Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are now listening to The Jim Colbert Show on
Real Radio one oh four point one.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
That's right, guys, here we go on a Tuesday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much for
tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every single day,
and we do have a banger for you this afternoon.
We will get you caught up on what's happening in
the world that does on a Round three twenty with
JCS News three forty five. Somebody who's gonna win a
twenty five dollars gift card to Frogger's Billumbar for the
Froggers football follow up? Four Glock Howards, what'd you do?
That's doom? We'll go over Ross's choice last, or excuse
(00:37):
me by block Howard's trivia and we'll ended up with
Ross thoughts. It's only money and you've heard it here first,
your calls, text and talkbacks all day long. Welcome to
the show. I'm Jim to my left, my lovely Mary Dingers,
co hostbands Deb Roberts. Hello that sorry, Dad Bridger Brat y'all,
good afternoon. The Alien Ross Paget don't make your Christmas
gift you don't have enough time poor oh seven nine
four one text does at seven seven zero three one.
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(00:59):
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We'll get you on the air while you're there. Please
make sure number one preset. That helps quite a bit. Guys,
(01:21):
Thank you very much for doing it.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
We appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
How are you guys on this Fine? It's Tuesday. It
is Tuesday, right, it is Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
It's like it's the time of the year where everything
is getting more condensed.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
It is.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Yeah, it's like it's like three days in one, so
it really feels like a Thursday at least.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
Yeah, one hundred percent. Yeah, it's wild man, and you
I just got the worst news you know in cancer.
It's no no, who knows the second worst news? You know?
I mean for this time of year, you know, again
in Florida. You know, there's one thing that we really
hope for down around this time of year. What do
you think it is? Snow? Yeah, right, cold cold weather,
(02:02):
something white Christmas that can emulate what we can get
as close to the Christmas vibe is you'd like it
to be like, you know, maybe in the mid fifties
as the high that day, Maybe in this early you know,
low sixties as a high. Just get the vibe in
the moon winter.
Speaker 5 (02:15):
Yeah, how about one frosted window that's not artificially painted.
Can I tell you and let me see my birth
let me see my breath until ten o'clock in the morning,
just one, just once, let me fake smoke, man.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
I went to the ten day and forecast. I went
to the ten day forecast today because we're you know,
we're just that many days out or so from Christmas,
you know, nine days. Actually, usually the ten day forecast
is pretty accurate. This is something I do every year,
and I literally, as I'm opening the page, I'm crossing
my fingers hoping for that little blast of cool air
to come in and write the moment. I don't even
(02:46):
mind a little rain or missed. Nope, on Christmas Day,
that way it can happen. God, dang it nothing. It's
gonna be like seventy five degrees seventy seven degrees Christmas
Day here in Central Florida. Another yeah, another beautiful day.
You can out and play golf. Uh whatever. But I mean,
just that's one day a year. I wish it would
just give us something a little unreasonable.
Speaker 5 (03:04):
And when it comes to cold, I'm curious, deb do
you feel that same way or as strongly, because I
have a theory, like do you feel like.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
You want it? You want it to be cold Christmas? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (03:18):
Like yeah, does it upset you that it's a seventy
degree Christmas.
Speaker 6 (03:22):
Not as much as when it's really hot on Thanksgiving
because that makes it harder to eat really a lot?
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Yeah yeah? And fry turkey yeah yeah, turkey Jack. Where
are you in this? I mean, you're again you endeavor.
The only ones that really have experienced Christmas is in
that in that world.
Speaker 4 (03:35):
Yes, the cold is synonymous with Christmas. It should be
winter all of that. I like it when you can
feel it different, right, Yeah, And you know I love
the Florida climate for the most part for sure. However,
I do enjoy those you know, sixty degree days.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Yeah, yeah, it's nice. I mean, actually, just yesterday New
York got their fine, their their first big snow of
the year, so the city finally looks like it should look,
you know, this time of year for Christmas.
Speaker 5 (04:02):
And mind the reason why I ask you, dev is
because of your Midwestern origin story of being out in Wisconsin,
so you've experienced cold, cold, So maybe I'm thinking, you know,
I think people from up north, when they see a
seventy degree Christmas, they're like, ah, right, yeah, I'm in
for that.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (04:19):
Well that's if you don't live in it all the time.
But this is the only break in the year that
we get.
Speaker 5 (04:23):
So when you are, when you've turned that page and
become full Floridian, it's seventy two degrees on Christmas.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
Man, it's a bummer. Yeah, yeah it is.
Speaker 6 (04:32):
It's the fat, fluffy snow of Christmas. That's the fun snow,
right Jack. Yes, that November December snow is the stuff
that Hallmark movies are made of. It's when you start
getting into the blizzard season of January and February and March.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
That's when the snow becomes your enemy.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
When it alters your life. Oh, and it does greatly.
Speaker 4 (04:51):
It's pretty at first, but then you have to quote
deal with it, and then you know it comes with
freezing temperatures and win.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Yeah, and ice on the road.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (04:59):
And I see snow that blinds you.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
A man Solomon who called in yesterday, you know, we
talk about the missing relative kind of thing. And you know,
I was talking about him being a trucker. If you
follow gym members at all, Solomon puts up stuff all
the time. Of him. He's a trucker, so he's always
across it. And man, he took a couple of pictures
last week. That's those big storms have just been destroying
the northeast and Pacific Northwest and uh, just you know,
(05:22):
just snow everywhere. You can barely see the road. Matter
fact that in one of those photographs that doesn't look
like they're a road. It looks like they're just driving
across a snow covered field. So that's interesting. I did
have something I want to talk about real quick before
we get going, because I want to I want to
do this on the texting service. You know, I throw
out a little something to kind of prime the texting
service for the day, and I wanted to ask a question.
I saw something online today and I've not heard of
(05:46):
this tradition before. I've heard of a similar tradition for
Christmas Morning, but I haven't heard this. Ross in your
household growing up on Christmas Morning? What was the situation
with the gifts and the tree? I mean we would
go to it and then we would all Christmas morning.
But as you're shopping going into the season, would you
wrap a gift and the put put it under the tree. Yeah,
(06:09):
you would do that as you kind of shopped and
did that right, But.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
I do remember you know the overnight late charge. Yeah, yeah,
you know magic brought.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Me Okay, got you jack, same thing? Or you are
you a rap it put it under the tree when
you get it scenario.
Speaker 4 (06:23):
So no, when we received gifts, like if I brought
gifts home from work, they would go under the tree
or something. And any gifts that were given to us
would go under the tree. But then you know, Sanate
doesn't come till Christmas Eve, right, yah, So that's when
you know.
Speaker 6 (06:39):
Your parents would be up late at night putting toys
together and tracing each other out.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
Don't know what you're talking about. That's when Sanna would come. Yeah, right,
that's right, So okay, so deb same thing would as
as your parents bought gifts, would they wrap them and
then put them under the tree as they bought them
or did they wait for a specific time.
Speaker 6 (06:57):
They would usually have to hide them because my brother
would go above and beyond to get in there and
find out what he was getting on Christmas.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
So our our our tradition was this, like, you know,
we would like if you were buying gifts. Let's say
I went out this weekend and I actually am Christmas
shopping this weekend. We go out this weekend, shop around
little bit. I'd come home, wrap the gifts up, stick
it under the tree, right, same thing for the kids,
you know, we'd do that. The stuff that we would
you know that Santa would bring would be unwrapped. You know,
it would be like.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
He doesn't have time to deliver.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
Understood. But if there'd be the rap gifts that we
would bring, don't embarrass us. There would be Santa's gifts.
And Santa's gifts would be like your bicycle or your
your barbie house. You know, things would be difficult to
wrap up for Santa and characters, sleigh and stuff. Right,
I read this weekend or this a yet this morning.
Actually that there are families that put no gifts under
(07:46):
the tree at all until that night, like a Christmas wastelang,
Like the tree is barren like until that night. So
when you you go to bed, no gifts under the three,
not one, not nothing, and then when you wake up
the next morning, all the gifts are under the tree.
That just looks like you're paranoid that your gifts are
gonna get stolen. Yeah, I've not heard that before. I've
(08:07):
not heard of that. Now. The one tradition I have
heard is is that an our house that my grandmother's
I should say, you know, all of the grandkids were
able to open one gift under the tree. We actually
had that tradition in our house, but it was kind
of a running joke because my wife would buy the
kids themed calendars and we'd be like, okay, kids, open
up your one gift. They wouldn't get to choose. It's
always the same thing. It was always a calendar. The
(08:29):
joke would be like what kind of calendar you got,
you know, a dog pooping calendar or a sports car
calendar of all, you know, whatever the case may be.
But I've not heard of it. I've not heard of
the completely empty Christmas tree night of everything gets stuffed
under there as everybody sleeps. No, not heard that one before.
Now it looks like the Grinch happened. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
it looks like something. It looks like act one Grinch
(08:50):
in here, Like all the stuff you're getting Olivia, like
that'll be under the tree that night, right, oh, all
that stuff? Yeah. I can't believe it.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
What I can't believe the amount of dog pooping calendars.
That's a real thing. Oh yeah, did you not know that?
I had no idea, and I just thought, I'm like, hey,
that's kind of a funny idea.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
Yeah yeah, and I just looked it up. There are plenty.
I know this because my one of my wife's close friends,
as a gag, got her a dog pooping calendar for
Christmas like three or four years ago, and we had
a hearty laugh about it.
Speaker 5 (09:21):
I don't I don't want to get two sidetracked here,
but I get pretty excited whenever I see that happening
out in the wild, Like just driving around.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
What's that when I see a dog? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah, Because I'm just like, yeah, man, that only
happens like once a day. We played golf the other
day when they're dueling German shepherds doing it in the
backyards like they were literally dueling. I'll do it here
or whatever, I'll smell it, I'll do it over there. Wow. Yeah, yeah,
what buddy, there's a lot. Yeah, there's a whole bunch.
There's a lot of dog poop out there. Yeah. Yeah.
(09:49):
The calendars were like the escape gift, right, you can
get anybody. I don't know. Nobody needs it anymore though,
it's so it's.
Speaker 4 (09:54):
More of a novelty now. It used to be a
legit yeah, escape gift. Yeah, but now the need I
don't tell you. Yeah we did Happy Third Day?
Speaker 2 (10:03):
Yeah, who printed that? Who proofed it? Did all that?
That was That was early, that was five years ago.
Speaker 4 (10:15):
Yeah, but the I'd like having what I miss having
that big like they call it, like the desk blodder calendar.
We used to always grown up had it on the
wall with the big boxes where you could write in
the stuff that you had going on.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Yeah. Sure, and I want to get one again for
next year.
Speaker 4 (10:30):
But then I saw they have a digital version of
it where it's kind of like the the on your phone.
Your calendar on your phone, except it's a giant monitor
that has the calendar feature and you just put it
on your wall.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
That's cool.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
That's one of those things where it's like, I'm not
spending money on that book, man, that would be cool
to have.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Yeah, those calendars you could write on. I would have
predict that the pen would go dry before you actually
use the calendar at all.
Speaker 5 (10:55):
So you were a big one gift on Christmas Eve, so.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
You know, so what would be is this, Like I
would put gifts under the tree and then Christmas Eve
you would open up a small gift. The kids do
not get to choose the small gift. They get to open.
It's chosen for them. Yes, usually as a primer to
what's coming for the next morning when Santa comes and
brings all the other good stuff. How was that when
you were a kid?
Speaker 5 (11:17):
I did it, but I remember going like, I don't
really like this tradition.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Yeah, I got like Christmas blue balls. I got green
and red balls. Dude. There are people who open all
of their gifts on Christmas Eve and then they wake
up and like Christmas morning they just have like breakfast
together or whatever. So what do you guys want to
talk about Yeah, you guys want to do anything? No?
