth
because at least the loofa, you're that's giving you the exfoliation.
Speaker 8 (56:52):
So are you asking me, yes, how do we get
to the point. No, I'm a hand person. I just
use my hands.
Speaker 5 (57:05):
Actually it might be the chair because I think Deb
is the same way. I think Deb is a bar
soap to the body scenario. Thank you, Deb, so chest up.
Speaker 8 (57:13):
If you're listening to me right now, I'm solidarity because
I just like bar soap and I use.
Speaker 5 (57:22):
Hand chest hair is natural, Lufa. It is a little bit.
You want to see it. I mean, I feel like
it's not my first rodeo.
Speaker 4 (57:30):
I feel like we've gone down a really weird It's fine.
Speaker 5 (57:33):
Just so you don't have chest hair, you have like
four right, you can't really lather up four chest hairs.
Speaker 9 (57:38):
No, but I can say hi to them, you know,
I can check in they are there if that's where
you're going.
Speaker 5 (57:46):
But you're just a bar to the body kind of guy, too.
Speaker 4 (57:48):
Right, I am.
Speaker 9 (57:49):
But I got a different bar for Christmas, a little
soap bar package, right, and these things before you judge, man,
there are some girthy blocks of soap here, right. So
these things, these thick mamas, they're lasting me a while.
Speaker 5 (58:01):
Like that squatch soap type thing.
Speaker 16 (58:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (58:03):
This thing is like a ball. Yeah, and it dries
out my skin. So I had to start using my
wife's moisturizer. I never going back. Jim you're not gonna
take a shot at him for that. You'll bust my
balls about the loop of it.
Speaker 4 (58:14):
He says.
Speaker 5 (58:14):
Moisturizer. You sit there and laugh.
Speaker 7 (58:16):
That's proper skinny, proper skin care. Good for ross, Jim.
He's only showering once a month and might as well
take care of him another way.
Speaker 5 (58:24):
Do you moisturize, Lorn when you get the shower way
to go?
Speaker 4 (58:27):
I don't do anything. I have to be honest.
Speaker 8 (58:29):
I like literally, the only thing that I do is sunscreen.
Speaker 5 (58:33):
And that's it.
Speaker 4 (58:34):
That's it. No like lotion or anything like thathing. I
just am not that person that is so crazy to me.
I don't do any of it. Every woman, my man,
I know I am not a normal woman. We have
so much lotion at our house. I are not a
normal woman, Jim.
Speaker 8 (58:53):
I think I think you have actually probably figured that
out at this point in time. We've known each other
for twenty years. All I'm saying is I don't do
I don't do moisturizer. I do sunscreen on my face
and that's that's it. Yeah, that's pretty much it. That's
my thing.
Speaker 9 (59:08):
And you moisturize, now, Yeah, I'm a moisturizer and you
should see this bottle. It is so sexy. It's like
a little it's like a potion.
Speaker 13 (59:16):
Dude.
Speaker 5 (59:16):
It looks like you rub it and a genie comes out. Yeah,
I cannot believe your wife deals with that, because if
I touched any of my wife's products, I would never
hear the end of it. Dude, because and I want
to tell you some of it I don't want touch
because I don't want to know how much it costs,
because some of that stuff she buys is rea donculous.
Speaker 8 (59:32):
Now, I will say this though, I feel very kind
of guilty about the fact that I'm a woman who
doesn't care about this.
Speaker 5 (59:40):
Why would you care? I don't get it because you're married.
I mean, yeah, doesn't care like all of the all of.
Speaker 4 (59:47):
The My husband has more products than I have. Okay,
I literally don't.
Speaker 5 (59:51):
You probably should be taking shots at ross.
Speaker 9 (59:53):
Then you got to see this bottle, man, I'm excited
about the bottle. It's got hit and it's made out
of glass something else, and it's like all French leo
or something.
Speaker 4 (01:00:08):
Are you avoid what does it say? I'm curious it is.
Speaker 9 (01:00:11):
I don't even know it's French. French gobblygook. I don't
have no idea.
Speaker 5 (01:00:15):
Are you a moisturizer Jack?
Speaker 7 (01:00:16):
I recently yes, in the past couple of months, started
using a face moisturizer because it also has SBF in it,
and I want the sunscreen aspect as well.
Speaker 4 (01:00:27):
Screens everything. Sunscreen is everything.
Speaker 5 (01:00:29):
Deb actually gave me as a gift one time, because
we were talking about this on the air. She gave
me a gift and it was a little kit a
male for males to do all the moisturizer that had
ice cream and everything like that. And I use that
for about I don't know, probably about two or three weeks.
I was actually pretty good at it, and then I
caught myself in the mirror putting on moisturizer and just
(01:00:50):
cried for a minute.
Speaker 4 (01:00:51):
No, you gotta let go. No, I can't get off
that horse.
Speaker 8 (01:00:56):
All that matters the sunscreen. All that matters the sunscreen.
Speaker 4 (01:00:59):
You got it.
Speaker 9 (01:01:00):
It's time. Hopefully that wasn't the reason why. Hopefully you
just lost it, and it wasn't just like a I
can't look at four.
Speaker 8 (01:01:06):
Years old and I've and I think I'm okay for
fifty four, and that's because of sunscreen.
Speaker 5 (01:01:13):
Okay, very good. Yeah, well I'm not fifty four, and
I know that there's not a sunscreen alive that can
bring fifty four years back to me. Buddy, I got
bad news. I could do it with sand same exact result.
Speaker 4 (01:01:24):
All right.
Speaker 5 (01:01:24):
Four oh seven nine four one text seven seven zero three.
One coin is your four o'clock keyword that COI n
go to real radio, dout of pim and send that
away for your chance in a thousand bucks. We will
do cob recort next right after this.
Speaker 19 (01:01:54):
Hi guy, how you doing?
Speaker 10 (01:01:56):
First of all, I love all of you, but I
hate have to be the one.
Speaker 7 (01:02:00):
To say it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
But the soap straight to the body.
Speaker 10 (01:02:05):
No wash claw, that's the white people think I.
Speaker 4 (01:02:11):
Never knew it was a white Now we know. That's
one opinion.
Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
All you white people, all these white people, all right
for my family is all right? No, you're fine, all right?
Four oh seven nine six four one text has seven
seven zero three one coin is your four o'clock keyword.
C O I n go to real radio out of
him and send that away for your chance at one
thousand bucks. Welcome back, And I'm Jim Lawrence here, Jack
(01:02:35):
is here, and so is Ross. Let's do Colbert.
Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
Court when you are listening to is real? Well sort of.
Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
The participants are not actors as a fact. This is, however,
a real case that will be decided here in our
four of the Colbert Court.
Speaker 5 (01:02:51):
Cob Court Brock. You better good bring Glenn Clausman from
Klosman Law. That's k l A U s m A
in law dot com Up. This is right there in
the winter park four oh seven nine one seven seventeen
eighteen car crash gaul Klawsman, guys good in loud for
mister Glenn Clausman. Buy good to see you. Good to
see you as well. EF you brought a friend?
Speaker 16 (01:03:11):
Uh, yeah, I've got a spine model here today, is
uh because this is part of what we're talking about.
Speaker 7 (01:03:15):
To that it is.
Speaker 16 (01:03:16):
Yes, I anticipated it might be, so I might as
well bring a visual aid.
Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
Very nice, U Glenn. Quick question.
Speaker 9 (01:03:22):
When you started becoming a lawyer, did you were you
fully aware day one that like, all right, I'm about
to learn a lot about the human body.
Speaker 16 (01:03:30):
Now, when I started, I didn't start doing injury law.
So but when I started doing injury law, I knew
I needed to learn as much as I possibly could
about the anatomy.
Speaker 9 (01:03:40):
And then you compared to a doctor right now, I mean,
I bet you you know a lot about a C six,
C seven, or you know the parts of a spine.
Do you ever catch yourself impressing yourself when it comes
to fun snapple facts about the human body?
Speaker 4 (01:03:55):
Not? Not really?
Speaker 16 (01:03:56):
But you know, the benefit is when you you litigate
spine cases and injuries to the spine, you end up
taking depositions from doctors who are experts. You take your
doctor's deposition that when I say your doctor, the doctor
that's done the surgery or is handling the treatment of
your client, and the other side usually hires a doctor
to say your client's either not hurt as bad or
(01:04:18):
it's not from the accident. You take that deposition and
you learn a lot from what the doctors have to
say on therowth about the particular parts of their body.
Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
Yeah, and that makes you a better lawyer too, because
when people coming off with injuries and you can actually
kind of semi identify what's going on or at least
something that you've heard that's similar, it saves a lot
of time and money for the client.
Speaker 16 (01:04:36):
Yeah, and things are changing all the time, so I'm
always on Google. I'm always researching and there's a lot
of medical papers that you can access on Google and
learn a lot.
Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
Yeah, for sure, especially with AI, the ability for aid
going to break all that info down into something that's
more consumable for you as well.
Speaker 16 (01:04:50):
Right, it's an amazing world. In fact, when my wife
had her need for getting surgery, I researched that. I
found everything I wanted to learn on it just on
the Internet. That's awesome, that's amazing.
Speaker 5 (01:05:00):
Glenn is a personal injury attorney but in town for
many many years, and his specialty is car crashes. That's
why we say car crash called Klausman, and that's why
one of the many reasons many lawyers around town will
call him for information on situations like that as well.
Legal Elite has been part of the best attorneys in
Central Florida for many many years. Drops by and we
do a case. Now, this is the case you're arguing
(01:05:21):
right now.
Speaker 16 (01:05:22):
This is a case I got a phone call about
and just you know, needed to get some advice to
the client, and I thought it might be interesting for
you all to hear to say, thank very nice.
Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
So what we're gonna do is gonna read the case Lauren,
and then we'll go around the room and trying to
figure out what we think should happen. And then of
course we'll turn it over to Glenn and we'll find
out what the actual attorney's going to happen. Very exciting,
all right, So here we go. That's right, I excited.
Bailey was injured in a car accident and called her
primary care physician. The primary care physician told her they
do not see auto accident patients and referred Bailey to
(01:05:50):
a clinic that actually does see accident patients. Bailey has
neck and back pain, and the clinic started Bailey with
a schedule for chiropractic treatment five days a week for
the first two weeks, and then three days a week
for the next four weeks. Bailey's had treatment for two
weeks now and does not feel any better at all.
Bailey asked the doctor about getting an MRI over neck
and back and was told she would have to be
(01:06:11):
reevaluated for six or have to be evaluated for six
weeks of treatment to see if she actually needs.
Speaker 4 (01:06:16):
The MRI scan.
Speaker 5 (01:06:18):
You are Bailey's attorney and she is asking for your advice.
What do you suggest? So, what's happening. Is this the
doctor when you go to the hospital, The doctor says,
but you are an accident. We don't do that right now,
I'll send him to clinic. The clinic says, hey, look,
we're gonna do the chyropactor treatment for five days a week.
Speaker 4 (01:06:34):
We're gonna do that.
Speaker 5 (01:06:35):
For a couple weeks, and then we're gonna go to
three days a week for the next four weeks. And
then Bailey says, well, two weeks after this every day thing,
and I'm not feeling even at least a bit better.
I want to get an MRI. And we know for
a fact from other cases that the insurance companies or
these clinics want you to go through every single possibility
before they spend one dime on getting an MRI. We
(01:06:57):
know that for a fact. So what do you guys
think clinic doesn't actually spend the money on the MRI.
That'll still send somebody out for an MRI, right, exactly
for the insurance. Right, what do you guys think I
can't do that?
Speaker 4 (01:07:07):
Sorry? Sorry, no, not good? Yeah, not good.
Speaker 5 (01:07:11):
So what we know is is the chiropractic treatment for
five days a week for the first two weeks. If
you don't feel any relief from that. The three days
a week for the next four weeks ain't gonna matter either.
And what I'm trying to figure is what is the
parameter for her to be able to go back and
argue with the insurance company and say, hey, look, let's
just do the MRI. I shouldn't have to go through
(01:07:32):
this treatment anymore because it's not working now.
Speaker 16 (01:07:36):
Her insurance company will say, you decide what treatment you're
going to get. We don't decide that for you. So
it's not like she can call her insurance company and say,
what do I do? Oh?
Speaker 5 (01:07:45):
Really, no, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:07:48):
She needs to decide, and she's got a lawyer and
they need to decide what's best. She needs to make
the decisions on her own. Her insurance company is not
going to say I want you to go to this doctor.
I want you to go to that doctor. That usually
happens when her insurance company would question whether or not
she needs any more treatment. Then they might send her
to a doctor that they use to evaluate people with
(01:08:10):
the hope possibly it's my opinion, at least, the hope
that that doctor say they don't need any more treatment,
and then in that case her insurance company wouldn't pay
any more for treatment.
Speaker 5 (01:08:19):
Yeah, because we haven't even heard the word insurance check.
Speaker 16 (01:08:20):
Yeah no, yeah, yeah, insurance. That's not an issue right here.
Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
So why is she not getting the MRI.
Speaker 16 (01:08:26):
Because her doctor has not yet referred. The doctor said,
let's wait till we get six weeks of treatment and
see if you really need it. Maybe you'll get better
by that and you don't need it.
Speaker 4 (01:08:34):
But how do you actually determine what the treatment is
without an MRI.
Speaker 16 (01:08:39):
That's a great question.
Speaker 5 (01:08:41):
I mean that in others, what she's saying, what you're
saying is basically you don't even know she's getting the
correct treatment. We don't know what she has right this
is giving your blind gyro brexit treatment. We have no
idea if it's exactly He could be making it worse.
Speaker 16 (01:08:52):
Well, we know, we know abso Yeah, what we know
is she's had he has neck and back pain. The
chiropractors done X rays. He believes in back and back
are a little bit out of line, and that's why
he needs to do this treatment. That's usually what we
see when we get chiropractice treatment.
Speaker 8 (01:09:07):
The chiropractice treatment in general, we don't know specifically without
the MRI, whether it's hurting her, it's manipulation of the spine.