Speaker 5 (11:37):
Yeah, no, I just want to take down the decorations. Yeah,
you can do the puzzle now. The status tradition, the
sadust tradition, Christmas tradition of all time is taking down
your Christmas lives.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
I think this Christmas break, I'm going to put together
the puzzle I got last year for Christmas, like five
hundred pieces, Yeah, five hundred or one thousand, I got
them both. That's so much? All right? Four seven, nine
and six before one text us at seven seven zero
three one found out something that they scientifically that blew
me away. I think we'll do the uh, we'll do
it on air to see if it's true. What is
something you thought was mandatory in life and then met
(12:13):
someone who doesn't do it and it kind of sets
you off a little weird. I've actually got a couple
of them. It's kind of a weird thing. Let's me
have a bunch of mout stuff as well. Deb What
do you got for news?
Speaker 6 (12:20):
We've got Nick Reiner's court appearance being postponed, a national
housing dip effects Orlando homes, and the halftime performer for
Netflix's Christmas Day NFL game games is. We'll talk about
that more coming up next during JCS news.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
You got a single break, We'll come back and get
Deb's news and do more of the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 7 (12:39):
Goodday is Mom Beta with Ross Pagan sponsored by jos Como,
Orlando's injury attorneys.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Well, it's up Culvert and Company Concrete mic.
Speaker 8 (12:52):
So Christmas usually most presidents don't get wrapped till a
weeker week and a half before and get placed under
the tree. For my little ones when they were younger,
Santa's gifts all had separate wrapping papers, separate labels, and
had different handwriting on the labels. And then of course
they showed up under the tree overnight.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
Christmas Eve, because sure Senate does this thing.
Speaker 8 (13:15):
Yeah, man, last minute rapping kind of Yeah, one of
them a right.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
Prince of the Island effect.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
There you go, alive and well.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Very contagious. Gonna be very careful if you're not familiar
with the prints of the island disease. If you have
something to say in thirty seconds, so it'll make you
say it in thirty seven seconds. It's really rare, highly
contagious though, So if you get that. Make sure that
you only apply to technologies that require thirty seven second statements,
(13:47):
then you can work happily in that area. All right,
Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show. Roll Radio one
O four point one. Welcome back. I'm Jim Jack and
Ross right over there, Ross shimminging the shoulders. You can
see that live on the YouTube feed. Obviously in the
spirit with his baggy sweater herself. All right, let's get
some news. Here's depth.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
It's time for JCS news.
Speaker 9 (14:10):
Wows.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
This guy gotta put his name on everything's.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
In my contract is.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Here's the news on the Jim Colburn.
Speaker 6 (14:16):
Show, and JCS News is brought to you by that
mortgage guy Don. The first court appearance for son of
director Rob Reiner is being postponed. Nick Reiner's attorney, Alan Jackson,
addressed the reason why.
Speaker 10 (14:29):
Chevy inmate has to be medically cleared before they can
be transported to court.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
He has not been medically cleared.
Speaker 6 (14:34):
Police say Reiner murdered his father and his mother, Michelle,
with a knife, at their home on Sunday. A possible
motive for the murder hasn't been disclosed. However, multiple reports
say he was disruptive at a holiday party held by
Conan O'Brien. Conan O'Brien hours before he allegedly murdered his parents.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
On behalf of Ross I had to do that. Yeah,
he was walking around asking people if they were famous,
and apparently it was like kind of a formal thing
and he shows up in like a sweatshirt. He's kind
of hung out in the peripheral of the party, making
people kind of uncomfortable.
Speaker 4 (15:05):
Kind of got staring people down, got into it with
Bill Hayter.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
Oh, I didn't hear about the Bill Hayter part.
Speaker 6 (15:10):
I heard about him arguing with his mother and his
father at the party.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
Well, yeah, leg just he was jumping into a conversation.
Bill Hayter said, this is a private conversation.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Oh wow, Yeah, which you have every right to do
at Christmas.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Carters, at any party.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (15:23):
And then also allegedly checked into a pretty upscale hotel
at about four o'clock in the morning on Monday, where
they found lots of blood evidence.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Yeah, a shower was apparently covered in blood. There was
blood on the sheets. He hung the sheets from the
bed up on the curtains, like to you know, keep
people being able to look in the room. Yeah, maniac.
They said it was kind of a tweaky at the party.
Speaker 6 (15:46):
Oh man, Well, we know he struggled with addiction, Yeah,
as well as homelessness and other issues.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
Closer to home.
Speaker 6 (15:53):
The College Park man who attacked a female jogger earlier
this year is back in jail. Officers arrested Tyler Fight
yesterday after he allegedly failed to show up for a
psychosexual evaluation last week, which violates special conditions of his bond.
He also allegedly changed addresses without notifying his probation officer.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
First.
Speaker 6 (16:13):
Fight pleaded guilty to battery after he was accused of
knocking a woman to the ground and attempting to overpower
her along Northumberland Avenue and College Park.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
Back in April, Wow all right.
Speaker 6 (16:24):
Polk Sheriff's deputies arrest a nineteen year old man on
a murder charge. They say Julian Trevino fatally stabbed a
retired nurse who had tried to help him with a
place to stay but ultimately told him to leave.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
This is what he told us. I was really angry
when he put me out of the house, and now
I'm having to live in a shed.
Speaker 6 (16:44):
According to Polk County Sheriff Grady Judge, Trevino broke into
sixty seven year old John Tornado's home in Davenport and
stabbed him to death when he was discovered. Detectives discovered
Trevino was using the sixty seven year old's car and
credit cards. They spotted the car early Monday morning and
to rest at Trevino after he tried to run away
on foot. Pay attention to this next line. A deputy
(17:05):
responded after neighbors called. Judd says she tracked Tornado's car
and just assumed he was out for a drive. She's
going back to the academy for retraining.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Wow, yeah, I bet yeah. He was just tooling around,
no big deal exactly, and not like he just killed himbody.
Speaker 6 (17:22):
The national housing dip is affecting most homes in Orlando.
A recent report from Zello reveals how what percentage of
homes in the area have lost value since last year.
Speaker 3 (17:33):
I don't know, think you guess what percentage? Would you say?
Speaker 2 (17:36):
This is a recent report from Zilo twenty eight percent.
It's wild though, because I just saw her reports today
as well that says there are depressed areas, but man
Orlando wasn't even listed. It was like Tampa, Miami, Jacksonville
and Polk County forty percent. It's not that much. Infusing
the answer no way possible also here and it's like
this affects him and there's something.
Speaker 3 (17:52):
Seven how about eighty five percent?
Speaker 2 (17:54):
No way? Yep, yeh. I don't believe that.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
Well.
Speaker 6 (17:57):
I believe the Sentinel also covered it as well. Jimmy
can look into it if you'd like.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
I'm going to go look. Eighty percent value in homes.
Speaker 6 (18:03):
Eighty five percent of homes lost.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
What are they saying? You have to listen to all
the words, all the words. Tell me what you said.
What's the state?
Speaker 6 (18:11):
It's the A recent report from Zillow reveals over eighty
five percent of homes in the area have lost value
since last year.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
Not they lost eighty I got money, okay, thank you,
My bad. I just I misheard what she was saying.
My apology yea yeah, oh god almighty.
Speaker 11 (18:29):
Well.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
It started off with I don't buy it. I don't
believe it. If it was the original statement I thought
it was, I would not have bought it. No it
we need not good all right.
Speaker 6 (18:40):
A new poll shows Congressman Byron Donalds is leading the
Republican primary for Florida governor with thirty eight percent support
among likely GOP voters now. According to the American Promise Survey,
Lieutenant Governor j Collins trails at nine percent, while James
Fishback and Paul Renner registered two percent and one percent respectively,
(19:01):
and nearly half of voters remain undecided. Now, after voters
learned of Donald Trump's endorsement, Donald's support jumps to around
fifty percent, while backing for Collins dips to seven percent.
Florida Politics reports the survey was conducted December eighth and ninth,
after that multi million dollar ad campaign backing Collins was launched.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
Still don't know who's paying for it.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Yeah, Yeah, he's going to be interesting. His wife is
in a bit of a scandal right now over the
school that she was managing and other things, So it's
gonna be interesting to see how that plays out when
it comes up to election time and how he manages
that in the press. Yeah, because it's a gnarly the
situation that sent and did a piece on it. CBS
actually did a piece on it as well, So it's
kind of an interesting story about the schools that she runs. These,
(19:44):
the voucher school, the charter school. Yeah, and then whe
of them just shut down in the middle of the
matter of fact. People were moving here from other parts
of the country to go to the school in Fort Myers.
It never never appeared.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
And you think you hear every last name possible, and
then Fish back. It happens right in front of you,
and it takes your breath away.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
I'm bringing fish back.
Speaker 6 (20:05):
The Council on American Islamic Relations is following through on
its threat and suing Governor DeSantis in federal court. He
issued an executive order declaring Care a terrorist organization. CAER
Florida's Hiba Rahem says it's not up to the governor
to decide.
Speaker 12 (20:21):
In this country, allegations come with evidence, and evidence is
tested in.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
Court, and it is judges, not politicians, who decide what
is lawful.
Speaker 6 (20:31):
Raheem compared the governor's move to efforts by Southern states
to attack the NAACP in the mid twentieth century. DeSantis
has said he'd welcome that lawsuit, as it would give
the state a chance to expose Care's financial workings through discovery.
Care's attorney says that proves the governor is using the
order as unlawful retaliation for advocacy. All right, this is
a story that's been going on for a while. Florida's
(20:53):
bear hunt is continuing and some are wondering, so how
many bears have been taken?
Speaker 2 (20:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (20:58):
Well, officials with the Florida Sha Chapter of the Sierra
Club say the bear hunt has been underway for eleven
days and the public has a right to know what
has been happening during the hunt. The last hunt in
twenty fifteen came to a sudden halt after three hundred
bears were called in just the first two days. This
is nine days longer, and we're not we have no
idea how many bears has been taken, but.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
We also know a lot of the people who secured
those tags actually sold them to that organization that was
buying them for two thousand dollars apiece, Right, that is
one And I believe they said, wasn't it a limit
of you could get one bear?
Speaker 3 (21:32):
One bear?
Speaker 13 (21:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (21:33):
And didn't they sell one hundred? I thought it was
two two hundred passes something like that. There was a max.
I mean, you can only do so many, And that's
what she was saying last year they maxed out after
the first couple of days, but we don't have any
data to see what's going on now. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (21:45):
So Sierra Club officials say they want to make sure
bear hunters are playing by the rules when it comes
to hunting the animals, and they're getting stonewalled by the
fd FWC in regard to numbers.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
That's not like our stay government, no full transparency, nothing.
Speaker 6 (22:00):
But Florida drivers, don't ditch your license plate frames just yet.
Florida's Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles says they're
probably still legal as long as key details remain visible.
Speaker 3 (22:11):
Under a new law.
Speaker 6 (22:12):
Effective October first, drivers can face up to a five
hundred dollars fine and sixty days in jail for obscuring
a plate's number or registration detail, but frames only decorative
elements at the bottom those are allowed. So a memo
released on Monday clarifies that law enforcement must clearly see
the alpha numeric plate identifier and the top right validation sticker,
(22:34):
but the bottom info is considered non essential, so go
for it.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (22:38):
If a frame obscures the numeric or decal section, drivers
could still face penalties, but frames that cover county names
or slogans at the bottom.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Those are just fine.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
I'll be damn. I didn't know that.
Speaker 6 (22:48):
Yeah, so they had to come out and say whoa, whoa, whoa.
A lot of confusion here we got.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
It still feels like one of those things that could
be like, well, I thought I saw his license plate covered,
so I pulled him over. Yeah you know, oh yeah,
like a tail light out. Yeah, yeah, you're right and dirty.
It's a bad scenario.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
Tint that's too dark, yeah yah, yeah, yeah, all right.
Speaker 6 (23:08):
Central Florida sheriff is running into potential problems with some
school zone cameras. The Osteola County Sheriff's office requested that
nearly three dozen speeding tickets should be dismissed from court
yesterday because it turns out the cameras are actually placed
outside of school zones for both and you now, state
(23:29):
law requires them to be placed within the boundary. So
the sheriff is now a waiting word from the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement to clarify the rulings.