And we don't even know what her injury is based
on what we're talking about.
Speaker 7 (01:09:24):
Right.
Speaker 16 (01:09:24):
What we know is from the x rays that the
chiropractor believes that her spine is a little bit out
of line and he can that might adjust it and
put it back in line, and maybe she'll be better.
Speaker 4 (01:09:33):
That might be true independent of the injury though. That's correct.
Speaker 7 (01:09:38):
Yeah, right, when I went to a chiropractor, I learned
out of condition, but I had it for years. But
it doesn't mean that the injury is related to what
the chiropractor is looking on that screen. The MRI is
going to show things that the x ray does not
absolutely point.
Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
Well, that sounds completely crazy, you're right. I mean the
doctor basically said, hey, look we just go to the
chirop He didn't. He just he has no idea what's
going on. He just favored the blind advice to know
the chiropractor because she has neck and back pain for
an auto accident, that's the is that the standard?
Speaker 16 (01:10:10):
Well, here's what happened. She calls her primary physician, and
the primary physician doesn't do auto accident cases. They don't
like dealing with lawyers, so they won't do auto accident cases.
It's pretty common that your your primary is not going
to see you for an auto accident, so they refer
you to somebody else. And what's happening is we see
a lot of referrals to these types of clinics that
have cultivated a relationship with primary care physicians, and so
(01:10:33):
that's where they go. And then we are in a
position where the first line of treatment that they do
is usually chiropractic. Now, in this case, they didn't order
an MRI and she wants an MRI, and that's really
the question.
Speaker 4 (01:10:47):
Why do you do for it? Why is the first
line chiropractice?
Speaker 5 (01:10:51):
Well, because it's it's not an expensive SMRI, But in reality,
how do we know that's not the case either because
MRIs or what eleven hundred bucks? Well roughly, yeah, that's it.
Speaker 16 (01:11:00):
Insurance, your auto insurance from ever pays the first ten
thousand dollars storage your medical bills. So if you're in
an accident, your own insurance is going to pay the
first ten thousand dollars storage of medical bills. And what
they pay for an MRI is roughly one thousand bucks.
Speaker 5 (01:11:12):
Okay, so she's going to go to chiropractor treatment at
one hundred dollars a session, well more than that, usually
more than one hundred dollars a session. So just this
first two weeks alone is going to cost her over
one thousand dollars, well over one thousand dollars. Yeah, why
would it seems like that's the backwards way to do it,
because if you have the MRI right off rip, you
would know whether or not you actually need the chiropractic
treatments at all.
Speaker 16 (01:11:32):
Right, well, why is it going backwards? Well, and then
the response to that is, why do you need an MRI?
Just because you have neck and back pain doesn't mean
you need an MRI because that doesn't necessarily mean you've
got a problem with a disc. That's what you look
at MRIs for for a problem with a disk. Maybe
a disk is pressing on a nerve and that's what's
causing the pain. And the argument that's made for not
(01:11:54):
getting an MRI right off the bat is let's see
if we can do treatment for you need one, because
maybe the treatment will make it better, that's the argument.
Speaker 8 (01:12:02):
But that treatment is more diagnostic, I mean why is
there such a why is there such a pushback on
an MRI.
Speaker 4 (01:12:11):
I mean it literally can actually it's a money stacking.
It can diagnose everything.
Speaker 5 (01:12:18):
And then what happens to Laura is this is you
wipe out the ten grand that you're giving your insurance
company on these chiropractice treatments. Because we're talking one thousand
dollars just for the first two weeks. We have been
gotten to the other for weeks actually a couple more. Yeah,
so now you're going to have you're gonna be spent.
You're gonna spend twenty five hundred dollars on your chiropractice.
Speaker 4 (01:12:34):
A guess why is there such a pushback on MRI.
Speaker 16 (01:12:37):
But they're both, they're both great questions. First, first, you know,
the the issue about why is there a pushback on
the MRI that there should not be. From a lawyer's
point of view, we want to see what's going on
with the patient inside their body, to know what's happening,
whether or not they should be getting chiropractical treatment or
maybe not getting chiropractice treatment. A patient could have a
her needed disc and getting a chiropractical treatum might not
(01:12:59):
be beneficial, might make things worse. Even so, you'd like
to know before you're adjusting somebody's spine if they have
a herney of the disk in that area. Now that
you know the chiropractice feel most of them would feel like, well,
I can tell from my examination and from the treatment
whether or not there is a herney at a disk,
and that's you know, sometimes that's true, but it's not
always true. If somebody's got symptoms going down the leg,
(01:13:22):
the numbness and tingular pain going down the leg, that's
an indication that there's a disk pressing on a nerve
coming out at a low back, and that's what causing.
Speaker 4 (01:13:30):
If you've got.
Speaker 16 (01:13:30):
Numbness or tangling or pain going out from the neck,
radiating out from the neck, that could be an indication
that a disc is being irritated or a disc is
irritating a nerve in the neck.
Speaker 4 (01:13:40):
So this is those things that you want to know,
those things. I had both of those things about.
Speaker 16 (01:13:44):
I want to know those things.
Speaker 5 (01:13:45):
And it's just a math problem, right because if you
do the MRI first, and the MRI says, well, you're
definitely still going to need the chiropractor treatment, You're still
going to go through the chiropractic treatment and it's going
to cost more. Theoretically, if you went through the treatments
first and that did solve it, that would save the
MRI expense.
Speaker 16 (01:14:00):
Yeah, someone's long TERMIL and the MR expenses a couple
grand up front because you're going to want to do
one for the neck and a low back. If the
person's really complaining about both and you think both are necessary,
then that's you know, two grand right away out of
your ten grand.
Speaker 7 (01:14:14):
And is it also a chance what you find in
an MRI I would more likely lead a patient to
other medical services that this clinic does not provide.
Speaker 16 (01:14:21):
That certainly can happen.
Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
Certainly can happen.
Speaker 16 (01:14:24):
It depends on the symptoms also, Jack, It depends on
the symptoms and.
Speaker 5 (01:14:27):
That loss of quality of life, right, because now you
can't move around, you can't do anything. Hell is this
woman by the way, this woman's in her twenties, in
her twenties, in her twenties.
Speaker 4 (01:14:34):
Yeah, yeah, how big was the impact? So impact was
a moderate impact to the rear? Basic?
Speaker 19 (01:14:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 16 (01:14:41):
Yeah, in her twenties, inner twenties, you a moderate impact
to the rear. Yeah, So you know, the question she
has is you're the lawyer. Now what do you tell her?
Speaker 5 (01:14:52):
Well, okay, so hold on, is that written in stone
that hole? I mean, could you go up and say, hey, look,
you know, we're not going to do any more of
these chiropractor treatments. It's not helping at all. I'm lobbying
the doctor in the insurance company to go get the
MRI right now and let's just end this facade.
Speaker 4 (01:15:05):
And move forward. Does she not have insurance?
Speaker 16 (01:15:08):
That's a great question also, because once you exhaust your
ten thousand dollars worth of insurance that you have with
your auto insurance, then your health insurance will kick in.
Your health insurance won't pay anything as long as you
have that ten thousand dollars of auto insurance to cover yourself.
So in this particular case, this lady has no health insurance.
So once she bleeds through that ten grand, and maybe
(01:15:30):
she's going to need epidurals like we talked about before,
went on in the Arab's a pain management injection to
help get rid of the pain. You know, the problem
is if she goes through six seven eight grand a
chiropractical treatment, it gets a couple MRIs that ten grand
in auto insurance is gone. It is gone, and now
she has to pay out of pocket at the time
(01:15:50):
of her settlement. Usually because a lot of these doctors
will see you if they know there's insurance to Here's
what if there's enough insurance for the party who costs crash,
and if you have uninsured motorist coverage, if there's enough
insurance there to pay for your medical treatment when the
case settles, the doctors will get paid. Now, some doctors
won't see you that way, but there are doctors who
(01:16:12):
are willing to see you. If you've gone through all
your car insurance, there's none of that left. You have
no health insurance. But if we know the at fault
party caused it, it's their fault. If we know they've
got insurance to cover your injuries and you've got some
uninsured motorist coverage, if they don't have enough insurance, then
there's doctors that will see you and do pay management
for you and injections and that sort of thing.
Speaker 8 (01:16:33):
I feel like there's a little bit of a takeaway here, right,
because you've mentioned uninsured motorist coverage multiple times now, So
what's the takeaway here?
Speaker 5 (01:16:41):
I mean, yeah, we talk about this all the time.
Speaker 8 (01:16:43):
Yeah, but I'm a little bit new to this, so
can you can you give me your spiel?
Speaker 16 (01:16:49):
Here uninsured motors case, Here's what happens in this case.
Let's say the at fault party only had ten thousand
dollars worth of insurance to pay for the injuries. And
let's say the injuries you know, are worth maybe one
hundred thousand dollars by the end of the day. With
this person, we don't know because they're just starting out,
but assume that that ten thousand dollars is going to
be going rather quickly. So you want to make sure
(01:17:09):
you have uninsured motors coverage to cover you to pay
for your damages that the at fault party's insurance isn't
enough to pay for. Unfortunately, today, lots of people cause
accidents that don't have enough insurance to pay for the
injuries they cause. The bad drivers that cost them a
lot more money to buy insurance than if they weren't
bad drivers, And there are lots of folks that don't
(01:17:32):
have any insurance at all to pay for injuries because
Florida doesn't require that. Florida is the only state, well
one of the only states. Florida only requires that you
have insurance to pay for damage you do to someone
else's car and for your own ten thousand the medical
bills not for the damage you do when you injure
someone else. So that's why people need uninsured motors coverage,
(01:17:53):
because we see so many accidents where there's not enough
insurance coverage to pay people's damages. I see it every day.
Speaker 5 (01:18:00):
Your twenties. She's in her twenties and theoretically, looking at
could be what could be neck and back pain for
the remainder or a large portion of her life. Yeah,
some of these things. I mean, you know this, Some
of these things never go away. I mean your unfortunately,
your wife has dealt with us for many years, does
she not?
Speaker 4 (01:18:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 16 (01:18:13):
And with Bailey in this particular case, we don't know
yet because she's just starting out right. He hasn't had
the MRI yet. So you know what I'm impressing the
Bailey is, you know you got to get an MRI.
I let's see what's going on there, right. Yeah, And
if this doctor doesn't want to order it, you may
want to consider going to another doctor or telling him, look,
I feel like I need this. If you don't want
to order it, I understand, maybe I should get another opinion. Yeah,
(01:18:35):
when do you get involved? Like if she I mean,
she's obviously reached out to you, when do you get involved?
I can involve right now?
Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
Out to me?
Speaker 5 (01:18:41):
Right yeah? So in other words, with the case, right now,
you're telling her advice like go get yourself an MRI
because obviously this isn't working, and we can kind of
go from there, right.
Speaker 4 (01:18:49):
Don't we have a southern lawyer we can check with.
Speaker 9 (01:18:52):
Oh I'm so happy you brought me out of the
closet here, mister Bradshaw. You said that she was twenty
something years old, in her twenties. Yeahies maybe mid hoigh twenties,
maybe twenty seven, twenty seven years What happened twenty seven
years ago?
Speaker 5 (01:19:06):
How about a little movie I like to call ten
Things I Hate about? Does that ring a batt mister Klausman?
Speaker 16 (01:19:13):
Ten things you hate about?
Speaker 19 (01:19:14):
What you not?
Speaker 12 (01:19:16):
You?
Speaker 4 (01:19:17):
The movie? The name of the movie. Please don't take
this the wrong way. He does he hit you? Has
a ten things kind of guy. I don't know.
Speaker 16 (01:19:24):
I think Fanticus has a movie before I walk.
Speaker 9 (01:19:26):
In y I believe actually on the Coln Treer mant Freer,
that's French for I disagree, all right, it is ten
things I hate about insurance policies and chiro practic practices
and all these things, so many things that I hate
at the end of what this poor girl's going through.
And it's also a teen romantic comedy movie, so.
Speaker 16 (01:19:50):
You know what I'm thinking too. I brought a spine
model in today, all right, show, yeah, to show what
it actually looks like in the spine. You've got vertebrates.
Those are the bone things in between the vertebrates and
the discs and X rays do not show the discs,
and the discs are what can press on a nerve
causing you problems, causing you damage. That's a soft issue
(01:20:10):
between the vertice, right, it's a cushion between the vertebrates.
So right, So X rays they're looking to see if
you have a fracture, but it does not show if
you've got a disc that's being compressed or herniated or
bulging and pressing on a nerve. That's why you need
an MRI. And I've been thinking, I don't have a
name for this spine model, and I'm sure fatic this
(01:20:31):
can probably help us guess what.
Speaker 5 (01:20:32):
We're gonna name the spine model.
Speaker 9 (01:20:33):
Well, first of all, that's just another thing that I
hate about all of this. All right, that's just I
put that on the long list. I would like to
call him Reggie, Reggie very nice because it's just right.
Speaker 16 (01:20:45):
In the mid.
Speaker 5 (01:20:48):
Yeah, and there's no question that spine model uses a washcloth.
Speaker 4 (01:20:53):
How do you know?
Speaker 7 (01:20:54):
I just kind of get a feeling, Jimmy real quick
Textter says, because of listening to this segment, they did
stack their three policies with uninsured motors coverage and had
one hundred and fifty thousand in medical coverage and still
got money back after people they got in an accident
with did not have enough to cover anything except themselves.
Speaker 16 (01:21:13):
Happens, happens every day, and I'm so glad people are
listening and getting uninsured motorscrafts and buying as much as
they can and stacking it if they can.
Speaker 7 (01:21:20):
Talking to my agent today and I explained to them,
as I'm reviewing all my policies, I go, it's mandatory
that we have uninsured motors.
Speaker 4 (01:21:28):
Gotta do it.
Speaker 5 (01:21:29):
You gotta do it for sure, on Rimris right here,
get both of those right.