Speaker 2 (23:39):
Yeah, okay, that's what we're unning for, tons of clarifications.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
Exactly, all right.
Speaker 6 (23:44):
A Lakeland optician is facing charges after a road rage
incident in Polk County. Deputy say sixty four year old
Stephen Phillips pulled a semi automatic handgun and pointed it
at another care a car, which was carrying a three
year old child, during a traffic dispute Onday morning on
Hardin Boulevard that's near Pipkin Road. According to police, Phillips
(24:04):
also shouted racial slurs at the family before driving off.
Tried to say he didn't point the gun and all
that other stuff, but the a photo provided by the
family showed Phillips with the weapon. Grady Judge was funny,
he said, with or without glasses, clearly you can see
he's holding the weapon.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
I like the fact that he's been I pulled a gun,
but I never said the N word, come on, come on,
or the other way around, so that didn't work. That
doesn't mean I pull a gun.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
Come exactly.
Speaker 6 (24:29):
And he couldn't remember if he'd actually pointed him at
the family. He was arrested on Sunday and charged with
aggravated assault and improper exhibition of a firearm.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
You said he couldn't remember.
Speaker 6 (24:41):
Yeah, that's what he told police. I don't think I
pulled my hand out and pointed it out of family.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
Dude, listen that that's nothing. He had a guy last
week that got pulled over for lake speeding or something
and he was drunk and when the cop asked him
what was going on, he said, I teleported here. Yeah, exactly.
I didn't steal the BMW with the keys. I was
still the top down I car. It is sure, you
may want to sit down. I got something to tell you.
Believe this. You are not going to buy this, man,
(25:06):
This is a deep, deep story.
Speaker 6 (25:08):
But they ever seen back to the future, all right,
if you're going to be traveling, man, this to me
just sounds like what a pain in the butt. But
progress is being made on the gate Link project at
Orlando International Airport. Crews have completed removing three trams off
the existing track, which is going to be replaced by
late twenty twenty seven. There are six more trams to
(25:31):
remove before construction can begin. The two hundred and fifty
million dollar project is part of the airport's goal of
enhancing transportation infrastructure. But they didn't say, is how much
of a pain in the butt it's going to be
while those trams are being replaced?
Speaker 2 (25:44):
Yeah? Are we expected to walk it. Are we walk it? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (25:47):
You have to hike it, yep, got a hike it.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
I've never seen that before. Over at Oia you get
a lime scooter I think, and a little Hitchley pull
yourself over on.
Speaker 5 (25:57):
I don't think people are ready for that. You know,
how many flights are going to be missed out of
that damn airport when they.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Show up and the trail is not there? Well, yeah, yeah,
because the trams won't effected connectors though, do they? That's right,
if you had a connector, you'd be fine if you're
out that already out there right.
Speaker 6 (26:10):
If you got to go to the A terminal E
terminal less, you have to go to the other term
right right, right.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
Then you're so well, oh yeah, all right.
Speaker 6 (26:17):
SpaceX is preparing to launch another batch of Starlink Internet
satellites from Kennedy Space Center. The Falcon nine rocket will
be used for the mission. The launch window will open
on Wednesday morning at seven nineteen. Once deployed, the Starlink
satellites will provide Internet.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
Service to various parts of Earth. Nice, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 6 (26:35):
Considering Elon Musk has reached a level of wealth that
has never been seen before in mankind. Right, yeah, I
have a six hundred billion.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
Dollars Is that what he said right now? Is it
what it is?
Speaker 3 (26:45):
Yep, six hundred billion dollars.
Speaker 6 (26:46):
I think it goes up to six hundred and seventy
seven billion dollars once Tesla's stock goes is offered up
in the new year.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
It's all good. We can print more six hundred and
seventy seven thousand million dollars. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's one
way to put it. Yeah, So it means he can
make everybody in Orlando a millionaire and the city proper.
That means he could hand everybody in the city a
million bucks. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (27:12):
I mean I think everybody has seen probably some level
of internet content that describes the difference between a million
and a billion, right.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
The time, one's the best one. So we just said
six hundred billion, yeaheah yeah, and one billion is like
you know that, it's the whole seconds thing. You've heard
that one, right, Yeah? What's what's a million seconds? Is
what three years? But a billion seconds is like thirty
three or thirty five years or something.
Speaker 5 (27:36):
I want to say, it's like twelve minutes three years.
I'm sure Texan Service yeah. Yeah, that's six hundred billion.
That's that's a lot of yeah, a lot.
Speaker 6 (27:43):
Forbes noted Musk's wealth had actually grown to six hundred
and seventy seven billion dollars by midday Monday, as is
privately held company SpaceX prepares to go public next year
at evaluation of.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
Eight hundred billion.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
Yeah. All right.
Speaker 6 (27:57):
Speaking of other tech news, Instagram is making the jump
from your phone screen to your TV screen.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
Really yeah.
Speaker 6 (28:05):
The popular social media app launched Instagram for TV on
Tuesday today.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
It takes users.
Speaker 6 (28:12):
It lets users rather watch reels that organized into personalized
channels based on their interests. As of now, it's only
available on Amazon fireTV devices and only here in the US,
but it is expected to expand to additional devices and
markets next year.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (28:29):
And then finally, here's a clue.
Speaker 14 (28:33):
One two bring it so Folk Snoop Doggy Dogg and
Doctor Drinks so ready to make any.
Speaker 6 (28:39):
Snoop Dogg will be this year's halftime performer for Netflix's
Christmas Day NFL games. Wow, the iconic wrapper will take
the stage at halftime of the game between the Detroit
Lions and Minnesota Vikings in Minneapolis. He's promising some special
guests to take part in Snoop's holiday halftime party.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
Man, I would love to be there.
Speaker 6 (28:59):
The game will be the second of Netflix's Christmas doubleheader
that starts with the Washington Commanders hosting.
Speaker 3 (29:06):
The Dallas Cowboys.
Speaker 6 (29:07):
It was previously announced that Kelly Clarkson will kick off
Netflix's Christmas Day broadcast.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Nice.
Speaker 5 (29:13):
I remember years ago, Jim, you questioned, like, because it
was in the news that Snoop Dogg was like selling
I don't know, like ham sandwiches or something like, and
then you questioned, like, what how much likability does this
guy have? He literally sells everything and how does nothing?
You know, he never sell out. He never gets deemed
to sell out. Although he does very sell out stuff,
(29:35):
he doesn't really ever get that Moniker.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
I don't know why NBC leaned into it heavy with
the Olympics. So, yeah, they had him on their Olympic
screw and then it was working. Then they added him
to everything they do.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
With the Olympics. He seems to be impervious to that
entire thing of selling out. It just seems to be
completely impervious.
Speaker 6 (29:52):
Now he's like a coach or something, and they've got
you know this collaboration between the Olympic War and Snoop Dogg.
Speaker 3 (29:59):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
He's like our uncle Sam in twenty twenty five, Like
he's like our mascot.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
And that concludes your JCS News.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
Snooze me trippy all right? Four seven nine four one
text us seven seven zero three one, Load them up.
It is time for the Froggers football follow up. One
of you guys is gonna take home a twenty five
dollars gift card to Froggers Grilling Bar. We'll do that next.
The Bruggers football follow up is next call down for
(30:30):
your chase to win. Four oh seven nine one six
one four one.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
It's time for the Froggers football follow up on the
Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
That's right. Is time for the Froggers football follow up
courtesy of our friends over at Froggers Grilling Bar. That's right.
For these beautiful locations all here in center of Florida.
You gotta love Froggers Band. They're awesome and they're perfectly
located so every part of town is is represented. You
can slide in all your favorite sports, all your favorite drinks,
great food, wonderful people. The people of Progers are absolutely awesome.
(31:08):
Love doing this every year.
Speaker 4 (31:10):
Yeah Fresh never frozen a menu with over fifty widescreen TVs.
You don't miss single a game, and nowadays it's sometimes
hard to I just tell you I was paying for
services I didn't even know I had twice I get
the games that were available at Froger.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
So learned from my mistake.
Speaker 4 (31:30):
And when it's time to watch the game, go to
Frogers dot com find the Frogers near you.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
Absolutely all right. The whole idea here, guys, is you
try to figure out what member of the show had
the best week in NFL Action last week. When it
comes to picks. This is not against spread. Just straight up,
we'll be Ross, Jack, Deborah or myself and off we go.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
So here we go, giving you a little bit of history.
Last week's winner was Deborah Roberts and that was her
fourth win of the year. Ross has been doing most
of the heavy lifting this season's go dogs with six
total wins.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
I have two, and then Jim is left in last
place with one win back in week nine. You guys
remember week nine, Yeah, he had he had a win.
What week are we in right now? We are in
week fifteen fifteen fifteen is what we just completed. Yeah,
one out of fifteen isn't bad. Good job, Jimmy, especially
(32:31):
when there's like four. Good job.
Speaker 4 (32:34):
But guess why what past results are not indicative of
future performance. That means in week fifteen, it could be
any one of the four of us. And what the
callers need to do now is pick which one of
the four of us they think won this week?
Speaker 2 (32:49):
Very good, Devra, one, two, three, four or five. Let's
go too. Let's go to that is Matt. Matt, How
you doing, buddy?
Speaker 15 (33:00):
Wonderful sir?
Speaker 2 (33:01):
How are you doing? One? Doing fine? Matt? Glad do
you call? Thanks for being part of the program today.
All right, who is it? Who do you think had
the best week? I gotta go with my fellow Yankees fan.
Speaker 9 (33:10):
Let's go Jack.
Speaker 2 (33:11):
Oh, you're picking me, buddy?
Speaker 3 (33:13):
So yes, what did you say?
Speaker 4 (33:16):
I mentioned I had two on the year, two wins
on the year. That was weeks one and two. So
it's been a However, this is week fifteen, and you
picked the right week to pick.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
Me because I took it off. Hey, buddy, let me
tell you this is the first time this year I
believe that the first caller chose the right member. I
guess I don't think anybody's gotten it on the.
Speaker 5 (33:43):
First try this entire year, buddy. And it's because of
Yankee fandom.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
That's right, Yeah, it is Yankee fandom. All right, give
us what we need, buddy, What do you need? It's
a frime. We need a rivet ribbit for froggers. Oh
you go, Matt is your winner. He chose Jack. Jack
did have a pretty good week. This was a bizarre week.
Ross at one point, like was leading the entire pack.
(34:07):
I looked up there, so goddamn Ross again. Huh and
then man, you checked fifteen minutes later and Ross is
not even know that. I mean, they've they this dangers
just on fire. Yeah yeah, well Buffalo helped me a lot,
But what really hurt me. I had a shout at
all of it, but that Kansas City game. I thought
Kansas fighting for their Kansas City, fighting for their life
would get it done. And they still home knee did not.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
Al Easton all the time.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
They don't have the personnel, man, they just don't have it.
I mean that I can think it's fair to say
that dynasty could be over, you know, and they had
a hot run. It was fun to watch, but they
almost come to an end. It looks like some others
are starting. You mentioned Ross, who I had eleven picks.
Right this week, Ross had ten, and then deb you
had nine, and then Jim came up in last place.
Speaker 11 (34:48):
It was the last.
Speaker 2 (34:49):
I just looked and didn't think I was Yeah, you
didn't look down enough. Oh yeah, Scarling. All right, so
there is Scarling. You came in with Carling went it
came in eighth, right, Patrick came in fourteenth. Yeah, and
then Jim Colbert comes in twenty fourth. Yeah, it's Devora
Roberts is in thirty sixth Are you sure you're right? No,
(35:09):
it's close.
Speaker 4 (35:10):
You both had nine, so it's really a tie. Oh no, no,
that means you're in the last place.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
No, no, no, no, no, on this thing. My name
before Deborah's. I came in third, and I'm sorry Deborah. Great, Jim,
you beat a girl. Good job, Jimmy. Oh don't let
beat the girl. It's okay.
Speaker 11 (35:29):
Like that.
Speaker 6 (35:30):
I have one hundred and fifteen year back over there
at like one thirty six.