Speaker 16 (01:21:33):
Yep, MRIs, you need to see what's going on inside
your body, then the X rays don't show it.
Speaker 5 (01:21:37):
And if you ever have a situation like Bailey get
herself in, don't forget me. You got to call Glenn
Clausman because you'll give you that great advice. Like he
is Bailey and he's gonna help her out as well.
He can do the same thing for you. He's been
doing this for many, many years. Four oh seven nine
one seven, seventeen eighteen. Remember all it's a car crash
called Klasman and it's Klosman Law dot com.
Speaker 4 (01:21:53):
Yep, thanks so much.
Speaker 5 (01:21:54):
You got it good loves what he said. Yeah, you
and reag you get the hell out of here. You're
at here all right for seven text us seven seven
zero three one. Get a fresh keyword for you now,
(01:22:17):
Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show, Real Radio one
oh four point one. You're five o'clock keyword is family.
Speaker 4 (01:22:21):
F A M I L. Y. You don't what to do?
Speaker 5 (01:22:24):
Go to Real Radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. Family guys, that
is your five o'clock keyword.
Speaker 4 (01:22:32):
Go get that money. We wish you the very very best.
Welcome back.
Speaker 5 (01:22:35):
I'm Jim there's Lauren Roe with us today. This year,
Lauren Jacket is here as well. Yep, and along with Ross.
Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
It's all true.
Speaker 5 (01:22:42):
It is all true. I got a crazy story. Now
we have a very special guest coming up in just
a few minutes. Next segment, we're going to talk to
doctor Kirsten Carter. She's the director and co founder of
Grace Medical Home, which is kind of cool because this
is a well I'll let I'll let doctor Carter explain it.
But as I read the mission statement today, it is
a facility that allows you to get medical help, medical
(01:23:06):
care because and I think there's some updated numbers as
we were talking to doctor Carter a little bit earlier today.
The initial numbers where in Orange County alone? How many
people do you think in Orange County? You live in
Orange County, Ross, Yeah, how many people do you think
right now in Orange County do not have health insurance?
Medical insurance? Three hundred thousand?
Speaker 7 (01:23:27):
All right, Jack, what do you think? I will say,
do we know the total population? Yea one point four
or five million? I believe, Oh really yeah, yeah, I believe.
So I'd say maybe it's higher four hundred thousand.
Speaker 5 (01:23:39):
Yeah, what do you think Laura knows it's about one
hundred and sixty thousand, but I think we do have
an updated number and that may have increased. So one
hundred and sixty thousand people in this community do not
have health coverage. And doctor Carter's going to talk about
what they do over there at Greg's medical home and
how important it is. We'll do that around five twenty
as well. You guys remember the Gilgo Beach killer, the
(01:24:00):
rex hureman. That's Long Island, New York correct, Long Island,
Long Island, g Island. Yeah, he's in the news right
now because I guess he just not only has confessed,
but admitted to another murder that they didn't even know
he committed. How many are attributed to this cat? I
think he has thirteen, f so, but that's not the story.
(01:24:22):
The story is even well, not crazier than that, because
you don't want to say that thirteen women dying at
his hands or is crazier than this.
Speaker 6 (01:24:28):
Do you know?
Speaker 5 (01:24:28):
Are you familiar with the story?
Speaker 7 (01:24:29):
Worm?
Speaker 4 (01:24:30):
By the way, honestly, I'm not. Yeah, a little shocked.
Speaker 7 (01:24:33):
There's a oh good, you don't need this in your life,
that this information no one needs in their head.
Speaker 5 (01:24:39):
I'll give you no, but he's gonna give me.
Speaker 4 (01:24:40):
He's gonna all right, I'll give you a quick rundown
so we can talk about it.
Speaker 5 (01:24:43):
There's this guy, giant guy's name was Rex Huerman, and
he was this big six foot five, three hundred bound dude.
He was an architect, right, a real horror door over
person y. Yeah, yeah he uh. Well, they kept finding
women at this place called Gilgo Beach and it is
it's a long island jack Gilgo, Yes, yeah. And they
found all these women disposed of in this area and
(01:25:05):
obviously they were murdered, right. A lot of them were
women of the night, prostitutes, other people, drug addicts and
things like that. He was obviously picking up and then
doing his thing and then dumping them off. Right, So
they bust this guy because of genetic information. They find
out it was actually a hair on a pizza led
(01:25:26):
to a hair that they found on one of the women,
and that's how they busted this guy, and they conclusively
found out it's him. He wound up a minting it.
It's been a big story. Matter of fact, they've already
made a movie about it called the Gilgo Beach Killer.
House of secrets. Now he has a wife and a daughter, right,
and they lived in this house and they still live
(01:25:48):
in that house. Ah, here's where it gets crazy. You ready.
He killed the women with the exception of one, in
the basement right or in their bedroom and took care
of them or dismembered them in the basement. Okay, the
wife now sleeps in the basement. What the wife now
(01:26:10):
in that house moved into and sleeps in the same
room that those women were dismembered?
Speaker 8 (01:26:17):
It?
Speaker 14 (01:26:17):
What is that?
Speaker 4 (01:26:20):
Why?
Speaker 5 (01:26:22):
She says?
Speaker 4 (01:26:23):
She said that? She She says, I don't understand.
Speaker 5 (01:26:28):
The former wife of Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Huerman
still lives in the same house where he murdered seven
women and even sleeps in the kill room, constantly reliving
the victim's horrifying final moments. She told the makers of
this Peacock documentary series.
Speaker 4 (01:26:44):
Is she doing it as a form of self punishment?
Speaker 5 (01:26:47):
I think she is, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:26:48):
I think that's kind of what she winds up saying.
Speaker 5 (01:26:50):
Now, what it is is the whole basement looks different
than That's really bizarre. It's been completely gutted, new floor,
new walls, new moldings.
Speaker 4 (01:26:56):
And everything, and.
Speaker 7 (01:27:00):
Camera are they Are we bringing a mould dog. That's
funny in the basement room. I would definitely bring in
the muld dog, It says in an off camera voice,
ask the one. She goes, what do you want people
to know about why you moved into the basement, into
the kill room, into the room where these heinous things happen.
The brutal truth is that rex Yrmann said that he
(01:27:20):
dismembered the bodies in this room. Is that the she goes, Now,
there's me, I'm in this room, and I'm here because
I do feel spiritual. I'm trying to stay spiritual in
my own way, and that I'm really sorry for what
these victims went through. So I think what you said
Jack is actually right. She feels so guilty that she
could not figure this out or did not figure this out,
(01:27:41):
and was incapable of doing anything to stop her husband
from causing all this drama and all this tragedy, that
she is going to punish herself now by sleeping in
that same room. What is really what is amazing, though
they lived, the wife and daughter lived in this house.
He killed these women in their bedroom, dismembered them in
(01:28:02):
the basement, and the wife and daughter had no idea
this was going on, because she they would go away
for weekends or trips or whatever, and that's when he
would do it. But there is a rumor I read
something at one point that he actually did kill when
these women in the basement while.
Speaker 5 (01:28:17):
They're why his while his wife and daughter are in
the house. I'm a little sick to my stysh she
would she would never go down there because I guess
he would be He would be real protective of the basement.
And she never asked questions. She was just like one
of those women who when the husband said, don't go
down there, she didn't ask questions. She just didn't go
down there. And that's not that uncommon, by the way,
and women that are married to men like this because
(01:28:38):
they're very overbearing. Where's the washer and dry Yeah, yeah, right, exactly.
Speaker 4 (01:28:43):
Yeah. She said that.
Speaker 5 (01:28:44):
She said, I'm haunted by my dreams every night. It
will never go away. It's gonna follow me for the
rest of my life.
Speaker 9 (01:28:51):
Therapy, just therapy. You don't have to sleep in the
basement that your husband did all these killings.
Speaker 4 (01:28:56):
You don't. You can talk to a medical professional.
Speaker 5 (01:28:59):
The thing is is now and I just found this
out yesterday. You remember Jonestown, right, Lauren, Jonestown. Yeah, of course,
Well there there is, believe it or not, in America,
there are a number of tour companies that do what
they call dark tourism, and they and they.
Speaker 4 (01:29:13):
Do that makes sense that people are totally fixated.
Speaker 5 (01:29:15):
And they do these trips and they visit these places
where these horrifying things have happened. That whether it be
the the house where John Bennet excuse me, John, to
day Ramsey where she that was.
Speaker 4 (01:29:26):
Right around the corner from my sorority house. Yeah, yeah,
literally right around the corner.
Speaker 5 (01:29:31):
And now I was just learned that Jonestown is now
experiencing that that there are trips now that go to
Guyana so that you can visit the Jonestown massacre site.
And I don't understand how she can't move out of
this house. There's no way possible. She wouldn't be able
to sell it. I mean, just on morbid curiosity alone,
she could probably sell it. I know that Jonestown is
a very dark and morbid tale. It's what it'slievable.
Speaker 7 (01:29:53):
It is probably one of the most important human like
teaching lessons that we have in human history and one
hundred years because honestly, a bunch of young people being
you know, influenced and saying that there's a better life
out there. I have the keys to it. Follow me,
(01:30:13):
watch this. We don't need rules, we don't need laws.
Speaker 5 (01:30:17):
And that's exactly why they went to Guyana, by the way,
because they would never be able to pull the what
they did off in America.
Speaker 4 (01:30:21):
They would have been rated immediately, right.
Speaker 9 (01:30:23):
And man, there's just such a lesson there when someone
is trying to convince you that they're the only ones
with the answers that red flag.
Speaker 5 (01:30:31):
Yeah, yeah, the reddest of flags, the reddest, fallest and
reddest of flags, the reddest of flags that I have
picked up on human history as someone going I have
the answers to.
Speaker 4 (01:30:40):
All of your life.
Speaker 7 (01:30:41):
I know more about this than anybody. Yeah, i know
more about all these subjects than anybody. I'm the foremost
expert in everything. Speaking of creepy tourism, ye, creepy tourism.
Remember a couple of years ago, was in New Hampshire
and the person we were with said, oh, you see
that right there, that is where Glenn Maxwell was hiding
out when the FBI erased, it arrested, and they stage
(01:31:02):
it here. So cut back to a week ago. We're
in the US Virgin Islands. My wife and I are
doing a snorkeling excursion and our guide says this is okay.
So we left Saint Thomas. That's Saint John, Saint Croix,
and you see that little white building over there, and
that that that's Epstein's Island.
Speaker 4 (01:31:23):
Know why did they even tell you that? I don't know,
but as job, it definitely.
Speaker 3 (01:31:29):
Was like a.
Speaker 5 (01:31:31):
My gosh, we were having fun.
Speaker 7 (01:31:33):
Wait, they had the you know, the Toto playing on
the boat where you know, oh, my gosh, you don't
having a great.
Speaker 4 (01:31:45):
Jack?
Speaker 5 (01:31:46):
All right for seven nine six one o four one
text us at seven seven zero three one. So next
time we're gonna a little bak will come back and
we'll talk to doctor Kristen Carter. Like I said, she
is the co director and co founder of Grace Medical Home.
We'll tell you all what that next.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
Today is Cooler Cooler with Ross Paget presented by mills Air.
Turned to the experts at Carrier and turned to the
experts at Millsair dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:32:15):
All right, welcome back to the Jim Colbert show real
Radio one over one point one, you're five o'clock. He
or to his family, that's f A M. I L
WI slide over to you real radio dout of him
and send that away for your chance at one thousand dollars. Guys, family,
that is your five o'clock. Hey word, good luck. We
hope you went. Welcome back. I'm Jim and Lauren Row
with us today. Hello, along with Jack, Yeah, and Ross
(01:32:36):
as well. It's all true. This is coming about because
actually we were talking about this earlier this week, and
then Lauren texts me and she said, I've got the
perfect person to talk about how people when they're uninsured
what they do?
Speaker 3 (01:32:48):
Right?
Speaker 5 (01:32:49):
What what do people do when they don't have health insurance?
And of course I went on their website today and
I know that Kirston has some updated information for me,
I should say, doctor Carter, I have some updated information.
But what I read on the website today for the
Grace Medical Home was one hundred and sixty thousand people
just in Orange County alone for living without health insurance
(01:33:11):
medical insurance, and I think she even has some numbers
that may be a little scarier, guys. Good in allowed
for doctor Kirsten Carter, how you doing, doctor, Good to.
Speaker 1 (01:33:20):
See you, lovely, Thank you for having me.
Speaker 14 (01:33:24):
It's a joy to be here. One of my favorite topics.
And thanks to Lauren, I've known her many years.
Speaker 5 (01:33:30):
Yeah, you are the director and co founder of Grace
Medical Home. And can you explain briefly what Grace Medical
Home is and how it came about?
Speaker 14 (01:33:38):
Of course, So Grace Medical Home is a medical clinic
that serves Orange Counties uninsured. We serve those for whatever
reason don't have Medicare Medicaid or for whatever reason can't
afford or don't have access to healthcare. So we are
like a regular medical office. No one sleeps here. But
what we do is we provide primary internal medicine, family practice, pediatrics,
(01:34:03):
and then we have twenty seven subspecialty clinics where we
have cardiology, gynecology, all that stuff, X ray, ultrasound, medications, dental, food, pantry, counseling, psychiatry.
Speaker 1 (01:34:17):
So we really try to do the whole person.
Speaker 5 (01:34:20):
Wow, that is really amazing. Yeah, that's impress simply amazing.
Now I did say that number, and I did hear
through the grapevine that there are some updated numbers, maybe
even some tri county numbers, and I bet they're horrifying,
aren't they.
Speaker 4 (01:34:32):
Can you give some of those to us?
Speaker 1 (01:34:34):
Well, they really are.
Speaker 14 (01:34:35):
There was some recent study that's been done and it's
really showed that in the Tri current County area Orange
Osciola Seminole, that we have over two hundred and eighty
thousand uninsured people. And those are the folks that we track,
so I'm sure that number is even probably higher. And
in that Tri county area, we have a number of
safety net clinics, which Grace is one of them, but
(01:34:57):
they only serve thirty seven thousand of those, so all
the rest of those people do not have a place
to go.
Speaker 5 (01:35:04):
Is there only one Grace Medical Home or is this
a concept that you guys want to roll out to
other areas other counties.
Speaker 14 (01:35:12):
Well, Grace is currently just in just in Orlando, but
we do have a mobile clinic that goes all over
and so like for example, on May fifth, we'll be
in Eatonville where we do pop up clinics where we
take all comers. So if you don't have insurance, come
by and see us at Macedonia Church. Well, we have
doctors and nurses and we'll be more than happy to
(01:35:33):
take care of you. Other than that, there are some
other clinics, there's federally qualified health centers, there's Shepherd's Hope
and a few others.
Speaker 1 (01:35:41):
But the need is huge.
Speaker 5 (01:35:43):
Yeah, question for doctor Carter.
Speaker 7 (01:35:44):
Yeah, Doctor Carter, how do you get your funding to
be able to provide these services to the thirty seven
thousand or so patients that you do see?
Speaker 14 (01:35:53):
So at Grace Medical Home, we're a five oh one
c three charitable organization. So ours is all run by
donator So our funding partners are the hospitals are probably
our strongest ones.
Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
But other than that, it's people like you.
Speaker 14 (01:36:07):
It's people in the community who donate services financial and
that's usually how that our four point four million dollar
annual budget gets served. It's just all food donations.
Speaker 5 (01:36:18):
Yeah, we just had a segment. We do a segment
on the show Doctor Carter called What'd you do That's new?
And Jack actually referred us to a CBS story from
a while back about an organization that does this globally
ram a remote area medical Yeah, so it's an amazing thing.
Now have you always just done this, doctor Carter, or
do you also have private practice as well? And this
is just another part of your career.
Speaker 14 (01:36:41):
No, well, I started out in private practice, but about
seventeen years ago Grace is coming up.
Speaker 1 (01:36:47):
On our sixteenth year.
Speaker 14 (01:36:48):
Another physician, doctor Marvin Hardy, came alongside, and so we
decided to start Grace because we believe that we're all
in the same and made in the same image of God,
and that we should all have a says to healthcare,
regardless of color, religion, or financial ability.
Speaker 9 (01:37:05):
I have to ask, how frustrating is it whenever you
see because I have some friends in the medical field,
and I've talked to them about this, and they have
grown frustrated when so many simple laws, I mean, so
many simple diagnoses, symptoms, or maybe even end results can
be prevented just by going to see a doctor once
(01:37:25):
a year.
Speaker 1 (01:37:27):
Oh, it's very frustrating.
Speaker 14 (01:37:30):
Most of our patients, I'd say about eighty five percent
of our patients have never had a primary care home
or any sort of prevention, so frequently by the time
they get to us, all I can think of is
I wish you could have come a couple of years ago.
We could have prevented the end organ damage, the heart failure,
of the kidney failure if we just had your diabetes
(01:37:51):
and hypertension controlled.
Speaker 1 (01:37:52):
So it's really unfortunate.
Speaker 9 (01:37:54):
And what's the fastest way to be proactive. I know,
I'm a big believer of getting your blood work done.
How accurate is that?
Speaker 3 (01:38:03):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:38:03):
Absolutely?
Speaker 14 (01:38:04):
That ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,
that saying our grandmother told.
Speaker 1 (01:38:08):
Us, well, she was right, So getting your blood work done,
she was.
Speaker 14 (01:38:12):
They're all those old things, they were right. And so
when you get your blood work done with that's early detection.
Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
So no only that, so you find out your sugar's elevated.
Speaker 14 (01:38:22):
There's lifestyle things you can totally change and make a difference,
you know, and just even changing your diet can make
a big difference and change how you think and feel.
Speaker 1 (01:38:33):
But in the endgame, not dying from early heart disease.
Speaker 4 (01:38:37):
All of that.
Speaker 8 (01:38:38):
And Kirsten, you know, I love the fact that you're
bringing this up because I think even people who have
health insurance are going to think twice about maybe they
should get their blood work done, Maybe they should go
to their primary care, Maybe they should actually do those
things that routinely will help them kind of stave off
what would be a really bad outcome. Are are you
(01:39:00):
seeing more people. I mean, I feel like right now,
from a healthcare perspective, people are struggling. Are you seeing
more people?
Speaker 1 (01:39:11):
Absolutely?
Speaker 14 (01:39:12):
Well, the need is huge, but our obesity rates, fatty
liver is going through the skyrocketing through the roof. It's
now the number one cause of liver failure. And we're
also seeing it in children. We've never seen it in
children and so and all of this has to do
with our sedentary lifestyle, the quality of the food we
eat and the quantity of the food.
Speaker 5 (01:39:34):
Also, let me blow Jim's mind. Fatty liver.
Speaker 9 (01:39:36):
I believe that is the professional uh you know, actual
diagnosis name.
Speaker 14 (01:39:42):
Correct, Well, we call it mas l D, but fatty
liver is also an ICD ten code, so it is
officially a diagnosis.
Speaker 4 (01:39:52):
So sell this out here.
Speaker 9 (01:39:53):
I'm not saying you need advice, but someone's got to
send an email to that PR team.
Speaker 5 (01:39:57):
All right, we're talking about it. Yeah, we're talking to
doctor Kirst Carter. She's a director and co founder of
Grace Medical Home, which got a text on our texting
service doctor asking a question how do people qualify to
get services from Grace Medical Home? Because he's saying, hey,
if somebody pulls up on a maserati. Are you going
to treat them the same as somebody who pulls up
or you know, pushing a you know, a shopping cart.
(01:40:18):
How do you how do you get people in? How
do you qualify them?
Speaker 14 (01:40:22):
Well, what we do is we do actually ask them
for financial statements. We ask them we first make sure
they don't qualify for another service, so whether they get
access to Medicaid, Medicare or they Affordable Healthcare Act, and
we try to connect them with other services, but we
also ask for them to kind of prove they a test.
They do an attest station, so that making sure that
(01:40:44):
our services really.
Speaker 1 (01:40:45):
Are to the ones who need it most. But our
patients frequently look like us. It's amazing, how you know.
Speaker 14 (01:40:53):
We we serve two hundred percent and below the federal
poverty guidelines.
Speaker 1 (01:40:57):
But that's less money but also more money than you think.
Speaker 5 (01:41:01):
Yeah, yeah, and it's so funny. I look to the
right here on my texting service, which is you know,
people can kind of text us as they listen to
the show and listen to you talk and it's very frustrating.
I'll tell you why. And we actually have somebody that's
close to us that has the same mentality says I'm
twenty seven years old, haven't been to a doctor in
ten years. I have unbelievable health insurance, I just can't
bring myself to go. And that's just one of three
(01:41:23):
or four of these we've already gotten in the short
period of time that we've spoken. So do me a favor.
You act like you're speaking to all of Orlando right now.
What did you possibly say as a doctor to get
somebody that has the mentality of I've got great insurance,
but I'm twenty seven and I don't feel at twenty
seven I need to go to the doctor regularly. What
would you say to them to get them into the
office to start kind of doing some of this preventive
(01:41:45):
care that Ross was talking about.
Speaker 1 (01:41:47):
Well, this is simple. Most of us have cars, or
I've driven a car.
Speaker 14 (01:41:51):
If your car like came on or even if you
knew that you needed your oil change, you'd take it
because why do you want it to last?
Speaker 1 (01:41:58):
Do you want it to run way? Well, why would
you think?
Speaker 14 (01:42:01):
Our most precious asset is our health and our body.
Everything else can be replaced. So you're going to treat
your car better than your most precious asset explain that
to me.
Speaker 4 (01:42:11):
Yeah, yeah, no joke, good point.
Speaker 5 (01:42:13):
What type of patient do you see the most, doctor Carter?
I mean when, because I think a lot of people
would believe, like you were saying, it's like me and
you or anybody on the show. Is the misconception of
places like Grace Medical Home that you're only serving like
a certain type of the community, homeless people, people are
really down on their luck. I mean, do you see
a certain group of people that's coming in that's like
different than we've seen before.
Speaker 14 (01:42:35):
Well, most of our patients are working, so they're not homeless.
These are folks, but they're mostly in the service industry.
You know, we have a very prolific service industry in
Service Central Florida, which also means a lot of housekeepers, landscapers,
construction workers. But it's also the probably the person who
cuts your hair, the person who waits on you at
the dry cleaner, even you know, front office staff in
(01:42:58):
small dental offices. You know a lot of people are working,
but they don't have jobs that provide health insurance.
Speaker 5 (01:43:05):
Unbelievable. What are the number one reasons you see people?
Like when people come in, what are the number one
issues or heart issues. Is it dental issues? And the
reason I ask is because the piece that CBS did
it was was that particularly for dental work that week.
Speaker 4 (01:43:18):
It wasn't that week.
Speaker 7 (01:43:19):
It's just that's what the majority of people were going
to then for And because it was.
Speaker 4 (01:43:24):
People insurance is insane. Yeah, it's for people.
Speaker 7 (01:43:27):
Who didn't have insurance or just felt under injury or
couldn't afford to use it with their high deductible and
they were travel hundreds of miles and wait overnight in
parking lots to get you know, free service from this group.
Speaker 4 (01:43:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:43:39):
Well, our dental center is a full service dential center,
so it's definitely very packed. But I would say most
of its heart disease, diabetes, they're usually finding themselves they
had to go to the emergency room for something else.
But unfortunately, like that twenty seven year old who said
he didn't want to go to the doctor, he may
have some that's undiagnosed that we can prevent. The other
(01:44:03):
part is is I feel that education is the most
important thing. I love empowering our patients. You know, you're
in charge of your own destiny, which also means your
own health.
Speaker 1 (01:44:11):
And what does that look like? What are some of
those things that we can make small changes of.
Speaker 7 (01:44:16):
And I think sometimes people might not want to go.
Some people we know might not want to go because
they're afraid the doctor is going to say you need
to change this certain behavior, and it might be a
behavior they don't want to change.
Speaker 1 (01:44:30):
Well, and that definitely happens sometimes also.
Speaker 9 (01:44:33):
Yeah, but you need to at least know, because if
you know, that means you have a chance of implementing
will power and discipline and conquering your own mental mountain.
Speaker 1 (01:44:45):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:44:46):
Yeah, And somebody just text it and says, what do
you do if you've never had a primary care doctor
and you don't even know where to begin.
Speaker 1 (01:44:54):
Well, if you have insurance, then you just use the
back of your card.
Speaker 14 (01:44:57):
You go on your website and it has a list
and you can one based on what's closest to you
and just get started is the most important part. And
if you don't, you know, there's so many there's other clinics.
Grace is one of them.
Speaker 1 (01:45:10):
Shepherd's hope.
Speaker 14 (01:45:11):
You know, most people find us because they have a
lot of medical issues, so they're really seeking care.
Speaker 1 (01:45:16):
But we love prevention.
Speaker 5 (01:45:18):
Yeah, for sure. You know, I was just on the website.
Speaker 8 (01:45:19):
Here, we're getting text messages from people who've never seen
a primary.
Speaker 5 (01:45:23):
Care for Yeah. One guy said he hasn't seen one
since sixteen and he's forty four years old. Now, yeah,
if you have a website, it's got oh yeah, it's
gracemedicalhome dot org. Now on that website, doctor Carter, is
that where I can find out when you have these
pop up clinics like the one that's coming up in
early May.
Speaker 1 (01:45:40):
Yeah, they'll be on our website.
Speaker 14 (01:45:41):
And if you want to become a patient, if you
look at the website, there's details of how to become
a patient. And once you become a patient, it's your
regular doctor's office. You come in here for prevention for lads,
for well checks, but also say you have a cut,
you get the flu, those kind of things.
Speaker 1 (01:45:59):
We're just we focus on wellness too.
Speaker 9 (01:46:01):
I'm gonna give my best stab. I probably should have
chose a different word there, but I will give my
best attempt on trying to get people to go to
the doctor with this. I saw this years ago and
it really stuck with me. Jack, I'm going to give
you five million dollars. Are you pumped?
Speaker 4 (01:46:18):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (01:46:18):
All right, Well, there's one trick you don't get to
wake up tomorrow. Which one will you choose the five
million dollars today and not wake up tomorrow?
Speaker 4 (01:46:26):
Wake up tomorrow. I'd rather wake up.
Speaker 9 (01:46:27):
You want to wake up tomorrow. So right now, and
everyone who's listening, you just answer that question the same
way you're valuing tomorrow more than five million dollars right now.
Speaker 5 (01:46:38):
Yeah, still act like it. Yeah, it's so funny. There's
an old saying a buddy mine say, is as your
your your health is your wealth. And I think you
said that earlier as well, that you know, you can
look at the physical world that you're in, but if
you're not here to experience it, there is no physical
world to enjoy. You know, you have to make sure
that your preventive care is on point.
Speaker 4 (01:46:57):
Exactly at their ageb Earth, grace people. What was that doctor?
I'm sorry, I said exactly.
Speaker 14 (01:47:04):
You can ask you jobs. One of the most powerful, wealthy,
influential people.
Speaker 4 (01:47:08):
He did not have his health Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:47:10):
One hundred percent. Well again, I want to make sure
everybody knows that website. So if you're in one of
these situations and you want to visit one of these
pop ups or just become a patient. It's gracemedicalhome dot org.
That's Grace Medical Home dot org. And they also have
a spiritual side there as well that when you become
a patient, they can also guide you in that manner
as well. So they're full service from dental to medical
(01:47:32):
and even your spirit as well. That can help you
hang out as well.
Speaker 4 (01:47:35):
Yeah, or if you want to donate doctor same website.
Speaker 1 (01:47:39):
Yes, we obviously run by donation.
Speaker 14 (01:47:42):
Usually our budget is always our rate limiting factor, so
the more you support us, the more we can help
the community.