Speaker 2 (35:34):
Yeah, that's a point. I have won forty three for
the year. Ross, Yeah, you can have this one, honey,
you can have this one. Do a good job for
the year.
Speaker 4 (35:46):
Ross has one hundred and fifty six, correct, Then Deborah
Roberts with one hundred and fifty correct, la, and.
Speaker 2 (35:53):
Then oh look who now tied? And there's so many
different metrics. Oh yeah, you're last and every one of them. No,
I was not last of this last week.
Speaker 5 (36:02):
Jeez, Louise, you're holding onto a tiebreaker though, Can anybody
holding up that you're holding on to Ross?
Speaker 2 (36:09):
You're tied for the season lead. Yeah, you're tied to this,
so I mean, you know, of course for people don't know,
if Ross wins the entire thing through entire year, that's
I mean, that's a good payday, right. Hey man, my
son is gonna eat through my gambling waves. You don't know.
And there's no real money and there's no real money, ye,
dad is at Deb's at one hundred and fifty, so
she's only six off the pace. There aren't many games left.
Its gonna be hard to catch up against those guys.
They rarely have bad weeks. Uh, let's see, Jeter, you
(36:32):
have four and forty three. I have one forty three
and deb has how many Deborah Deborah has one fifty.
So yeah, you and I are tied. Jack.
Speaker 3 (36:40):
Saturday is going to be a tough night.
Speaker 2 (36:42):
Yeah, yeah, it's Saturday night.
Speaker 3 (36:43):
Packers at Bears. Oh, that's gonna be a great game.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
Bear Bear's looking pretty good right now, be dude, look
pretty good. There's good, I'll tell you. Man. There are
teams you don't want to play. You don't want to
play New England right now, even though they had a
tough game against Buffalo, they had them down twenty one
zip and then kind of collapse. But you don't want
to play Denver right now either.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
Oh yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
Denver is gnarly right. Oh, I'm so happy New England lost.
Speaker 5 (37:08):
I know this is different, but it truly was the
worst fantasy football loss of my life this past week.
Oh and fantasy football amongst my own right, my childhood
group of friends playing fantasy football, I lost by point
four to three in a playoff match. Mind you, I
played Sam Donald over bow Nicks.
Speaker 2 (37:28):
Oh my god, I would have.
Speaker 5 (37:30):
Won by twenty five if I would have just stuck
with the quarterback I played all year. But sometimes you
overmanage and then you freak out, and then you get.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
Knocked oat to hold me back? Would you? Why would
you do that? Why would you take Sam Donald over?
You overthink real?
Speaker 5 (37:45):
You stare at the screen long enough and you're like,
I gotta do something. And here's another thing, all right,
it's because all analytics that I looked up through AI
and freaking Todd Berry, everyone told me Donald over bo
startled over bone Nicks. There are just two players on
the team.
Speaker 2 (38:03):
I mean, the entire team is better.
Speaker 5 (38:05):
No, you don't even even know that you no, no,
that Seahawks are also really good and bone Nicks in
the last four games, but like not really putting.
Speaker 2 (38:13):
Up that many points.
Speaker 5 (38:15):
Knocked out of my playoffs, dude, I'm sorry. I shouldn't
have brought it up. My blood pressure right through the roof,
right through the roof.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
I need an apple juice to keep my blood sugar low.
I got knocked out.
Speaker 5 (38:26):
That's playoffs, that's fantasy football over and I lost my
point four three God, so you're out, completely out completely.
I really I got reminded how much I don't like losing. Yeah,
for me, I rather officially lose by a lot than
a little bit, because in fantasy football, in that sense,
(38:48):
you wouldn't lose by a lot, because it's like, I couldn't.
Speaker 2 (38:51):
You don't want it to be close enough to be
mad about.
Speaker 5 (38:53):
You don't want it to be close enough that if
you would have had thought.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
A different thought, that you could have won. Yeah, yeah,
all right, four seven nine seven seven zero three one
really good job, good job, I mean, that's awesome. Thanks Rogers,
We appreciate that very much. Frogers Grilling Bar for these
locations locally, all the great food, all the great people.
You'll love going there, Frogers dot com for the location
nearest you. Let's take a little break. What did you do?
That's new? Is next here on the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
This is Man the Froggers football follow up. Find the
Froggers near you at Froggers dot com.
Speaker 14 (39:35):
So in my family, we waited till the night of Christmas,
or my mom waited to put all the presents into
the tree. And to me, looking back now as a kid,
like it really gave that sense of like magic with Santo,
Like you go to bed with no presence into the tree,
and then you wake up Christmas morning and it's all there. Yeah,
and that way you knew he came. And it was
(39:55):
just really like it added to that idea of Santa.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
Yeah, but I mean having some you mean the reality, yeah, Santa.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
Yeah, but having some gifts under the tree I think
creates some kind of anticipation there that makes it even
oh yeah, a little hotter there, you know. Four seven
nine one text us seven seven zero three one. Welcome
back to the Jim Kolber Show right here on Real
Radio one oh four point one. Thanks for joining us.
We appreciate that a lot of chair. Thanks for tuning in.
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello. Jack is here as well. Yeah,
(40:26):
so is our boy Rock. I'm excited for this. All right,
let's do what'd you do that's new? What'd you do that?
What did you do that? They something new to do?
I need to tell us something. Law, that's right. Closman
Law k l A U s m A in law
(40:48):
dot com offices right there in winter Park four oh
seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen car crash called Klosman.
We'll hear from Glenn on Thursday for Colbert Corp. But
this week it is a Santa Clausman. So tune in
on Thursday as Glynn brings in Christmas trivia and gives
out twenty five dollars public skift cards to people who
choose it. Right, all right, what you do that's new
if you're just tuning in new to the program. Every
(41:10):
Tuesday at four o'clock, one of the members of the
show will choose something for the other members to watch, read,
or listen to. We will do that, reconvene on that
following Tuesday. We'll review that and then move on to
the next member. We will have no next member because
this is the last week of the show before the
beginning of the year. We'll reboot this when we get back.
So Ross, you're the last one of twenty twenty five.
What do you have for us? Pig dog Man? I
(41:31):
really hope I, you know, nailed it at the end
of this Year's what you do?
Speaker 5 (41:36):
That's new because I chose my favorite content creator so
far that the Internet.
Speaker 2 (41:41):
Has spewed at me. And it's not a skateboarder, it's
not a comedian. It's actually it's not well produced.
Speaker 5 (41:48):
It's not well produced very to be honest with you,
it's dead pan and pretty boring when it comes to
a when it comes to a charming person.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
The delivery aspect of this is.
Speaker 5 (41:59):
Very it is not anything other than exactly what it is,
which is opinions and takes that you may have never
heard or.
Speaker 2 (42:09):
Thought about before, because it's on stuff you'd never really
considered having a.
Speaker 5 (42:12):
Take on things that I absolutely have watched and went,
oh my god, I do agree with that. When he
brought up about how special effects, I brought this up
to you guys. He was the one that put it
in my ear that special effects used to be one
of the biggest driving forces of movies in the eighties
and nineties and even in the early two thousands, and
then when special effects plateaued, Well, that is that's just
(42:35):
one of the many reasons why movies aren't as popular
or part of pop culture as they once, Like the
magic is gone, there were I sent you guys just
one video to start off with, and then kind of
wanted you guys to just scroll on his page and
see all these different takes. Here's one thing that I
enjoyed him posting that made me laugh, And this is
(42:56):
an interesting thought. He said, The key to understanding capital
is that dog treats have shapes like in a steak,
even though that means nothing to the dog. Yeah, right,
Thoughts like that that are always original, are always his
and he is just a fountain of different thoughts that
(43:16):
I find interesting and dare I say pretty intelligent.
Speaker 2 (43:20):
And by the way, that he he's talking about is
Jason K. Pargin.
Speaker 4 (43:24):
That's pa r G I N Yeah. So on Instagram
it's at Jason K. Pargin or you can go to
Jim Culbert Live and the link is there on the
What You Do That's New pape.
Speaker 2 (43:34):
And it's funny when you brought this guy up. I
had been kind of tuning in on this dude for
about the last three or four months. He just popped
up in my feet on Instagram. And because I've watched
his content so much, I get more of his feed.
So I didn't follow him until last night when I
tuned in to watch the videos. Because I've always just
gotten so much of his content, I've never even thought
to follow the guy, but I did it last night,
and he had one of the most amazing ones outside
(43:56):
The one that I chose to watch was what I'd
seen before, and it's crazy and I think devil think
it's fascinating. But by the way, I think everybody should
follow this guy. I think he's also very brilliant fun.
Speaker 5 (44:06):
And change your if your algorithm is just spewing like
the same stuff and it's boring.
Speaker 2 (44:12):
I really do recommend following this, Jason K.
Speaker 5 (44:16):
Pargan, because it's a really good follow You hear different thought, Jim,
what was the one that you watched?
Speaker 2 (44:21):
Is the one that he talks about the Day of
the Dead parades? Yes, right during the James Bond movies.
And then all of a sudden, that's a cultural phenomenon, right,
that that parade, the idea that did not exist until
the James Bond movie portrayed in the streets of New
Orleans or wherever it was. So I know exactly what
you're talking about. So in Specter, Day of the Dead.
Speaker 5 (44:42):
Parade is the opening scene of that movie, and the
Mexican country of Mexico is like, yeah, well we'll do this.
This is gonna be great for tourism. And then you
come to find out is that, like, there actually is
no Day of the Dead parade. They made that in
the movie, and then Mexico awful that interaction with Red
(45:03):
in the movie. They went, oh God, people are going
to expect a parade now, and now there's a parade
and then he kind of peels back the curtain to
a lot of corporate impacts.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
On our culture that we may not know.
Speaker 5 (45:17):
That is from a corporation a La Santa Claus and
Coca Cola. The reason why he has the red hat
and the big red nose and burley red rosy cheeks.
That was a huge part of Coca Cola's campaign way
back in the day.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Did you find one you like that?
Speaker 16 (45:34):
I did.
Speaker 6 (45:35):
I found one that had one point three million views,
And it's about one of the things they don't tell
you in childhood.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
Oh really, And.
Speaker 6 (45:42):
It's about how you're going to have to restart your life.
You're going to have to start over again at some point.
Speaker 2 (45:48):
Oh wow, I haven't seen that one.
Speaker 6 (45:49):
Yeah, it was see what do you mean, either through
divorce or through death, or through losing your job or
your career, your industry of vapur writing. He talked about, yeah,
how many times he's had to remake himself again and
again and again. And it's something they don't tell you
about in childhood that Listen, life isn't a single line trajectory.
(46:10):
You're going to start that way, You're going to think
it's going to go that way. And then life is
going to happen, and he talks about how, you know,
he went to college for radio broadcasting but ended up
becoming fool, yeah exactly, and after two years found out
that the thing he trained for was not the career
for him, went and did something else, built a multimillion
(46:30):
dollar business, just to watch that industry evaporate.
Speaker 3 (46:34):
So then he had to restart his life several times.
Speaker 6 (46:37):
And then he also mentions that in that piece why KFC,
Colonel Sanders is one of his heroes, and he says,
you know, to the kids watching, you know, Colonel Sanders
is not just a mascot.
Speaker 3 (46:49):
He's not a logo.
Speaker 6 (46:50):
This is a man who was sixty eight years old
and living in his car, who had bounced from job
to job and career to career, basically had nothing left
and ended up creating literally one of.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
The most iconic American businesses out there, exactly.
Speaker 6 (47:04):
At sixty eight years old, living out of his car.
So the idea is, you know, you can plan for stuff,
but be prepared because life is gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (47:12):
That's a good one. I haven't seen that one. I'm
gonna roll through this dude's content like crazy. Yeah, what'd
you find? This is really cool?
Speaker 4 (47:18):
And it's why he does a quick review on why
groundhog Day the movie.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
I was just about to say that how one how
good is this take on groundhog Day?
Speaker 2 (47:28):
The minute because I'm a giant fan of both movies.