Speaker 5 (01:47:48):
And they even have a general supplies list if you
go onto the website and you click on that and
it'll give you a list of things that maybe if
you don't want to do it, you can actually donate
some supplies to these guys as well. Sit a band aid,
maybe one band aid, jack band.
Speaker 1 (01:48:01):
Band aids count Well.
Speaker 14 (01:48:02):
What's funny is our four point four million dollar annual
budget is made up of a lot of monthly donors
which are low. You know, they're five dollars donors, ten
dollars donors, twenty five dollars donors. So you may think
that five dollars a month would make a difference. It
makes a big difference to us.
Speaker 7 (01:48:19):
Yeah, and it's so funny because you would automatically think
it's all medical stuff, but that's not necessarily the case.
Speaker 5 (01:48:24):
I actually just clicked on it and it could be
office supplies. It could be pens and pencils and papers
or folders or something to be able to keep information
of patients as they come in. So there are myriad
things that you can do from price ranges from fifteen
dollars to sixty five dollars. It's all Amazon as well,
where you can order it and send it right to
the clinic, put your name on it and make yourself
feel good.
Speaker 14 (01:48:47):
Yes, we believe that it's a community problem, so it's
just amazing how the community has come up with solutions.
Speaker 5 (01:48:53):
Well, doctor, we can't thank you enough for your time
and we want to help support this. And you're listen.
You are more or or than wellcome to ever always
come back on and talk about the latest pop up
or the latest thing that the Grace Medical Home has going.
We would love to have you back on. You're wonderful.
Speaker 1 (01:49:09):
Well, thank you so much for having me. I really
appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (01:49:11):
Yeah, you guys, get up good love for doctor Carter.
That's doctor Kirsten Carter. She is a director and co
founder of Grace Medical Home. If you want to go
get that website. It's easy. It's Grace Medical Home dot org.
Doctor Gray, seeing you and thank you for everything. Thank you,
you got it all right? All right for seven nine
one text us at seven seven zero three one. Don't
forget your five o'clock keyword as family f A M.
(01:49:33):
I l y site over to real Radio dot FM
and send that away for your chance at one thousand dollars.
Also load them up. It's time for trivia. We'll do
that next.
Speaker 14 (01:49:48):
Jim.
Speaker 4 (01:49:49):
You guys are filthy animals. We are thinking.
Speaker 15 (01:49:52):
I will tell you I take two showers every day,
and if I go out to work in the yacht,
I'll come back and tack onto the shower. Do anything
I don't do is I don't change my tawo dot munch.
It's every week a week and a half. Now I
have to try and be better at that. Oh boyd,
(01:50:15):
the Cobok.
Speaker 4 (01:50:15):
Crew, Honeymo. Throughout history, I have all the answers. Only
I can solve the problems. Sounds.
Speaker 5 (01:50:26):
Where have I heard that recently?
Speaker 19 (01:50:29):
Oh?
Speaker 16 (01:50:29):
Yeah, right, crap.
Speaker 5 (01:50:32):
I'm a right for a seven nine went six roar
one text us seven seven hey zero three one. Welcome back.
I am Jim Lauren Rowe with us today. Hey, thanks
for joining us. We appreciate that Jack here as well.
Speaker 7 (01:50:42):
Yo, Ross Daddy, we're royalty free Disco. He is here
as well, and we are playing royalty free Disco. I
love that should be the name of the show. Jack,
what's in the Jackie Zach?
Speaker 5 (01:50:54):
Let's get it all aboard, dall get chugga cheer two,
look at glack. We're getty glack.
Speaker 4 (01:51:00):
We'll take it and here we go, ladies and gentlemen, and.
Speaker 7 (01:51:03):
Then Jackie sech Today winner gets to choose the prize
like a pair of brunch tickets for this weekend. It's
the third annual Cabbage Potato Bacon Festival. It's an agricultural
celebration in downtown Hastings, Florida, April twenty fifth and twenty sixth,
and the event features culinary experiences with the Hastings street
Side Brunch. That's what you'll get tickets to. Let's they
(01:51:24):
have the Great Potato Ball Gala. Family friendly event also
features the Hastings Mowdown lawnmower races and the Misst Potato
Queen Beauty pageant, and it's all sponsored by the Saint
John's County Tourist Development Council. This is gonna be huge, Jim,
you were saying, yeah, it's great.
Speaker 5 (01:51:42):
If you google the old the aerials of that thing
from last year, you'll be amazed at how many people
show up for it. It's very funny. Oh yeah, it's
no Potato Queen. Yeah, for sure, one hundred percent. I'm
that's Northeast Florida. It's for me, big, huge farming community
up there, and they love it and they celebrate you.
They don't play around.
Speaker 4 (01:51:59):
Two love it.
Speaker 7 (01:52:00):
Maybe you want something on May third, a week from Sunday,
I'm talking about a pair of tickets for a night
with David Lee, Ros Diamond, David Self Voice Van Hallen.
He's playing the Hard Rock Live Orlando May third. Finally,
the third prize up for grab today a pair of
tickets to see Weezer the Gathering Tour at the Kia
(01:52:21):
Center October eleventh. Looking forward to that show. It will
be my first time seeing Weezer.
Speaker 4 (01:52:27):
Big fan. They've been doing it for third over thirty years.
Speaker 9 (01:52:30):
Long early nineties, but I'm pretty sure the last time
they performed here in Orlando was at Universal for like, Marty.
Speaker 5 (01:52:36):
Gross was really in college at the time. I just
get I can't wait to see them. I want to
see him do hash pipe and Universal Property. I think
that'd be funny.
Speaker 4 (01:52:44):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right? Is that the price? That's it?
Speaker 5 (01:52:48):
Very nice, Lauren? One, two, three, four or five?
Speaker 4 (01:52:51):
Oh gosh, three three?
Speaker 5 (01:52:53):
Very nice?
Speaker 4 (01:52:54):
That is Patty.
Speaker 5 (01:52:55):
Patty, how you doing.
Speaker 4 (01:52:56):
I'm good, Jim, how are you?
Speaker 5 (01:52:58):
I'm doing great. We're gonna play a little game with us.
Speaker 1 (01:53:01):
I'm gonna give it a try, all right, Let's do it.
Speaker 5 (01:53:05):
A game, all right, Patty, this is a real easy game.
Get a question here for you? Five excuse me, four answers.
One of these answers is a lie, Patty. But if
you can find that, I will send you over to
Jack and the Jackie Sack and you pick it out
something nice for yourself.
Speaker 4 (01:53:19):
Are you ready?
Speaker 1 (01:53:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:53:21):
Here we go. On this day.
Speaker 5 (01:53:22):
In nineteen seventy seven, American actor and professional athlete rapper O. J.
Speaker 9 (01:53:28):
Simpson Oh Scott, sorry sorry, Jack, known for being incredibly
generous with his time and money.
Speaker 5 (01:53:37):
He's a make a Wish superstar John Cena. You may
know him as the prototype. That's right, you can't see him.
John Cena was born on this day. Here are three
fun facts about John and one George's wearing lie. All right,
here we go. We're talking about John Cena, Patty, are
you ready?
Speaker 1 (01:53:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:53:53):
Where we go?
Speaker 5 (01:53:54):
Number one, he spent five years learning manner in Chinese
to be the brand ambassador to China for Wwe had
to apologize in it too. Number two he's terrified of spiders.
Number three his full name is John Felix Anthony Cina Or. Lastly,
he wears gene shorts as an homage to his father,
(01:54:14):
who worked construction to fund his career. Which of those
is a lie? That's the one year? All right, okay,
very nice, All right, I'm gonna put you right on hold.
You're a winter Kathy.
Speaker 4 (01:54:31):
That's right.
Speaker 5 (01:54:31):
He does not wear gene shorts because of that. Anybody
know why?
Speaker 4 (01:54:35):
Ah? No, show off his leg.
Speaker 5 (01:54:37):
It's actually kind of crazy. Do you know who John
Cena is? I do the restaurant. He wears gene shorts
because early in his career he used to wear cargo
shorts but the crotch ripped out. Of him once and
his package fell out. So now he wears gene shorts
now because they're considerably more durable and he doesn't have
to worry about the crotch tripping out of him. And
he doesn't want to wear the spandex thing because he
(01:54:59):
thinks that he does people will look at his wing.
Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
Oh my goodness. Well first you got to see him. Yeah,
here we go.
Speaker 5 (01:55:09):
He did spend five years learning Mandarin Chinese, which he
is fluent in, by the way, as a brand ambassador
to China for the WWE actually trying to kind of
spread that brand all throughout Asia.
Speaker 9 (01:55:20):
And do you remember I kind of burned one of
your questions. I'm sorry, but he had to. He apologized,
and I believe it was for the Fast and Furious franchise.
Speaker 4 (01:55:29):
Really well. In Going Up, everyone apologize Going Up.
Speaker 9 (01:55:33):
For one of the promos for one of his big
triple A budget films, he basically acknowledged Taiwan as a country.
Oh yeah, you can't do that, and then he apologized
by in Mandarin for acknowledging Taiwan as a sovereign nation.
Speaker 5 (01:55:48):
He is terrified of spiders. His name his full name
is John Felix Anthony Sina cool a couple other things
you may not know about him before we get to
the top of the hour. Get some ross thoughts. True,
he's the winniest w d w E wrestler ever. He
used to be really winning. Yeah, okay, so I understand
what you're gonna say. Yeah, it's a it's all written
(01:56:09):
so I mean, but you know, they actually were going
to turn him heel one time, and they did like
a little study to see how it would turn out,
and it was going to turn out poorly. His merch
is so gigantic for the WWE, they would not take
a chance of turning him heel because they didn't want
to lose money on his merch sales. Because he's so popular.
He's one of five brothers. His rap album you Can't
(01:56:34):
See Me? Actually sorry, did you say yes? His rap
album you Can't See Me made it to number fifteen
on the Billboard chart and sold over a million copies.
What and then, lastly, how many make a Wish Requests?
Has John Cena?
Speaker 4 (01:56:53):
There's a redemption there. Let's just how many. He's the
most ever, seven hundred and fifty.
Speaker 7 (01:57:01):
I'm not a bad guess. I'm going thirty thousand, No,
thirty thousand. Well, I mean there's a lot of kids. Yeah,
that's a lot many days do you need? But I'll
go you say six twenty two, you win six fifty,
six hundred and fifty make Oh wait, you remember he's
gotta wedge these things in the remainder of his life.
Speaker 5 (01:57:19):
Of course, thirty thousand movement, it's definitely no. Thirty thousand
some thoughts.
Speaker 4 (01:57:24):
Yeah, he's amazing.
Speaker 5 (01:57:26):
Ye's a cool guy.
Speaker 4 (01:57:27):
You see.
Speaker 9 (01:57:28):
You ever see the viral clip of him answering the
question of why he doesn't have children. No, as he
basically goes, I'm selfish. I really enjoy what I'm doing,
and I know I want to respect the amount of
time that it takes, which is something that I wish
I did for Ross Thoughts objects.
Speaker 4 (01:57:44):
But he still helps six hundred and fifty kids.
Speaker 7 (01:57:46):
Yeah, among the other things, he gives away a bunch
of money. Never tells anybody who's.
Speaker 4 (01:57:49):
Not just say so for Ross Thoughts man. Jim.
Speaker 9 (01:57:53):
You know how I always love seeing like people on
the right do stuff that stereotypical on people with on
the left. I love seeing an F four f one
point fifty just ripping a Starbucks cup.
Speaker 4 (01:58:05):
Oh yeah, yeah, I see what you're saying, the dichotomy.
Speaker 5 (01:58:07):
The irony of it. I love seeing a preus blaring
George straight. Yeah, yeah, I got you.
Speaker 9 (01:58:12):
You see what I'm saying. Yeah, I think I found
the zenith. I've met somebody these last couple of years.
I'm not saying he has all the answers, but I
am saying he has a handful of solutions. You don't
need to know who this guy is, but I need
to blow up the myth that is my new friend,
Zach Zach. He's best of both worlds. Guys, buckle up,
(01:58:33):
I can't. I just want to let you know there's
a unicorn out there and I caught.
Speaker 5 (01:58:36):
Him, all right. Russ Thoughts is next.
Speaker 3 (01:58:42):
Ud after Montic.
Speaker 5 (01:58:43):
Culbert Kurruin has well too, are the beautiful guest we
have in today. But yeah, with the whole shower thing,
I'd just say it's kind of subjective.
Speaker 12 (01:58:50):
If you work like me construction, hot outside, sweaty shower
every day, if you're not exerting yourself as much, not
as much need.
Speaker 4 (01:58:57):
But with all the IBF news we've been having lately,
I had a quick question for you.
Speaker 5 (01:59:02):
If the stork brings the baby? What bird keeps the
baby from coming? Come on, man, come on man, all right,
Welcome back to the Jim Coberg Show, Real Radio one
oh four point one grand g R A N D.
Speaker 8 (01:59:18):
That is.
Speaker 5 (01:59:20):
Your six o'clock keyword. Get over to Real Radio dot
fhim and send that away for your chance at one
thousand bucks. Grand guys, that's the word.
Speaker 4 (01:59:26):
Go get it. We hope you win.
Speaker 5 (01:59:28):
By the way, we're doing the Costco thing. Somebody text
and say, hey, did you do the Costco thing yet?
Speaker 4 (01:59:32):
No, we did not.
Speaker 5 (01:59:33):
We're going to do that next segment. And what we're
talking about is this saw a thing today where it
says did you ever wonder how many premium brands make
products for Costco that are Kirkland brands? And I was like, okay,
that's kind of interesting. I think I know them all.
I didn't know anything. The brands that you're gonna hear
that are actually that are Kirkland products, but they're made
by premium brand companies is amazing.
Speaker 4 (01:59:55):
And we'll do that after Ross thoughts. Welcome back. I'm Jim.
Speaker 5 (01:59:57):
There'slauren jack is here as well.
Speaker 4 (01:59:59):
Yeah, man, let's do those ross thuts. Now open them up,
it's weird, it's funny.