The minute he says that, I'm like this, dude nailed it.
He did, and it's so it's why groundhog Day is
a better Christmas movie and more of a better Scrooge
movie than Scrooge, both starring Bill murl Murray and even
better then It's a Wonderful Life for.
Speaker 4 (47:52):
Two of the main themes that those other two movies explore.
One is that change over time, where in Scrooge it's
over an night, but groundhog Day he changes who his
core character is. And I didn't know this until I
heard it that they estimate that the time in groundhog
Day he keeps repeating the same day over and over,
(48:13):
that goes on for between ten and thirty years.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
Yea, yeah, yeah, hearing.
Speaker 4 (48:17):
Okay, So it's like that seems like a more realistic
timeframe to really change your entire person personality. And then
as far as It's a Wonderful Life, you get to
see all the different pathways, like you see what happens
when Jimmy Sewart isn't there. Well on this you get
to see all the different pathways based on how Bill
Murray acts or behaves in groundhog Days. Although it's a
(48:41):
holiday movie, but that takes place in February. It's a
it's a groundhog Day movie. However, he said it has
it's more Christmas themed, has more of a theme of
Christmas than ninety five percent of the movie content out
there with Christmas in the time.
Speaker 2 (48:57):
That was a fascinating take. I mean, he wasn't ten
seconds in that thing, and I started yelling, he's got it.
He nailed it.
Speaker 5 (49:03):
And just because I know a lot of people have
probably seen or heard his voice before, Like tell me, like,
I think we have some audio close enough that we
can pull up. Just like, tell me you haven't heard
this guy's voice on your phone?
Speaker 2 (49:18):
Without a doubt groundhog Day. And I am dead serious
about this.
Speaker 8 (49:22):
And in fact, I think this is a better Scrooge
movie than the actual Scrooge movie that Bill Murray also made.
Speaker 5 (49:29):
It it's that guy, yeah, yeah, you know, the guy,
the nerd who is poor lighting and not great video quality.
Speaker 2 (49:35):
It's like if your dad got real curious and discovered
he had a video camera, It's like, oh, this is
what green screen does?
Speaker 11 (49:41):
You know?
Speaker 6 (49:41):
His take on the Notebook was really fascinating too, which
was which was basically, how cool to for good?
Speaker 3 (49:48):
How you know the good guys in films? Right, the
boring guy, the one.
Speaker 6 (49:51):
Who's got his s together, who's got a job, who's
got a life, is always portrayed as the antithesis of romance.
But the bad boy who doesn't have his s together, right,
he pulled from Titanic, he pulled from the Notebook, he
pulled from Clerks. It was it was fascinating about, yeah,
you know, this guy isn't gonna have as much free
(50:12):
time to whine and dine you because having a career
takes an extraordinary amount of energy and time. And yet
those are always kind of portrayed as the villains of
the romance movies. So I found that one is fascinating.
And then Ross, I'm definitely gonna check out his take
on Wally.
Speaker 2 (50:26):
Well, I'll break it down.
Speaker 5 (50:28):
His stance on the movie Wally is that it it's real, Well,
it's the worst aging Disney movie, and it will it's
aging like milk, because when you have robots coming in
to save humanity, which is basically what happens in Wally
by a robot trying to, yeah, trying to you know,
save Earth. Now, look at twenty twenty five, we were
(50:51):
terrified of them. We should be, and the message of
a robot going I'm here to help, I will save
does not feel outs you don't.
Speaker 2 (51:01):
That just doesn't work anymore. And by the way, this
guy's a best selling author as well, well, yeah, I
should say that. Yeah, best sellers should have opened up
with that. Once again, we're talking about Jason K. Pargan.
I look forward to reading some of his novels as well.
I look forward to doing that.
Speaker 6 (51:16):
In twenty twenty six, they just been signed by Saint
Martin's Press for three more titles.
Speaker 2 (51:20):
And by the way, prepare yourself accordingly, because once you
get on this dude's feed, you're gonna be there.
Speaker 14 (51:24):
Bit.
Speaker 2 (51:24):
You better bring some snacks because I'm telling you, you'll
get on one of these videos and you'll be like, god, man,
this this is amazing. It'll be like you three minutes
of the most blown away you'll be and then you'll
next thing you'll know, You'll be four hours into this
dude's feed. You know you'll learn more than you can
ever imagine, and it's very entertaining. He does a very
good job. If you can't Jason K.
Speaker 4 (51:43):
Pargain, If you can't find it on Instagram, you just
go to Jim Culbert live dot com.
Speaker 2 (51:46):
Look up what you do that's new. It's at the
very top of the list with a link to his
uh hayes post. Great choice to end the year, buddy.
Speaker 5 (51:53):
Yeah, it's not inflammatory, it's all interesting, and you know,
I think it's time to try to smarten up some
people's feeds, and I think this is a very fun
and entertaining way to do exactly that, for sure.
Speaker 2 (52:05):
Four seven nine four one texts seven seven zero three.
One favorite chain restaurant you? Ah, favorite chain restaurant? Uh,
Peach Valley. Favorite chain restaurant. Yeah, I gotta come back
to me outback baby. Let's right. I do like Texas Roadhouse,
but I don't go there. I don't go to any
of these a lot.
Speaker 3 (52:25):
What about you.
Speaker 2 (52:26):
I would go to McDonald's more than those, but I
wouldn't say much. I would think it's Roadhouse or Peach
Valley as well. I go to Peach Valley as much
as I go to anywhere for break, because I think
it's superb. I'll tell you why I'm asking this question.
Speaker 17 (52:36):
Next proudly sponsored since day one by Glenn Klausmanclosmanlaw dot com.
Speaker 9 (52:52):
HI today is.
Speaker 7 (52:57):
Better sponsored by Just Calmo, Orlando's injury attorneys.
Speaker 18 (53:06):
Hey, Jescy, I screw the next summer here. Hey, it's
interesting hearing you talk about when you put the presents out.
When I was growing up in Chicago, I'm a huge
Christmas fan. My birthday's right around Christmas' twenty first. My
parents would always wrap all mine of my sister's gifts
and leave them at my grandmother's house, who lived a
block away. Until I was about seventeen or eighteen. When
(53:26):
we would go to sleep, they would drive over, get
them all, bring them back, put them under the tree,
and do all the little things.
Speaker 2 (53:31):
That Santa was there.
Speaker 18 (53:33):
Kind of cool.
Speaker 2 (53:36):
I like it all right, or A seven nine four
one texts seven seven zero three one bulcome back to
the Jim Colbert Show. I'm Jim deb Jack and Russer
here as well. I had him and and my so
my cousins. They were eight.
Speaker 4 (53:48):
In fact, we had seven in our president they had
eight and theirs. Oh yeah, my mom's sister Catholics. So
she would wrap all their gifts in white paper. Then
they would be numbered for the order to open that.
Speaker 2 (54:03):
We did that one year. Yeah, we did that one
year because we thought the kids were sneaking around a
little bit, so we put numbers and they had no
idea whose gift was Who's that way, we knew all
the number six's were one kid, all the number three's
were one of the kids. Brilliant I had.
Speaker 5 (54:18):
This happened more than once, probably ballpark four or five times.
You guys remember opening up a gift that gave away
another gift. No example, you want to PlayStation two and
then you get a PS two video game before you
get the PS two. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's what we
(54:40):
do have that you can't open that yet, open that
last not that one, don't know. And sometimes it's stack
because the giveaway gift would be smaller than the other one,
so stack, that's like, okay, open the big one first, right, right, right,
and then sometimes that you know, my wife is obsessive
about the gifts under the tree.
Speaker 2 (54:57):
How many there are? You know how they feel in
church equal, making sure it's equal, right. But we had
that situation one time where it was one of those
gifts where it was a two piecer and it was
it was considered two separate gifts, but they went together
because they were both kind of expensive. And I remember
it was my son. He picked up one of the
gifts and my wife was like, whoa, and she goes
(55:18):
hold on for a second. You could see her go
deep in the tank, you know, deep in thought, thinking
you know which one is which, and literally had to
take it in the other room and shake it a
little bit to figure out kind of remember what it
was before we open it up. I'm still I still
got to put up my Christmas decorations. What I know,
I just give up. It's the sixteenth, buddy, I know.
Mind we're up a month ago. Yeah we put her
(55:39):
up to the day after that. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (55:41):
Yeah, we just did ours this weekend too.
Speaker 2 (55:43):
Your son doesn't have to know what Christmas is. He
doesn't know what anything is. He does his lights, you'll know.
Speaker 5 (55:49):
I mean he likes the lights on the Christmas tree.
I have the tree up, there are ornaments on it.
But I'm not like outside decorations. No, no, not feeling
it now, just haven't gotten to it. Yeah, stupid day
the stupid ass daylight ending at three o'clock or something.
Speaker 2 (56:07):
Whack is wild to go out to use the bathroom
five forty it's like pitch black. Yeah, one of my
batman that's what'll be midnight out there the hell?
Speaker 4 (56:14):
All right, Well, they all talk about ending daylight saving
time or keeping it whatever.
Speaker 2 (56:18):
I still don't know what is the.
Speaker 4 (56:20):
Preferred time to be in Yeah, when against darkness early
or isn't.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
It it's the it's in the summer.
Speaker 4 (56:26):
We want to just stay like that, So that's the
daylight saving time. Oh yeah, that's the time you want.
I mean I think that's the you know, I mean
it's darker later in the morning, right, Yeah, it didn't
get it won't get light until like seven thirty.
Speaker 2 (56:37):
Yeah. Yeah, that's a little tough though. Got me with
a damn headband with a flashlight on it, looking like
a minor, like a mole man.
Speaker 4 (56:45):
I think we should cheat thirty minutes, like like turning
back thirty minutes and that's where you lock it in.
Speaker 2 (56:53):
Yet. Yeah, all right, seven seven zero three one. So
I asked everybody on the show what their favorite chain
restaurant is you said Peach Valley, Jack, you said roadhouse
or I don't know. A texta reminded me. I really
do like Derek Leen. Oh yeah, not as a restaurant.
Oh yeah, yeah, you said it, but it's not a restaurant. Yeah,
I mean some of them have the Brazier burgers and
(57:15):
stuff like that. That's not what you're going for. I
do like I enjoy Texas Rodhouse. You're going for the
peanut Buster parfait. Oh yes, oh god, oh yeah god.
Speaker 5 (57:24):
And you said oot Mack Slovakian steakhouse. Yeah, completely different.
Speaker 2 (57:31):
Well, the reason I gotta admit I like a Chick
fil A too. Chickle A is fine. And the funny
thing is, I think that when we say chain restaurants,
I mean they're really not even talking about fast food spots.
They're talking about your your normal like your Chili's, your outbacks,
your Bennigan's, your Fridays, your apple Bee's, your Applebee's, all
of those places. And this is an NPR story if
(57:52):
you want to check it out. It really is kind
of fascinating. Why do you think that people are these
chains still stay alive in there? And I asked because
of this. Like, I think nationwide, over the last maybe
ten or fifteen years, we've been kind of inundated with
food content. Would you guys agree? We went from like
one food channel that you had to get that you
had to buy a package to get to now having
(58:12):
like fifteen different you know, TV channels specifically just focused
toward food and eating. And that doesn't even begin to
count the influencer accounts on social media to handle this. Right, Yep,
nobody in any city in America doesn't know where the
mom and pop family spots are, right, I mean is
that safe to say? Like in Orlando, it would take
(58:32):
verly hardly any time to find out where the cool
restaurants are. We have a guy on Fridays that tell
you where they are all the time. We're not interviewing
or excuse me, we're not reviewing Chili's or Fridays on Fridays.
You know, we're talking about local restaurants owned by local
people that still struggle to stay alive every single day.
And it's because of chain restaurants. But why if you
(58:52):
know you're supporting a neighborhood or possibly a neighbor you
know you're getting better food, why do chains continue the thrive, consistency, price, location.
Speaker 7 (59:04):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (59:06):
They are comfortable. They grew up with it. Advertising nostalgia,
yeah is the answer.