Speaker 5 (02:00:05):
Sometimes it's just got to shoot.
Speaker 1 (02:00:07):
Sometimes it's ross.
Speaker 5 (02:00:10):
Yes, spelled like sauce present it's Ross thoughts.
Speaker 4 (02:00:14):
Ross Dots is brought to you by mills Are.
Speaker 9 (02:00:17):
Mills Air been providing great air conditioning service for all
of central Florida for decades, over thirty years, by.
Speaker 4 (02:00:23):
The way, just call them today.
Speaker 9 (02:00:25):
Got them coming out because I'm being proactive, not ensured
that my unit is up to Paul.
Speaker 5 (02:00:30):
Can I tell you it's the cheapest way to make
sure that your AC is gonna be good for the season.
I'm telling you straight up, because if you wait and
it breaks down, that is not gonna be cheap.
Speaker 14 (02:00:38):
Do this now.
Speaker 5 (02:00:39):
I'm very affordable. The smartest thing you'll do.
Speaker 4 (02:00:41):
This this year.
Speaker 9 (02:00:42):
I'm doing it all right. I don't know you started
with the aggression. It's also kind of a bummer that
you guys got that happy and like it's one of
those things when you do something mundane and then your
wife looks at you and goes, I'm proud of you.
Speaker 4 (02:00:55):
Good FLA.
Speaker 5 (02:00:56):
That's the same vibe I go.
Speaker 9 (02:00:58):
I called Mills Air, I'm on top of it, and
Jack was like, I'm proud I'm proud to call you
your friend. We're very proud of you body, and I'm honestly,
I'm not even having that good of a day.
Speaker 5 (02:01:06):
It started off rough. Did laundry left the vapor in there?
Speaker 14 (02:01:09):
God?
Speaker 9 (02:01:09):
So now I'm smoking half vape and half chacoozie water
or something. It's five percent mental, ten percent tied.
Speaker 5 (02:01:16):
Your lungs have never been whiter or cleaner.
Speaker 9 (02:01:18):
Yeah, dude, I don't know if I'm helping or hurting
at this point, but I'm pretty sure I'm vaping laundry detergent.
Speaker 5 (02:01:23):
That's lavender sentence. You're fine, Yeah, it's happening. It's happening.
Speaker 9 (02:01:27):
But there's the The whole reason why uh your ros
thoughts today is because, like Jim, you know this about me,
and honestly, it's one of my favorite things about you guys.
You know, and me and Lauren aren't very close, but
maybe she also falls underneath this this category of friends
and humans, right. I love knowing that Jack leans a
little to the left right, Okay, And some people may
(02:01:50):
be shocked to find out that I said a little,
But to me, I at thirty six, I know some
people who are way more left for Jackie, right, yeah,
but I love knowing that Jack is on the left
and guess what he is a gun owner, stays stressed. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's right right, holding a pistol. It might be it
might be went bristed, but he's holding a gun.
Speaker 4 (02:02:10):
Stop. And then I also love that Jim.
Speaker 5 (02:02:15):
You know, he chills on the right, he's on the
right side of the aisle. But he's also like, I
could see you respecting poetry. Oh yeah, dude, are you kidding?
Speaker 10 (02:02:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 19 (02:02:22):
I like you.
Speaker 5 (02:02:23):
I could see you.
Speaker 6 (02:02:26):
I know.
Speaker 7 (02:02:27):
All I'm saying is I could see him just smoking
a cigar, getting a medium rare steak and then looking
up some Robert Frost poems. Yeah right, So I am
so pro whenever we break any bit of a stereotype
with our party. And then fast forward a couple of
years ago, I got hired by Orlando City and I
(02:02:48):
joined the coolest digital team in all of MLS. And
that's not just me saying that we got awarded last
year being the best digital like offering for all EMA
last team.
Speaker 5 (02:03:00):
That's awesome. Giant win last night too, which is great.
Speaker 4 (02:03:02):
Huge win. It was awesome.
Speaker 9 (02:03:03):
In fact, last night is what made me go I'm
talking about you tomorrow at six o'clock because he is.
There's a guy who pushes all the buttons whenever we
score a goal. He's the reason why everything happens. He's
the digital side of the entertainment for Orlando City. But
I'm not here to talk about Orlando City. I'm just
here to talk about how this guy shouldn't exist. Should
(02:03:27):
not exist? Oh, boy, shouldn't exist. I've never met anybody
like take him out. He is a walking sentient stereotype shatterer,
and he needs to be platforms. So he could be
used at as always an exception because I have a
friend named Zach who graduated from full sale right yeah,
(02:03:47):
super into editing, has a farm and I'm about to
go hog.
Speaker 4 (02:03:51):
Hunting with him.
Speaker 7 (02:03:52):
You're going hog hunting. I'm gonna go hog hunting, dude,
You're going hog hunting with my friend Zach. What do
you think about that? I'm gonna make someone.
Speaker 4 (02:04:03):
Is the hog hunting actually here in Central flo Oh.
Speaker 5 (02:04:06):
Yeah, there's there's tons of hogs out there, and oh
there's hogs everywhere at my moss Park.
Speaker 9 (02:04:10):
Apparently it's hog topia on his farm, and they're not
doing well with his cross really yeah, and he was
real destructive, Yeah, very destructive invasive animals here, right.
Speaker 4 (02:04:21):
Yeah, how do you kill them?
Speaker 5 (02:04:22):
You just, oh, man, shoot the hell.
Speaker 4 (02:04:24):
Out of them.
Speaker 9 (02:04:25):
And guess what, I think I'm ready after years of
talking with my friend Zach and he's also listen, let
me just paint the picture. Imagine someone who graduated from
full sale all while wearing camo pants and work boots.
No one is ever rocking like Guy Harvey and being
that proficient at Adobe Premiere.
Speaker 5 (02:04:48):
No one is work.
Speaker 4 (02:04:49):
So you can shoot it while you shoot it. You're saying,
he can shoot and you can shoot it while you're
shooting at.
Speaker 7 (02:04:55):
Hey, that digital editor is an awesome salefish on his shirt.
It's such a look and it's such a vibe. And
I'm becoming better friends and he's gonna show me a
whole new world.
Speaker 11 (02:05:05):
Man.
Speaker 9 (02:05:05):
This is ai flap He's got he's got a farm.
He always shows up to work with like dozens of eggs. No,
that's awesome, right, because he has DUTs and chickens. Yeah,
that's great. Duck eggs are great.
Speaker 4 (02:05:15):
Dude.
Speaker 5 (02:05:16):
That tastes so good that he charges a little bit
more for him. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they're bigger.
Speaker 4 (02:05:21):
So we're adding another friend to the group.
Speaker 9 (02:05:24):
Yeah, he's one of my new friends and he and
he's awesome. You're gonna like him.
Speaker 4 (02:05:29):
Do we need another friend?
Speaker 5 (02:05:30):
Are you upset? I'm not cheating on you.
Speaker 7 (02:05:33):
He just sales hogs. What are you talking about? This
is good, this is good fodder. I'm just saying that
that that's another friend. Were and what we what do
you guys friend? Well, we're friends. But when you add
a friend to the group, that's my proxy. He's your
friend too, So you say that he needs your approval.
I'm not saying he needs my approval. I'm just asking them,
(02:05:53):
like I'm confirming we're adding another friend to the group.
Speaker 5 (02:05:57):
I don't I don't know what's going on. I just
didn't know that Jack and I started. Yeah, I didn't either.
My gun man put a ring on it, bitch.
Speaker 4 (02:06:05):
But yeah, I think I do feel like there's a
little bit of like an approval situation going on here.
It's fine, fine, I would.
Speaker 9 (02:06:13):
Say it's more of a sexual tension. But no, where
I'm going with this exactly is that? Jim, Dude, I
think I'm gonna go hog huntingdeed, Dude, I cannot believe
that you want to borrow my bow and arrow? Are
you gonna do with a gun?
Speaker 5 (02:06:27):
Have you ever shot a rifle? I've never shot a rifle.
I've only shot a pistol, can pistol.
Speaker 4 (02:06:33):
I don't think I think bow and arrow sounds a
little a little much.
Speaker 5 (02:06:36):
No, no, could, it's.
Speaker 4 (02:06:42):
It's harder.
Speaker 5 (02:06:42):
I don't think you can hunt pigs with uh. I
don't think you can hunt with a with a handgun. Yeah,
I think the reason why is because it doesn't happen.
It doesn't have enough knockdown power to kill the animal.
Speaker 4 (02:06:54):
Is this a rule?
Speaker 7 (02:06:56):
I kind of I kind of think it is. Guys,
I kind of don't think you can help with the pistol.
You don't have to shoot.
Speaker 4 (02:07:00):
So this is what he told me, though?
Speaker 9 (02:07:02):
Is that like sometimes not him, but other hunters, like
what happens if I have to knife it?
Speaker 4 (02:07:09):
Oh my goodness, dude, do you have any idea how
graphic or how dangerous these animals are?
Speaker 7 (02:07:17):
You're gonna get gorg This is how they got a Barathian?
You You should you should YouTube hog attacks all people
are hunting.
Speaker 4 (02:07:27):
I don't know what it is man.
Speaker 7 (02:07:28):
They just say you like it's now or never. I
either I'm gonna take a life or not. Dude, they
will hunt. They will open you up like a can
of tuna.
Speaker 5 (02:07:36):
They are one of the most If you ask hunters
right now, if we were to take a poll, are
you more scared of snake where or bobcats or anything?
They will tell you straight up, I do not want
to see a hog because they're agro too. They will
come at you. They won't run from you like some
other stuff. Well, they will square up. I'll square up.
Speaker 16 (02:07:55):
What up?
Speaker 5 (02:07:55):
You hog?
Speaker 4 (02:07:56):
Bitch? You little dumb tusty Jim is like he can't
don't baily handle.
Speaker 5 (02:08:02):
You don't think I can alpha out a hog just
out of curiosity? How big do you think wild hogs
get wild boards?
Speaker 4 (02:08:10):
How big?
Speaker 7 (02:08:10):
How much do you weigh? I weigh like a buck seventies. Dude,
they got you covered. They don't got me covered.
Speaker 4 (02:08:16):
I can whoop the ass of a hog.
Speaker 5 (02:08:18):
You sound like a maniac right now. People out there
right now are literally pulling over to the side of
the road and laughing out.
Speaker 7 (02:08:24):
Of the window with their right now saying you're crazy. Yeah,
I'm just saying I think you should rethink this new friendship.
I don't think it's gonna work.
Speaker 4 (02:08:33):
I let me, let me ho. That just doesn't want
to add anybody get the friend group.
Speaker 5 (02:08:39):
Zack is doing his own rosshocks. That's the weirdest machine
of all that Jack Wrench is wrenching into. Did you
cry when you hunted the first time? Because I fit?
Speaker 14 (02:08:51):
I did.
Speaker 5 (02:08:51):
Actually I shot out squirrel and I got emotional about it.
I felt bad for it because it was running into
a nest with other squirrels and stuff. Oh no, that
was a weird eleven year old scenario.
Speaker 13 (02:09:02):
There.
Speaker 4 (02:09:02):
Wait, no, those are the family squirrels, a squirrel family.
Speaker 5 (02:09:06):
It was not good, dude, it was.
Speaker 4 (02:09:08):
It was not good. I've never seen you look like.
Speaker 5 (02:09:10):
I got a bunch of shot at deer, never got
to kill a deer because I missed every single time.
And I got one shot at one hog in my
entire life. And you know, and the hogs may have
another hog and baby hogs. Yeah, but I mean that's
a baby situation. That's the problem is they have too
many hogs.
Speaker 1 (02:09:24):
I do know.
Speaker 4 (02:09:24):
I can't wait.
Speaker 7 (02:09:25):
I'm gonna put on some waiters, Buddy Waters, what are
they called waiters?
Speaker 5 (02:09:29):
Is fine, You're way behind already. What kind of gun
are you to have? Does he have one you can borrow,
like a thirty thirty or maybe.
Speaker 4 (02:09:34):
He was talking about using a knife.
Speaker 9 (02:09:36):
You're not gonna use You're not gonna use a knife.
I'm gonna use a knife gun, And so it don't
shoot a knife, break up with your friends, shave a
hog ross. Jack still doesn't want the friend of you.
Really don't think I'm friends group. You think I am
not man enough to turn off a hog ross.
Speaker 5 (02:09:58):
This is one of those scenarios where I just don't
think you understand what you're talking about. I don't think
you understand the violence that a wild boar can bring
to your life.
Speaker 4 (02:10:09):
And so fast, so fast.
Speaker 5 (02:10:12):
Yeah, but I'm like, you know, like I also can
I'll rifle out. He's talking. That's his GTA side talking.
We're talking tusks. But by the way, if they tusk you,
the cuts one part. But the infection because of how
they root and how they live, that's the other fun part.
But by the way, they're so strong that if you
(02:10:33):
laid on a ground, right, if you laid on the ground,
a hog could come up and with their head pick
you up off the ground and throw you. Well, I'll
make I'll make sure not to be doing yoga.
Speaker 8 (02:10:42):
Okay, I want to I want to understand that you
said earlier, like what is that exactly?
Speaker 9 (02:10:48):
Particularly, I didn't want it to come off like I
was tabby and sing. They were supposed to be nine
millimeters Okay, fred is stare well regardless, I'm taking a
hog and I got to prove Jim wrong.
Speaker 4 (02:10:57):
This new friendship sounds dangerous.
Speaker 5 (02:11:00):
Those are your ross thoughts. Thank you, Mills there, I'm
out peace.
Speaker 4 (02:11:02):
That's out.
Speaker 5 (02:11:02):
Hogs all right? Four oh seven nine one six one
o four one.
Speaker 4 (02:11:06):
I have to have video.
Speaker 5 (02:11:08):
I have to see your face when one hundred and
fifty pound hog comes rolling out of the brush and
it's focused on you, and you just start defecating on
yourself and that's all you're gonna be. Cry poop, cry poop,
cry poop, pass out, hog kills you. Next topic, I
think I got it, Yeah, you don't have it alright,
back in a second, Jemmy.
Speaker 20 (02:11:37):
Really can't say you're a quick shower guy when you
got ten to twelve minutes and it takes you four
minutes just to grab the loof of I mean, you
gotta get one of those showerheads where it's uh, you know,
it's the one that attaches and you still get the nozzle,
plus you get the attachment. You get in there, your
rents off, grab your soap, do what you gotta do,
(02:11:58):
rents off, then you're done.
Speaker 4 (02:12:00):
Yeah that's for you.
Speaker 10 (02:12:01):
Dog.
Speaker 4 (02:12:04):
No, he wants you to shower that way.
Speaker 5 (02:12:06):
Yeah, that's fine, he can. I wonder how Ross's new
best friend showers. That's what I want to know.
Speaker 4 (02:12:12):
Well, he's creepy, he's so good.
Speaker 7 (02:12:14):
Yeah, he's so awesome whatever, getting a lot of shower conversation.
Speaker 5 (02:12:19):
Yea, yeah, yeah, they so they send him throughout the day.
So Jack lazing as they come in so crazy, all
right for seven nine one six one four one texts
seven seven zero three one. Welcome back. I'm Jim Lauren
Rode with us today, which we appreciate.
Speaker 4 (02:12:30):
Jack is here as well, and so is Sauce Daddy.
It is true.
Speaker 5 (02:12:34):
Saw this today and I thought it was kind of interesting.
Speaker 13 (02:12:36):
It is.
Speaker 5 (02:12:37):
So when you go to Costco, what is the Sam's label,
by the way, what is the Sam's product?
Speaker 4 (02:12:42):
That's Walmart.
Speaker 5 (02:12:43):
Oh, the label it's help as members Mark, members Mark.
That's exactly right. So but Costco's in house brand is Kirklan.
Are you a Costco girl?
Speaker 4 (02:12:51):
I am, Yeah, Yeah, I'm a huge Costco person.
Speaker 5 (02:12:53):
Yeah, we love.
Speaker 4 (02:12:54):
It's like my happy place now.
Speaker 5 (02:12:56):
Yeah yeah. Jack actually just goes and wanders around and
looks at the eye and it's to be honest.
Speaker 8 (02:13:00):
Jack, I mean it's frustrating but exhilarating all at the
same time.
Speaker 4 (02:13:05):
You're going there. Yeah. Why am I here on a Sunday? Yeah?
It was Craig Cray. But I love every second of week.
See that's why I like I do it, like right
here after work where it's tolerable.
Speaker 7 (02:13:17):
But I went on on a Saturday afternoon once, I'd
be like, never again, never again on a Saturday afternoon.
Speaker 4 (02:13:23):
It's that I feel like I'm with the masses.
Speaker 5 (02:13:26):
Well I was remember a well, actually years and years
ago my family business had a Costco account, but we
when we got one of our personal accounts, it was
Sam's because it was really it was right on the
corner from us. We would go to the one in Castlebury,
it's not even there anymore. Because we lived in Maitland.
It was just easy to cruise over. And I think
Jack's is a because you also are a BJ's member,
aren't you?
Speaker 4 (02:13:45):
Yes? Because it's new and I had to try it out.
Speaker 21 (02:13:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:13:47):
Sure. Now are you a member any of the shopping
clubs ross? I can't remember?
Speaker 9 (02:13:52):
Yeah, Costco, Costco card holding. I want that direction because
my wife went that direction, and you.
Speaker 4 (02:13:58):
Actually are a part from one either. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:14:00):
Yeah, very good. Well, so, in for years, everybody's kind
of known or thought for sure that the brands, the
in store brands, would it be Kirkland or members Mark,
were actually made by companies that, you know. We didn't
think for sure that Kirkland just started a factory that
made all this stuff, But you always wondered exactly who
made it. I'm not gonna lie guilty as charge. I
thought Kirkland was doing that, can I tell you? I
(02:14:21):
did as well. I thought they were like, we have
so much money, we're just gonna.
Speaker 4 (02:14:24):
I'm with you. I thought the same thing.
Speaker 5 (02:14:26):
Now, some of these are a little odd, and some
of them are very cool.
Speaker 7 (02:14:29):
I think they call it like a white label product,
where a company will make two of the same product.
When they put their label on the other, they put
a white label on it, then they sell it, and
then you put your label right in other words, just.
Speaker 5 (02:14:40):
Sell you the wholesale and then go from there. Right,
So the one of the very first ones up there.
And I don't know how much of this stuff you got.
When's the last time you bought aluminum foil?
Speaker 4 (02:14:49):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (02:14:49):
Uh, that's the only thing I actually buy, I know, honestly,
I don't do aluminum foil.
Speaker 4 (02:14:55):
I actually use so Yes, I did buy Dollar Store.
Speaker 5 (02:15:00):
And of course everybody knows the brand general, right, the
brand is Rentalds Rep. Everybody does. Yeah, Reynolds is the
company does the aluminum foil in the wraps. Well, it
turns out that Kirkland is when you get Kirkland either
foil or their rap, it is made by the Reynolds company.
So you're getting the number one brand in the world
(02:15:21):
under a Kirkland brand, and it's way cheaper. It's about
twenty percent cheaper. See this topic. This segment's going to
make me feel dumb.
Speaker 21 (02:15:29):
Well no, but it's exciting, it's fun. And here you're
actually getting good news exactly. And here's the one that
would have affected you for sure. Now, when Miles was
coming up, right and he was young, what diapers did.
Speaker 4 (02:15:41):
You guys use?
Speaker 9 (02:15:42):
Coderie Bougie ones, bougie ones of Coderie, right, Yeah, they
were very excited. I'm still in debt from them.
Speaker 4 (02:15:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:15:49):
I don't even know what that is. I've never even
heard of that either. I guess that what they're they're
like a natural or something. No pfas or no man,
they just catch everything.
Speaker 4 (02:15:57):
Oh yeah, I do.
Speaker 9 (02:15:57):
That's the only reason I went with them is that
they lasted longer.
Speaker 5 (02:16:02):
If you have a child my you know, of course
I have a grandchild, so my daughter's buying diapers at
a crazy rate. Diapers are really really expensive. Well, Kirkland
diapers are made by Pampers, Huggies, Huggies, so when you
get Huggies when you go buy Kirkland diapers, you're actually
buying a Huggy brand named diaper. And we're talking again
(02:16:24):
another massive savings. But they're also responsible for stuff like
Scott Kleenex, Cottonell and all that stuff.
Speaker 7 (02:16:31):
How about the toilet paper? Do they have their toilet
paper there because I get that exclusively at Costco?
Speaker 4 (02:16:36):
Yeah, I do, I do too, right, huge way. Oh
nothing happier when I'm stopping on the paper and the
that's all I get from Costco.
Speaker 5 (02:16:49):
And by the way, toilet paper, no joke, it's super expensive,
like paper towels, right, paper towels, another one, unbelievably expensive.
Speaker 8 (02:16:55):
Yes, toilet paper, paper towels. I do that at Costco exclusively.
Oh really, it's the only reason why I have that membership,
to be honest. Really well, and there's salmon. We do
a little salmon.
Speaker 5 (02:17:06):
Oh do you really all right?
Speaker 4 (02:17:07):
Wild salmon?
Speaker 9 (02:17:09):
It's an odd trip to walk up to the cashier
with just toilet paper and salmon, But I like it.
Speaker 5 (02:17:14):
That tells a story. Are feeding a bear and solving
a bear's riddle?
Speaker 4 (02:17:19):
I just feel like I Jack you and I are
like just we're just rid here right now, We're just
all right.
Speaker 5 (02:17:25):
Here's here's another one for you.
Speaker 4 (02:17:26):
Right yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:17:27):
So when you buy Kirkland coffee from them, who do
you think makes that coffee folders? It is not Folgers, Starbucks.
It is Starbucks. Is really so when you buy Kirkland
coffee in the can, the Colombian Columbian Coffee, the Supreme
Coffee Blend, dark, the Dark Roast, the Signature House Blend,
the Decaff Blend, those are Starbucks coffees. Okay, all right,
(02:17:50):
And what do you know about ice cream?
Speaker 4 (02:17:53):
Runs right through me. Have you read have you I
don't need ice cream? But yes, have you read it?
Speaker 5 (02:17:59):
Have you ever heard of a company called Humboldt ice
Cream Company, really high level ice cream company out of
out of California. When you buy Kirkland brand ice cream,
you're getting Humboldt ice cream. So you're not even sacrificing there.
You're getting some of the best ice cream in the nation.
Speaker 4 (02:18:14):
How about this? When you buy juice, who do you buy?
Drop a can, drop a cannon?
Speaker 5 (02:18:18):
What about you? Ocean Spray? Yeah, yeah, that's Kirkland. Kirkland
juices are brought to you by Ocean Spray. So this
is why I said, this is going to make me
feel dumb? What else is a lie?
Speaker 4 (02:18:32):
Is everything a lie?
Speaker 7 (02:18:34):
It's not that it's a lie, it's it's it's a
weird it's a it's a it's not a lie.
Speaker 5 (02:18:41):
I agree, but they're leaving out some truth. It's not
a Hey, alright, it's not I'm not telling you a lie.
I'm just not telling you.
Speaker 4 (02:18:47):
It's not like we're selling.
Speaker 7 (02:18:48):
We're not giving you a product worse than what you thought,
give you a product better than.
Speaker 5 (02:18:53):
What's your what's your favorite bottled water. You drink buttled water, Loren,
I don't. You don't drink bottled.
Speaker 4 (02:18:58):
Water, and I feel bad about it. I don't. I
feel like it's polluting the planet. H I got you
a percent on that. You're not wrong.
Speaker 5 (02:19:05):
How about you bottled water people over there? Yeah, a
brand you like?
Speaker 4 (02:19:08):
I mean there is one. I like Fiji.
Speaker 5 (02:19:10):
Oh that's a good one.
Speaker 4 (02:19:11):
That's the only water. I'm like, yeah, you can taste
the difference.
Speaker 7 (02:19:14):
When it comes stocking it for a hurricane season. Is
when I will buy the the Costco bottled water. It's
three ninety nine, you get forty.
Speaker 5 (02:19:22):
Yeah, you're right, and that's Niagara water.
Speaker 4 (02:19:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:19:25):
Like, so when you buy Kirkland brand water, you're actually
buying Niagara brand water. That's that's who packages that for them.
Canadian side. How about this when you buy a mattress
at Costco. When you buy a mattress at Costco, seally,
who do you think is making it not seay way better, serda, bigger?
(02:19:47):
It's bigger, one of the most fava, no, not fatfa
the one with the sheep Stearns and Foster, which are okay, yeah,
high level mattresses. Like when you go into the mattress
area and you go the okay, yeah, the very end
where all the good stuff is. Those are Sterns and Foster.
(02:20:08):
That's what Kirkland sells you. A Kirkland mattress is made
by Sterns and Foster.
Speaker 4 (02:20:13):
And you're talking.
Speaker 5 (02:20:13):
And by the way, you know that that mattresses are
one of the most expensive markup products in the world,
like for what it cost to mate, so what they
charge is one of the biggest markups in all of business,
like right there with popcorn and soda.
Speaker 4 (02:20:24):
Blew my mind right now because I need a new mattress.
So really, I just I love that you know where
to go.
Speaker 5 (02:20:30):
Yeah, yeah, Sterns and Foster mattresses, which is those are
twenty five hundred to thirty five hundred dollars for huge
when you when you get Kirkland Pro Care Infant formula, Okay,
that is made by a company called Parago, which I
guess is a high level brand of of of a
(02:20:51):
baby formula and it's called pair of yeah, Pyrigo or
p E R R I g O because it's like
a pair on the go even buying like chinette cups,
like when you go buy the really nice like paper
cup stuff or paper plates. Yeah, when you buy them
in their Kirkland brand that's actually made by the Chinette company,
(02:21:12):
you know, the ones that charge you like fourteen dollars
for one hundred plates.
Speaker 9 (02:21:15):
Yeah, now they have to be doing like the bad
like you know, bottom tier of all these inversions, right,
it can't.
Speaker 4 (02:21:23):
Beat the same. I don't think you're right. I think
they're just repackaging.
Speaker 5 (02:21:27):
And think about the volume they're selling. How about this,
that's the volume.
Speaker 4 (02:21:30):
Do you eat your right?
Speaker 5 (02:21:31):
Do you eat canned tuna at all? Like the fish?
Speaker 3 (02:21:35):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (02:21:35):
Like cantuna?
Speaker 16 (02:21:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (02:21:36):
Yeah, Ever, now not a lot on another kuy of cantona.
Speaker 5 (02:21:40):
When you buy Kirkland Alba core tuna, it's really Bumblebee.
Bumblebee makes Kirklands soon good stuff. That's lap And again
you're talking twenty percent cheaper than the companies that that
you get it elsewhere.
Speaker 7 (02:21:54):
Texta points out ross you shouldn't be mad at Costco
for selling it at a cheaper price. You should be
mad at the other companies selling theirs. I just say,
an incredible markup, that's what saying. That is what I'm
kind of mad at. I like just everything, having this
little we work in the shadows. This is actually that
that used to be the third and.
Speaker 5 (02:22:13):
Then and then one more here and this kind of
applies to us because we have hurricane season here, right,
So what do they tell you to stock up on
when you go to a hurricane water water, that's right,
which we have with Diagara. You can save money there.
Speaker 4 (02:22:24):
What else? Yeah, batteries, battery.
Speaker 5 (02:22:26):
Yeah, when you buy Kirkland brand batteries, what are you
getting energize You're getting Dura cell masteries out four thirty
eight percent less. Then you're spending on Dura cel batteries.
Kirkland batteries are Dura cel battery.
Speaker 8 (02:22:42):
Here's here's the thing. You should be getting a Costco
sponsorship at this point.