Speaker 3 (59:12):
This is a well then I would have picked Ponder Roast.
Speaker 2 (59:15):
Yeah. Yeah. This is a fascinating, a fascinating story about
how people, I'll say Americans because this is Americans. We're
talking about how people in this country and in this
culture love those restaurants. And it has very little to
do with the food, Yeah, very little to do with
the drinks, very little to do with the service. That's
the first place you took a homecoming date. That's where
(59:37):
you found out that you were you know, That's where
you went for your sixteenth birthday. That's where you went
when you found out your sister was pregnant. That's where
you went after graduating high school. That's where your sister
got pregnant. Right, Yeah, that's where your sister got pregnant.
That's what I call them texts. Americans have applied their
cultural nostalgia to chain restaurants, and so now it almost
(01:00:00):
has nothing to do with what the restaurant really provides.
It has everything to do with how it looks and
feels inside. And that goes back way to your childhood.
And if you look back and people out there listening
right now, chances are one of these restaurants will be
a lexicon in your family. Whether it be olive Garden,
whether it be a roadhouse, or any of these places,
(01:00:20):
more than likely your family has spent some special time
in those walls. For us, it is Roadhouse. Like the
last four or five family events we've had, we just
go to roadhouse because it's easier. It used to be Kobe,
but now it's like Roadhouse. But we all have those
places and because they're very comfortable, we like going back.
We don't even care what happens when we get there.
(01:00:41):
Oh friendlies, remember friendly ice cream there? Man. I don't
know how people will accept that message.
Speaker 5 (01:00:47):
And first of all, there's one disagreement that I need
to throw out here. I don't think people know where
the mom and pops are in their local business because
they're always coming in and out. They aren't usually the
thirty forty to fifty year establishments that have a higher
chance of word of mouth sticking.
Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
Yeah. Like, still, local businesses are for me.
Speaker 5 (01:01:11):
I support as small business and local business as much
as I can, especially with food because I will not cook,
and there's always a new one that I haven't heard about,
And like we have faias on Fridays to tell people
that because they need to be talked about for them
to have a change.
Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
A couple of these, Hey you're right, and they have
national advertising on nine yards With a couple of excerpts
from the story, it says these restaurants are personal landmarks,
dotted with memories of nights spent with friends before a movie,
awkward first dates, family birthday dinners, and it goes on
to go down that people are obsessed with chain restaurants,
especially they have a favorite one that's just a cherished
place of their personal histories. It says the sameness is
(01:01:50):
the point. Experts in the industry say that a familiar
meal can provide a needed jolt of nostalgia that actually
makes you feel better about your life. When they find
that people start having those tough moments, rather than therapy
or anything like that, they'll go back to a restaurant
they went. For me, it would be like maybe Hot
Dog Heaven here in Orlando, because when I worked on
the east side of town when I first moved in Orlando,
(01:02:12):
that would go to Hot dog Heaven probably twice a week,
and just standing in that line and standing there waiting
for a hot dog for my buddy Mike, you know,
who owns the place with his wife. It just became
a place that felt kind of comfortable when you walk in,
like your local bar. Like bars have this in spades.
By the way, you know, Texters stopped telling me that
Costco is my favorite restaurant. It probably is. The check
(01:02:32):
your credit card receipts with probably my most eating that
restaurant in the past this year, I know, I know. Yeah,
my year end review Costco, I know.
Speaker 5 (01:02:42):
For a fact that outback to me is absolutely right
on the nuts, exactly what you're talking about it. First
of all, yeah, sure, I'll defend a good cuckar barra wing.
I'll still enjoy I'll still I'll still defend those Aussie
cheese fries, which I believe was notoriously known for having
the highest calorie out of any appetizer twenty one n
(01:03:04):
calories more. Okay, it's five is it really? I want
to say it's five or four thousand, five hundred calories.
Speaker 2 (01:03:10):
That's the highest I've ever seen. The only thing I've
seen is that massive fudge brownie with all that stuff on.
It is like in that in that three or four
five thousand range. Jack.
Speaker 5 (01:03:17):
If you can't checked out, check out that calorie count
on those Aussie cheese fries full order appetizer did moment
on the lips about three years on the hips in
that category. But I grew up going out back for
my birthday with my mom. Hell I even worked there.
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
I was a busser.
Speaker 5 (01:03:33):
I remember bringing the cheese fries to a house party
and then dropping the little fun fact about how you
guys know this is.
Speaker 2 (01:03:39):
The highest calorie aupatography. It didn't work.
Speaker 5 (01:03:42):
I didn't make out with anybody, but outback is my
formative years special out.
Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
Back Aussie's cheese fries are a bit high in calories,
with a regular full serving clocking in around two six
hundred twenty calories. That sure in, by the way, for
a guy in my size six two twenty, that's my
entire allotment of calories for an entire day. Did you
slap some ranch on that bad boy? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:04:08):
WHOA A small serving offers around eleven sixty calories.
Speaker 5 (01:04:13):
I don't think you've lived though, if you haven't been
drunk eating out back cheese fries.
Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
Yeah, that's a dragon. Do you need to chase ye?
I gotta tell you if you were to kind of
sum up, if you were to run my credit card
sipts over the years, for the place I've spent the
most money in chain restaurants, it probably is breakfast places,
maybe more so than even dinner places. The place that
Deban I are talking about, this Peach Valley Place, came
into town what about two years ago, deb I.
Speaker 3 (01:04:34):
Think it's been a little bit longer.
Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
A little bit longer, and it is spectacular.
Speaker 4 (01:04:37):
A Texter nailed it for me because they also grew
up in North Jersey, which is where I'm from. They didn't,
we didn't have many chain restaurants, so their nostalgia is
from local Italian places and pizza joints, and that really
is true for.
Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Us as well. For me personally, what those pizza joints,
Italian places, that's where we would go Lebanandi's or Uncle Frank's.
Speaker 9 (01:04:59):
Right right right.
Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
I don't know what that would be for us here,
probably wing spots. For me, that's the you know, if
I was going to tour any spot in Orlando, that
would be something that would be a specific food. I
will go from spot to spot to good get to
get good chicken wings. Don't don't, don't sleep on outbacks
cucku burro wing. Okay, enough of your cuckar bur wings.
Speaker 6 (01:05:16):
Be Swan supper club yeah, oh really Yeah. Supper clubs
are were at least a big thing up north.
Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
One of my favorite things when I got trained as
a busser over at Outback was they were like, hey,
heads up, we have no Australian food. This is just
a thing.
Speaker 3 (01:05:32):
That we are not really kind of didn't need that.
Speaker 2 (01:05:34):
Yeah, we are not serving cuckar burro. There's masters is
the most Australian thing. You having a joint, that's it. Yeah.
They were very open like day one. By the way,
heads up, we're lying. It's just for decoration, you know,
a change that I can't believe didn't take off and
do more. Actually I believe they're closing them. All is
a Darden product. And I have to tell you every
(01:05:56):
single thing on the menu I ever had there was
absolutely wonderful. Bones No, actually not bad though, But I've
only eaten there a couple of times. I've eaten at
this place a number of times. Corn Bread and I
never figured. I was like, I would actually have conversations
or buddy Steve Kramer from TK Law. We used to
go there for launch occasionally, and I would always kind
of ponder, like, why is this not a considerably more
(01:06:17):
popular spot season fifty two? Bahama bree is the answer?
Oh yeah, yeah, goode Bahama Breeze. Man. The last time,
last two or three times I went there, it was
just absolutely killer. I did it, Yeah, Like, why is
this place not more popular? Man? The food is good,
it's good for you. Not everything's deep fried. You know,
it's been years, but I remember enjoying the food. I
just don't And my daughter asked, me, hey, you guys
(01:06:38):
wanted to go out to eat. I'm like, it's expensive. Yeah,
you know, you inviting me out to eat. I get
to pay for it, right exactly, and that's more than
one person. Yeah. Yeah, Bahama Breeze is great, man. I
mean Seasons is great as well. I mean it's a
little too expensive for the portion sizes for me, but
they do a good job. Everything's great, a little ounce around,
(01:07:00):
It's and a half. Desserts are kind of novel and fun.
It is. Yeah, someone turned me on to the charboiled
colliflower there. Oh yeah, absolutely wonderful with the with that
sauce made out of oh god, oh cheese. That was
you that turned me out? Yeah so good. Yeah, great,
area perfect.
Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
And it's weird how even certain menu offerings from chain
corporation chain restaurants they strike up their own fancy Like
the blondie over at Applebe's. I couldn't tell you, Yeah,
I couldn't tell you a single Applebee's offering, but I
can tell you what they had from the years ninety
eight to two thousand and four.
Speaker 2 (01:07:35):
Yeah right, dude, I'll tell you another spot that's really
good and you don't hear about it ever, but there's
like four or five of them here in Orlando is Bonefish. Yeah,
that's a fun to bonefish grill man. That's that's also
damn good food. The one up at Altamont, what my
you know, my family kind of switches around. We pick
one of these restaurants, will visit it for four or
five family events, and then we'll kind of move on
to something else, like a bird. We've been on this
(01:07:56):
we've been on this roadhouse Texas roadhouse kick for a
little bit now. But they're for a minute, we were
going to uh we were going to Bonefish Drill and
man it was it was killer as well, great drinks
at the one in Altamont.
Speaker 4 (01:08:06):
I'll give you a chain that I would say right
now that I would like to go do more than
any of the other ones we talked about.
Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
Sunny's Barbecue. Really yeah, I like like, I like that.
Those those big ass cups there. Let's go. I when
they're fries and sweet tea are on, it's hard to beat.
I get sliced pork when I go every single time.
They also do good smoke wings.
Speaker 4 (01:08:27):
That's a place where usually I'll find like one or
two things that I'd be cool with on the menu.
That's a place where there are a lot of things
that I'd be cool with eating the Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:08:37):
Yeah, we're excited because we have a Mission Barbecue opening
up near us pretty soon. And Mission is actually is
pretty earn good. There's one up by the villages, but
that's too far to drive, but by the Sandwich support
the troops right right. Yeah, yeah, man, their good. Their
fries are simply amazing too. But it's like any barbecue restaurant,
you have to get in there on the days where
certain meats are are done, you know, you know, find
out when their brisket comes off because it takes long
to cook. Then you go in there and get that.
(01:08:59):
And the magic with restaurants is cooking chicken. Well, not
only do they have good chicken, but they also have
good turkey. They smoke turkey there. It's freaking amazing. Here's
a billion dollar idea for whoever wants it out there.
All right, Oh, I love only doing this week. Yeah,
it's like we toss out more billions in the Florida
than the lot of this is how elon muskit so rich.
Speaker 5 (01:09:15):
I need a barbecue restaurant with a crispy cream, red
neon light aspect to it. Oh, you want like an
old school, like a dancing pig barbecue restaurant.
Speaker 2 (01:09:26):
That says what hot barbecue? Now hot off the line,
you know, some burn ends or something. Yeah, like the
brisket just came off.
Speaker 5 (01:09:34):
I want a little I want a little spotlight, little
little lighthouse like that it's up and lets me know
that the brisket is done.
Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
I like that idea. Boom, there you go. You're welcome
and you're not gonna tell you're right. Man, Sunny's brought
some food in here last week, Deborah, and it had
been sitting in on that counter for a little bit,
and there's some chicken. You could dig into that chicken.
It was like pudding. They cook it so perfectly. It's
got that perfect tender in the white meat. It's not
it's not too dry. It's so good. It's that tenderism.
I know what that is. What are you talking about.
Speaker 6 (01:10:02):
I've seen that guy on Instagram too. That'smy holds up
his brisket and slaps the table. It's just like, I
don't know where this is, but I gotta go right now.
Speaker 4 (01:10:12):
Would it be weird if we went out to dinner
on Christmas even I chose Sonny's barbecue?
Speaker 2 (01:10:16):
No, it wouldn't be. All right, I'm not a bit
wrong with that at all. All right, let's go.
Speaker 5 (01:10:19):
I was about to agree with you guys, but then
you said, all right, way too quick, like it was
out of a place of necessity.
Speaker 2 (01:10:25):
All right, right, So the next problem, all right? Four
oh seven nine one six one four one Again, you
can always text us at seven sevens. By the way,
Sonny's is one of those spots, you know, because they
had one in Palatka. So Sonny has been part of
our family kind of get together for eons, even going
back those days, you know, and we've had so many
great barbecues.
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
I read Blackwater Barbecue from years ago, and then we
had Porky's, even Porky's and Bubbaalues.
Speaker 2 (01:10:51):
Oh yeah, that's a pretty good barbecue spots. Now, man,
I think Pig Floyd's is highly underrated. And the smoke
made Meats is the one that Faia says just is
the ruler in town right now. Have yet to go there,
so I got to check it out, all right, four
seven nine one text us at seven seven zero three one.
Rash you up for a little scientific experiment. Does it hurt? No,
it doesn't hurt you. Don't You have to do something,
and I want you to go and do it and
(01:11:12):
then come back and report if it happened or not.
You can actually, you know, call us on the phone
and let us know what happened. But I'll need you
to go to the kitchen for this. I believe he
can do it. I saw this online today. I didn't
try it at home because I want to do it live.
I'll tell you what it is. Next.
Speaker 13 (01:11:33):
We're talking about friendlies and though it is an ice
cream place, and yes, I did love to get a
Jim Dandy or a strawberry fribble there. Another thing they
had there was a fish sandwich called a fish in
a Jig, which was like a grilled cheese with a
fish patty and so yeah, cheese and fish, and then
they topped it with Thousand Island dressing.
Speaker 11 (01:11:52):
M hm.
Speaker 13 (01:11:52):
Might sound weird, but I loved it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:56):
Sounds good.
Speaker 19 (01:11:57):
I've been from around Central Florida most of my life
and going to Sonny's pre COVID was the bomb.
Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
But nowadays it just ain't any good.
Speaker 19 (01:12:09):
And you used to see them smoking their own meats,
and now they don't even smoke their own meats anymore.
Speaker 20 (01:12:17):
Saw cover crew bedm bread here, Joel Ross, preach, preach
man out back.
Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
Those fried shrimp they do the same way they do
the bloomin onion. Oh my gosh, I annihilate that thing
when it gets to the table. Yeah, Jesus, I bet
does a good job. Y'all have a going thanks, but
I appreciate it.
Speaker 9 (01:12:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:12:36):
The one thing I forgot to mention, the reason I
bring up bonefish was because I have I don't know
if they started it, but man, as much as I
can remember. This is the first time I ever had
Bang Bang shrimp right where they do those shrimp and
that like that spicy kind of frame sauce. That's the
first time I ever remember having those was at a
bonefish grill.
Speaker 4 (01:12:53):
That's I think they originated. I'm assuming because that's the
first time I remember hearing about it. They have a
type of bang Bang shrimp at several different places.
Speaker 2 (01:13:03):
Yeah, sure, that's what I'm saying. It's like they kind
of originally. That's the first time I had it. Yeah,
and uh, we ordered to order those things. I'm like, well,
keep that away from me. I'll eat that dish like
anything that touched that shrimp, I will eat it, all right.
Four O seven nine one text us seven seven zero
three one. Welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show right
here on Real Radio. Thanks for tuning in. I'm Jim.
There's deb but hello, Jack, Kim and Ross. Yeah, all right, Ross,
(01:13:26):
you're ready to help out? I mean, can you can
facebook live in right so we can watch you do this.
He's already on its phone right now. All right. So
I hope that nobody I hope that this isn't a
revelation only to me, like, I hope that it's only
That's what I hope because when I say what this is,
I hope that people already don't know. I've not heard
this on all my life, that this wasn't a situation.
(01:13:47):
So should I hear this right now?
Speaker 5 (01:13:49):
Yes, waiver, results of this experiment, you're just going to
go and do it and we're going to just kind
of experience this live on the air to see if
it's true or not. It was a reddit It was
a reddit feed today, right, and what it said was
is you can't melt ice in a microwave.
Speaker 2 (01:14:08):
No chance, you can't. No chance, that's true. You cannot
melt ice in a microwave. The theory is is that
a microwave makes the atoms spin around, and that's what
creates the heat, is the agitation of the atoms. Ice
is in a crystal state, so it's solid. The atoms
can't move. So theoretically you can microwave ice and it
(01:14:30):
will not melt.
Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
Oh yeah, that's going to be cool to see.
Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
So you want me to go microwaves and ice. I
want you to go in there, grab a handful of
that ice that's in that ice machine, throw it on
a dish and put it in the microwave and microwave
it for like ten seconds, for ten seconds, and let's
see if it melts. All right, I am going to
go do exactly that. We'll be able to talk to
you be able to talk through your phone, I think so,
but if not, you will only get video. I'm going
(01:14:57):
to go microwave Jim Coper live dot com right now.
We have it up. Jack. If you heard this, by
the way, I have not. Yeah, and Ross hasn't either, Right, Ross,
and you haven't heard it.
Speaker 3 (01:15:05):
I've never heard that.
Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
I read it today on Reddit and I was like,
there's no way that's true. And then I clicked on
the comments. I started reading the comments. I'm like, well,
that seems like it could be plausible. That could be plausible.
So we're gonna find out here. Can you melt ice
in a microwave?
Speaker 3 (01:15:19):
Could it be because of all the plastics in the ice?
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Then what now? What they did say is is if
when you take the ice out and you put it
in a container, if you don't put it immediately in
the microwave, that if it melts a little bit, the
ice the microwave will heat up whatever residual water is there,
and that steams will cause the ice to melt. But
it won't melt the ice like it was a stick
of butter ross. Can you hear us? Question is all right,
(01:15:44):
he's got ice. He can't. He can't hear us. He
should be able to.
Speaker 6 (01:15:49):
Wait wait, wait, wait is that a plastic cup? Because
if that's a plastic cup, that will melt.
Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
Oh yeah, let's let's let it happen. Yeah, okay, all right, yea,
there he is. Turn it on the way.
Speaker 3 (01:16:03):
The building smells like burning plastic.
Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
This is a hot ass microwave too, by the way. Yeah,
but you don't Oh it does light up inside. Okay,
giving a thumbs up. Thirty seconds is too much. They
put it in for a minute.
Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
Now he went in for a minute.
Speaker 2 (01:16:18):
It's too much, too much, too much, too much, too much.
Cut it, cut it, dude, take it out. Take it out.
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
It's gonna smell it.
Speaker 2 (01:16:26):
Thirty plastic. Get out.
Speaker 10 (01:16:28):
He can't see it.
Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Apparently he he's not doing take it out. No, it's
too much. It's too much. Open we're doing sideline. I
don't know why I get in the ears. Oh he's
doing it. He's gonna melt it. It's gonna oh, it's
gonna destroy the entire What are you doing? He's ruining
(01:16:51):
the microwave.
Speaker 3 (01:16:53):
Oh no, oh no, that is not a good look.
Speaker 2 (01:16:58):
That is not a Is he still it's still running?
What is he doing?
Speaker 21 (01:17:05):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:17:05):
It melted it bigger than this s Oh yeah, water,
but he did it too long? All right, come on back.
No he didn't come.
Speaker 6 (01:17:13):
He said he couldn't microwave ice. He proved that you
can microwave ice.
Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
All right, four o seven nine one six. I got
that hook line and sinker, and I don't know if
it was like supposed to be like like you know
when you get those cubes out for your bourbon, like
dead frozen, like dry solid. But the ice is in
the machine is a little damp when you got there.
It's not you know, it's got that chene on it.
It's not like that cold ice that has that matte
(01:17:38):
finish to it.
Speaker 6 (01:17:39):
So you're basically saying that your own experiment didn't prove anything.
Speaker 2 (01:17:42):
No, it didn't any Is he ever coming back? Yeah?
Well right, he's cleaning up after himself like he should.
Microwaving water. What kind of mess you could you possibly
make How about a melted cup that's now filled with water?
Is he walking so slow? Dude? He is killing me
and he's doing it on purpose. Now he just what
(01:18:02):
what are you doing? He can hear every word we're saying.
To what I think you could hear every word we
could say? What did you hear every word? You're not
supposed to microwave it? For a minute?
Speaker 5 (01:18:13):
Why I had no You said microwave ice, and I
microwaved it? What what else do you want from me?
That was one of the dumbest experiments I've ever conducted.
Speaker 2 (01:18:25):
That's coming from Ross telling I was a frozen dinnergy
heat That don't Jim, I'm those sciences here, Jim. That
wasn't that smart of us? All right, well we rolled
that one wrong. No, we we can roll that one
out with the new myth mustard.
Speaker 5 (01:18:43):
You know, I have you ever I think I've taught it.
I think I've brought this up to you guys before.
Have you ever microwaved a grape?
Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
No?
Speaker 5 (01:18:50):
Oh, damn, let's do that, and we do that it
explodes or nothing? Even dude, so much cooler, so much cooler.
You don't believe me, You won't believe me.
Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
I want to go back. I got grapes right here.
Speaker 5 (01:18:59):
If you hut a grape in half and you leave
a little bit of the skin connecting it, like so,
you make a little grape bridge, a little grape taint,
and you go ahead and microwave, you might you see
what I'm talking about. A little butterfly on a grape. Yeah,
you microwave that. Fireballs, fireballs, balls. There's chances of fireballs
(01:19:21):
for microwaving a grape. Yeah, experiment stupid.
Speaker 2 (01:19:25):
Oh my god, this happens.
Speaker 5 (01:19:27):
There's like a little there's like electricity or some sort
of charge that happens with the plasma within the grape
out of here, and then when the charges connect in
between the two butterfly grapes, boom, fireball.
Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
I don't believe Jack, you have a grape ard grape
a whole thing. I'll do that. Watch this. I watched this.
Speaker 5 (01:19:46):
On the next break. I'm gonna go back into the
chat room on this break and I'll show you a fireball.
Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
All right, four seven nine four one text us at
seven seven zero three one. I can bet money right
now as I sit here that seventy five percent of
the audience didn't do something in their house they should
do for sure, And I found out today that I
am way behind. And I'll tell you what that is next.
Speaker 9 (01:20:12):
Guys.
Speaker 15 (01:20:12):
My tradition into my teens was it on Christmas Eve,
I got to open up my new pair of Air
Jordan's nice before we went to my uncle Christmas Eve party.
That meant the world to me.
Speaker 13 (01:20:24):
And then the next morning.
Speaker 15 (01:20:25):
Standard would show up and granted that kind of got
messed up with. My dad showed up and tried to
strugglingly put together my bike on Christmas and you fell
into the tree. I came out laughing and then crying
at the time. But anyway, Hey, Happy.
Speaker 2 (01:20:37):
Christmas, Merry Christmas, Welcome back Gona the jimp over show
already one oh four point one. I am Jim. There's
this but hello Jack Yo and Ross. It's true. Hope
you had a good day to day. He's not gonna
have worked, taking your time to get a home. Turn
us up. We got you all the way to your driveway.
Speaker 22 (01:20:54):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:20:54):
And if you're making plans for New Years, let me
get it. Get you a couple of weeks out and
help you out a little bit. We're gonna bring in
New Year right there with the Jim Colbert Show in
Mount Dora's free New Year's Eve Party Summer thirty four. First,
I'll be down there of course with Devin Jack along
with a live performance from Mel's Mighty Motown Machine plus
Blues Brothers tribute. Bring the family, enjoyed, great food in bev.
(01:21:16):
It was great last time we did this a couple
of years ago, or was it last year? It is
last year. Yeah, you get a great with time. Listen, man,
I buddy, listen.
Speaker 3 (01:21:24):
Just last week it was August.
Speaker 2 (01:21:25):
Yeah, explore all the Mount Dora has to offer as
we welcome in twenty twenty six with spectacular fireworks drone
display midnight over Lake Dora. It's gonna be a great time.