Speaker 4 (02:22:48):
We should. Everybody is like, oh my gosh, Costco is
the best thing ever.
Speaker 7 (02:22:53):
Oh yeah, they're the absolute greatest man and it's always
on the short list of best companies to work for
as well. Oh yeah, they are man. No, the battery
is no joke. I've been by like single A double
A batteries for years. I only get the Costco brand
and they're right next to the door Cell. It's the
only two they sell. Oh yeah, and uh and it's
it's funny enough because they're the same exact brand. Yeah,
there you go.
Speaker 4 (02:23:13):
And this is just a few.
Speaker 5 (02:23:14):
By the way, there's plenty more. I found this at
a website is kind of wild outdoor revival dot com.
I don't even know what why that is, but that's
exactly where it was, Outdoor Revival, Outdoor Revival. It's just
I got it from an aggregator, so it's just, uh,
you know, it just came kind of popped up. But
those are just a few. They have a list of
plenty more in there. If you want to know what
you're actually getting for Kirkland brands. When it comes to
(02:23:36):
name brands, this will tell you, like almost all of them.
And this is that's just not that I skipped over.
Like Bree, like cheese, like high quality cheese, the cheek.
They have a fantastic cheese.
Speaker 4 (02:23:46):
It's all.
Speaker 5 (02:23:47):
It's all brand name premium cheese.
Speaker 7 (02:23:49):
They and they have liquor too. I'm curious who makes
their you know, their drinks. They have their own spice drum.
Speaker 14 (02:23:55):
Oh.
Speaker 5 (02:23:55):
By the way, there bourbon. They're Bourbon. When you look
at Bourbon rating and stuff, believe it or not, Kirkland's
bourbon rates really well. Right if there was companies like
makers Mark and stuff like that, I don't even know
they had their own Oh yeah bourbon, yeah, vodka, the
whole nine yards.
Speaker 4 (02:24:11):
Oh my gosh. Okay, that's great.
Speaker 9 (02:24:13):
But this doesn't rub anybody like I understand this is
good news and all that, but it doesn't rub anybody
else the wrong way that like everything is not like it.
Speaker 4 (02:24:23):
Yeah, I just double checked it.
Speaker 7 (02:24:24):
Yeah, man, Kirkland Signature coffee now, granted, just double doing
some extra research on this. Is that it says in
twenty twenty four was kind of the moment where not
all Kirklands Signature coffee was Starbucks, but prior to twenty
twenty four, it was labeled right there on the bag
of Kirkland Signature coffee roasted by Starbucks.
Speaker 5 (02:24:44):
So if you buy your pet food, Kirkland pet food
is made by a company called Diamond Pet Foods, which
makes high quality, high level pet foods for your dogs
and cats.
Speaker 7 (02:24:53):
That's exclusively what I used to get for Jeter. Really, yep,
Kirkland petit.
Speaker 5 (02:24:58):
And you're not sacrificing there, think because they put that
stuff right next to the name brand stuff, and you
think of yourself. I'm gonna buy this period of one
and the other bag's like literally fifteen dollars cheaper, and
you pass it by because it's Kirkland. And what you're
doing is you're passing by a product it's actually better.
Speaker 7 (02:25:11):
I even checked the ingredients and then I even ran
it by every buddy Darryl Payne, and he's like, yep,
that's good stuff.
Speaker 5 (02:25:16):
Their yogurt is made by Airman Yogurt, which is a
high quality yogurt company, and they sell that under the
Kirkland brand for way cheaper. They're sunglasses made by ray Bands.
Speaker 4 (02:25:26):
Are they really? I don't know, but it sounds like
at this rate and why not? Honestly, I do, I
do feel I wonder.
Speaker 8 (02:25:35):
I completely agree with you. You're kind of like, what
everything is? Everything we can get from Costco.
Speaker 4 (02:25:43):
It's all alive.
Speaker 9 (02:25:44):
It forces you to come to grips. This is what
I'm going through right now hearing this list. It forces
me to come to grips with me falling to durist
cell marketing. Yeah, all the times I saw a Duras
cell in a movie, and how if I was in
an eye, I would choose Duras sell over Kirkland.
Speaker 5 (02:26:02):
And by the way, I've heard the butcher their butcher department,
Like when you go by the meat, you're buying meat
that is the same exact product that's going to your
grocery stores that you're paying twenty or thirty percent more for.
Matter of fact, somebody just said here that their beer
and I remember reading this their Logger beer. Like they're
just like, what would be like a Budweiser or something
like that is also award winning, So dude, they're killing it. Everybody.
(02:26:24):
I gotta get myself a Costco card. You feel like
I'm getting ripped off, but not everything to winter. I've
had their spice drum before pass on that. I also
have their their Seltzer drinks before that tastes like dog turns,
So it's not They're not all home run well and.
Speaker 8 (02:26:41):
Can I just say sure you see whatever? Yeah, remember
this is like the when we actually go out and
do purchases for things that are in our actual oh yeah, neighborhood,
right yeah, so yeah, I mean like we gues, I'm
(02:27:04):
a huge Costcoeah, you gonna get there at the same time.
But you're like, Okay, I need to get my rum
from costco. Y, yeah, or do we want to go
to our local?
Speaker 4 (02:27:13):
Yeah? Yeah, our local. You gotta keep past liquors in business.
Yeah yeah, all right?
Speaker 5 (02:27:18):
For our seven nine one text us seven seven zero
three one, take little break, will come back and get
the hell out of here. On a Thursday, our.
Speaker 7 (02:27:32):
Friends at t K Law want to remind us to
look ahead, So we will look ahead on real Radio.
Tomorrow is Friday, and that means Friday on the Monsters,
Angel's gonna give you the ones and twos. And also
they're going to cap off the show with Beer of
the Week. Plus they are broadcasting live from the Leesburg
Bike Fest. Do not miss it that happens tomorrow. Show
(02:27:53):
up you might win Orlando Magic Playoff tickets. If you
don't win it there, check our Instagram when it's time
to look ahead for you and your family. In the
world of family law, trust Ray Trenly and the team
at TK Law. You find them online at one Firm
for Life dot com.
Speaker 12 (02:28:10):
Okay, Ross, I got some advice.
Speaker 4 (02:28:21):
Tree stand fifteen feet up, minimum three dogs. Have the
dogs chase the hogs out. Then you're not on the ground,
because that's the only way you're going to do it.
Speaker 10 (02:28:30):
Other than that, toss to.
Speaker 7 (02:28:32):
The brain, golb crew stone crew Ross, go for it.
Speaker 19 (02:28:40):
Yeah, the adrenaline rush is nothing like you've ever felt before.
Speaker 4 (02:28:45):
That's what I need. Find somebody that hunts them with
dogs and get into that.
Speaker 3 (02:28:54):
Man.
Speaker 19 (02:28:55):
My favorite thing to do in the showers. Get yourself
an ice cold beer pop in, get that, get that
shower super hot and steamy, and then crack that thing
and hold her about a foot over your head and
just pour it like stone cold, right into your mouth
and all the spillover just goes all over your face
and down your chest. All that ice cold beer.
Speaker 5 (02:29:11):
Make me super hot shower water.
Speaker 4 (02:29:13):
Oh, it's glorious.
Speaker 5 (02:29:14):
Your number, big dog and A to the friend group.
Speaker 4 (02:29:18):
Add the final one, baby, mister Jim.
Speaker 13 (02:29:21):
A shower sitting is not the weirdest thing you've ever done.
Getting totally naked with your dog in the shower where
the bath dub is the weirdest thing you've ever done
outside of the radio.
Speaker 5 (02:29:36):
In hindsight, dogging with it.
Speaker 13 (02:29:38):
Getting naked with your dog to give it a bath
is weird. I don't care who you are and what
you say or anything else. That's weird.
Speaker 5 (02:29:47):
My wife does it too, By the way. She ain't
getting away with us, and she's listening right now and
just busted your woman. You get naked in there with
the dog.
Speaker 4 (02:29:54):
Too, everybody. No, wait a minute, she does?
Speaker 5 (02:29:56):
Yeah, four row seven night when get out of here,
jacket pin in my ass? You know sometimes I think
there is a line. Yeah yeah, yeah, tech it is
where it is, and then he just blairs right by it.
Yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:30:08):
Hot topic today yeh yeah, yeah, showers aroladly the hot
topic man.
Speaker 5 (02:30:11):
Everybody does. Everybody does? All right, Welcome back to the
jum Culper Show here on Roal Radio. I'm Jim Lauren
with us today. Thanks Lauren, by the way, appreciate you
your time. You're the best jack here as well. Yeah,
and sau study. And by the way, if you want
to see Sauce do stand up? Do it before he
goes hog hunting.
Speaker 4 (02:30:28):
Yeah, you might not be afterward.
Speaker 5 (02:30:31):
You definitely want to see him before he goes hog hunting.
Because I gotta tell you, when you spend an afternoonssing
down your leg, it takes a little of your verve
of life away.
Speaker 4 (02:30:42):
While I'm happy that.
Speaker 9 (02:30:42):
You brought up stand up because it's official. May twenty third, Melbourne,
Pineapples tickets Rosscomedy dot Com.
Speaker 5 (02:30:52):
That's awesome, dude. And by the way, somebody texts earlier
asking where to get information to get your tickets. It's
Rosscomedy dot com.
Speaker 4 (02:30:57):
Yea. And they've been asking for months on when is
he coming back to Melbourne.
Speaker 9 (02:31:00):
So and there's two shows, one at six another one
at eight thirty. The last time I was there, both
shows sold out. It's not that big of a room,
but it is a big enough room to do Comedy's
coming with you.
Speaker 5 (02:31:11):
Do you guys know yet? I do not know as
of right now. Yeah, right, I'll keep it open because
that crew you took to Okala was like unfair. Yeah,
I mean that was worth It was worth more morning
for the ticket. I mean, you and Ken Miller on
the same ticket is worth more than whatever you're charging.
That's a great, great ticket. It probably won't be camp
but I'll make sure to have a couple of killers
with me. But I always know you bring somebody cool.
(02:31:32):
I mean, if people have Melbourne, get lucky. You get
to see a few minutes of Joel Warren. Joel comes out,
you guys gonna do a little thing.
Speaker 9 (02:31:39):
He'll be busy at Fringe this year, but I'll be
over at Melbourne May at twenty third.
Speaker 5 (02:31:44):
Rosscomedy dot com. That's Rosscomedy dot com. Oh, he's very funny.
You gotta as I see you should go see him.
And it's so funny. When people hear him on the
air doing his thing here, they have one expectation of him.
They see him on stage and see his act and
it's I mean, it is definitely ross, but it's a
different level of ross than you have.
Speaker 4 (02:32:03):
Family loves comedy.
Speaker 5 (02:32:05):
Oh, they love him and I will.
Speaker 4 (02:32:07):
Actually I'm I'm all over it.
Speaker 5 (02:32:09):
And he's not too dirty. You won't get embarrassed going
That's the thing. It's that's if you, as a parent,
like you could go out with It's he a raw
show and not have to worry about a lot of
the gross stuff that makes you embarrassing in front of
your kids. I might say a couple of bad words.
But here's the thing.
Speaker 9 (02:32:21):
I promise you every teenager who's ever been at one
of my comedy shows, the parents walked away feeling like cool, Pa,
oh yeah, yeah, one one hundred.
Speaker 4 (02:32:29):
I love it very good. I'm in bored.
Speaker 5 (02:32:33):
If you take your twenty year old kids to see
Ross you are going to be You're gonna be a hero.
Speaker 4 (02:32:37):
Yeah yeah, all right, who do you have to think today, buddy?
Speaker 7 (02:32:40):
We have a bunch of people. First off, Lauren Rowe
for spending the afternoon with us. Thanking very much, Lauren.
Also Glenn Lausman for Colbert Court. We want to thank
doctor Kirsten Carter from Grace Medical Home for stopping by
telling us all about her the wonderful work she's doing
in our community.
Speaker 4 (02:32:58):
And we want to thank everyone for listening as well.
Speaker 7 (02:33:01):
And including that would be Sam Candice and our good
friend Alicia will Ware for monitoring our YouTube chat where
we put the YouTube question of the day, and today's
question was have you ever been hunting?
Speaker 4 (02:33:17):
Where do you think it falls?
Speaker 5 (02:33:19):
I say forty thirty four percent say yes this this yeah, no, no,
just ever in.
Speaker 7 (02:33:26):
Wetube the audience yeahah, in the YouTube chat no, not bad,
Jim thirty nine percent not bad.
Speaker 5 (02:33:34):
Yeah, the other side of it, yeah, the other side
of it very good. All right, Rosscomedy dot com get
your tickets for that may show coming up in Melbourne
at Pineapples, Yes, sir, all right tomorrow for us man,
it's more Ross Comedy it's more Kay rollins from Yeah,
the Queen of Soccer.
Speaker 4 (02:33:49):
Will be waiting. Gosh, I can't wait to hear all day.
Speaker 5 (02:33:52):
Tomorrow's me a lot of fun. We're gonna make her
do pick the porn with us too. It's gonna be great.
It's gonna do a lot for her reputation. Sorry, Kay,
it's gonna do a lot for her reputation. It'll be okay,
please still come all right, we'll be apping Lauren, Jack
and Ross.
Speaker 4 (02:34:04):
I'm Jim.
Speaker 5 (02:34:04):
We follow the news junkie. They follow the monsters. The
morning after us. It's Tom Daan with Tomadam oh man,
you got it. It's Tom and Dada. Of course, it's
loved thy neighbor on tonight as well. We'll also get
right into real laughs tomorrow at three o'clock. More than
Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 1 (02:34:18):
We'll see you then, Yeah, freaking boy.
Speaker 2 (02:34:24):
If you missed any part of today's show, check out
The Jim Colbert Show on demand, and for highlighted feature segments,
listen to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods.
Speaker 4 (02:34:32):
Both are available for free on the iHeartRadio app.