Begins at nine o'clock right there at Sunset Park, brought
to you by Geico Guinness, Pisces Rising. Visit Lake and
the city of Mount Dora. It is absolutely free, so
make your plans to join us. It was a great
time last time, and we'll be out there again this
(01:21:47):
year as well. It was They have the stage out
there right by Sunset Park, so it's live music right
up until midnight. Then it's fireworks and drones it's I'm
really excited about the drone show. Yeah, that's really cool,
super good last year. So join us out there Mountain
door for sure.
Speaker 9 (01:22:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:22:02):
By the way, if you're online Jack, if you go
to Jim Corper live dot com and you log into
our feed, you can also go to Real RADIOFM slash watch,
it takes you right to our feet in the studio.
Ross did the grape experiment during the break and Jack
put up a still shot. I was sitting here on
my phone, gonna look at my phone on her deb
go whoa yea, and she goes what it was? Giant
(01:22:24):
and then look at the size of that explosion.
Speaker 3 (01:22:27):
And that's from just one grape.
Speaker 5 (01:22:29):
One great, it's like the size of a fist. That
little fire there, yeah, it's uh does a big good noise? Yeah,
you could hear like a buzz, there's like a z
Is it the microwave dying? Yeah, it might be, I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
Then you can hear Judy and our boss from the
next door saying, what the hell is that. I'll be
on a record and say that I'll find somebody to
pay for that. No, you won't, ah find somebody that
is insane, man, But Yeah, everything's good. The microwave still works.
Speaker 5 (01:22:56):
But yeah, there's something about the plasma within a grape
that if you cut it in half and microwave it.
I think I microwaved it for was it nine seconds?
Eight seconds until we saw the fireball that can shoot
out of a grape when microwave.
Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
Jacket is playing the video right now. So if you
want to check it out, jump over live dot com
or a real radio dot FM slash watch and you
can see it. There's the light coming on in the
microwave right now. You think like, wow, I'm not gonna
be able to see it, and then boom, whoa dude,
that is crazy. Yeah. Yeah, it's like, tell you what
it reminds you of. You know those goof lighters back
in the day where you'd light it and it wouldn't
(01:23:29):
be just a little light, it would like be a
flamethrower light. Yeah, that's what it looks like. It looks
like flash paper going off. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:23:36):
There is a I don't really know the science exactly
besides that it happens.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
Damn. That is the nuts. My microwave a cut grape
in half. That is a way bigger reaction than I
thought it was gonna be.
Speaker 5 (01:23:48):
I'll be honest with you me too. There's something wrong
with that. Great, there's something a little bit more charged
up and now.
Speaker 2 (01:23:53):
Kind of grape shoeting Bradshaw, all the baby a right,
all the explosive grapes come and get them all right?
Four oh seven nine one six one four one text
us at seven seven zero three one. I was I
gonna talk to you guys about what are that public
going in? I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:24:11):
You tease something real good though. Mmm, you said this
thing about your house that you didn't do that.
Speaker 2 (01:24:16):
Oh yeah, yeah, So again just online today, kind of
clicking around and looking for stuff to talk about, and
you know, we know about things in your house that
you're supposed to do, and this entire feed was these
are things you probably didn't know in your house you're
supposed to be doing. Now we know about the toothbrush
when we've talked about that, right, yeah, but people need
to know it again. You need to say it again, yeah,
because people aren't living that life.
Speaker 9 (01:24:38):
Jip.
Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
Once a month, I listen. I know about the toothbrush rule,
and I do not follow the toothblush rule. It's once
a month, right, you change your toothbrush. One toothbrush once
a month, six months. It's every six.
Speaker 6 (01:24:48):
Months six months yea, or after you've been sick. So
that's why they remind you when we change clocks.
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
After you've been sick, you put it in the dishwasher.
Stop jack, you sound crazy? What No, the hot water infected?
Speaker 3 (01:25:01):
But ahead and get a new tooth You need the bristles.
Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
To be stiff enough or be you have enough structure
to get under your gums. I think every six months
is a bit much.
Speaker 3 (01:25:09):
I'd say that is actually the recommendation.
Speaker 2 (01:25:12):
It seems like every time you get to cleaning.
Speaker 4 (01:25:14):
I just had my cleaning yesterday and I asked for
a new toothbrush, I need to change because I did
get and you get the little tube of cold game.
Speaker 2 (01:25:21):
Yeah you're saying that's not enough. I think six months
per toothbrush once every three months is what I think
it should be, or maybe once a month or something.
Biggerest brushure Yeah, no, one, First of all, that's not good. Well,
I mean I say biggers, I don't bru I brush
slightly like I'm trying to strip something off an eggshell. Yeah,
but you were just talking about having the bristles be
way too soft. But no, no, no, not too soft.
(01:25:43):
You want a soft brush because you want your You
want the bristles to hit your tooth in the turn up.
That's why you're not supposed to push it in there
because it's cream cales them. You want to be able
to just you want the bristles to go under your gum.
That's the whole idea. I mean, you're not going to
scrape your teeth another color. It doesn't work like that.
I just know I've been floss. Huh do you floss? Yeah,
(01:26:03):
all the time, every night.
Speaker 5 (01:26:04):
I just know for a fact that a lot of
people are thinking right now, oh god, it's once every
six months, yeah, yea yeah, and they just do the math.
Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
Think about it.
Speaker 5 (01:26:14):
When was the last time I use a toothbrush? Differently,
a lot of people are going multiple years.
Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
Really Yeah, it's funny. I replaced mine about once. Like
when I go on vacation, I almost always buy one
to take with me, and that's the one I wind
up using after I come back from vacation. So I
know I do it at least three times a year
because when I go, you know, for anything, I'll take
a toothbrush with me. The one I threw out yesterday
was a year? Was it really?
Speaker 4 (01:26:36):
Because my last cleaning they didn't give me a toothbrush,
and I've been smarting over it for six months.
Speaker 2 (01:26:41):
I've got to buy new heads for my sonic hare.
I've stopped using that and I've gone to a manual brush,
and that one's about to give up the ghost too,
but I gotta do it. That's not what I'm talking about, though,
There's something else, spoke detectors. No, I mean this one's
kind of weird because of what it does. I found
out today that you're supposed to change your loofah in
your bathroom, which you wash your shower with. You're supposed
(01:27:02):
to replace that every thirty days, at least at least
every thirty days. Now, I will tell you what why
that Jack is laughing because I contended when I read
this that there I bet seventy five percent of our
audience doesn't change their loof hup once every six months,
much less once every year. And when you think what
you're where you're putting that thing and where everybody else,
(01:27:25):
you know, maybe for you. My wife and I used
to have separate ones. Now we have the same one
because one of them. You know, we threw it out
because it unraveled, which is kind of a weird thing.
When a loofah unravels, you're like, what are you even?
You guys? Are you? Guys are completely okay with that?
How do they make that? What are you even? I mean,
what are you? A minute ago you were a ball
and now you're this long veil. I think that's a.
Speaker 5 (01:27:45):
Little could be a fifty percent of society fifty percent.
Don't share a loofah with your partner.
Speaker 2 (01:27:51):
You share, you don't, No, you don't know. But are
you a loof of person or a wash person? You're
a straight soap to the body person. Yes, use bar soap, yes, yeah,
don't don't use bar soap. I use the liquid's opening
to my loof Oh. You know your guys is lufa.
It's not your loofah. Yeah, it's my wife and I
is loofah. Your loofah has a roommate. My loofa does
have a roommate. My wife should never know what the
(01:28:13):
loofah does. That's I'm not gonna lie. I don't want
to just gloss over that. That not a lot of people.
You don't think that A lot of people use the
same loofa as their partner. No oh, no, no way.
Speaker 5 (01:28:23):
That's especially you know when there's the option of getting
a second loofah.
Speaker 2 (01:28:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:28:29):
Again, that's coming from ross Man.
Speaker 2 (01:28:31):
Always there out there in the universe of like, yeah,
we could get too hey, but at least they're not expensive.
But like the cheapest part of a shower, it's like
five bucks. You you and then we branch on dot
Com used the same loofah Jack, now we have separate.
You're a liar. You're a liar. You found out a shower.
You're on an island on this one. I'm serious.
Speaker 6 (01:28:53):
You ever seen the Instagram videos where the wife walks
in and sees the husband like right up all five
figures in the crack.
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
Wearing her loof of Love that she uses on her face.
My workout every day is how far I jam that
thing up. That's that's how that's work.
Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
And then she's taking it and putting it on her body,
and I'm kind.
Speaker 2 (01:29:13):
Of like drawn dropped.
Speaker 5 (01:29:14):
I'm like, I don't think you exactly know exactly what
you signed up for when you confess this.
Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
When it comes to Lupin's I'm a straight grammer. The
opposite of the toothbrush. You see they're clean. No, no,
it's really clean. Use the same shower towel. No no,
we use different towels in that bazaar, and I won't
use one. And by the way, in this little thing,
they say that you should not use a damp towel.
(01:29:39):
You should always use a fresh towel. You should not
use And my wife takes a shower in the morning
before she leaves, I don't take one tool, you know,
like eleven, so you know she's already gone, but the
towel is still damp. And she hates the fact that
I use one towel and then and throw it in
the wash. She can't stand that because she grew up,
you know, use the towel hanging up, let it dry,
and use that one a little bit more before you
get a few days at it. I that's to do that.
Speaker 5 (01:30:01):
Yes, I asked Ai, how many couples share a loofah?
Speaker 3 (01:30:05):
And it came back, what are you sick?
Speaker 2 (01:30:07):
No, it gave me do you work with the grammer?
What it gave me one of the best answers I
think this stupid website has ever given me, And says
so for being honest and grown.
Speaker 5 (01:30:18):
New couples have a high loofah sharing percentage. Yeah, a
long term couples separate lufahs really separate.
Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
They realized.
Speaker 5 (01:30:30):
But check this out, very very very long term couples,
they are more likely to share again because they've survived worse.
Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
Yeah. I mean we've been together twenty years, so I mean,
you know we use the same lufa. And by the way,
I mean, this hasn't always been the case. I think really,
to be honest with you, the reason why we use
the same loof of now is because every time we
go to the store we forget to buy another one.
And uh, we used to have two separate loofahs. But
then when I broke, I just said, well, he's got
a loofah you Does she know you're using pram that one?
(01:31:07):
Does she know this? Do you share this? Be shocked
if she knew that wing collar, I guess you share
the same toilet press stop it, Jack, She doesn't scratch
your back like I did. There's no way that you
use the same I don't know. You guys made the
biggest deal out of the stuff I do at home,
Like it's so bad. Most people I think out there
(01:31:29):
are probably sharing a loofah or sharing a washrag. Look
would it be different if Chris came in took a shower,
It had that bar soap, ran that thing everywhere, and
then Deb comes in right behind that runs that same
bar snap everywhere. It's the same thing, isn't it.
Speaker 6 (01:31:42):
That's why because you don't run it everywhere, you do
run it everywhere. No, you don't know, Sorry, don't.
Speaker 2 (01:31:48):
Look for no hands, what exactly I rubbed? I get
the soap on my hands and then I rubbed my body.
Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
So exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:31:57):
You don't put the bars remember that. You probably don't
remember the Friend's episode.
Speaker 2 (01:32:02):
Oh I do remember that A great line. It is
the hair on the soap.
Speaker 4 (01:32:06):
No, no, no, Chandler was using Joey's. So he's like, wait,
you're using my soap in there? He goes, yeah, he goes, well,
I just want you to imagine the first thing you
wash and what you think the last thing I wash is.
Speaker 6 (01:32:20):
And let's just say that's all he had to say
for Matthew Perry to stop using that bar soap.
Speaker 2 (01:32:25):
When I used Barcyca drugs, I would I have a
hairy chest, So when I use bar soap, I would
what I do is I would rub that bar soap
on my chest and get like a whole bunch of
soap on my lather, and then I would use that
to wash my body. So so you are your own
I wouldn't lad he's spoken for. You don't need a lufa.
You are your own Loofah. You just you lather it
(01:32:46):
up and then you just take that lather and you
just use it everywhere else. So you build like a
little reservoir on the chest. Yeah, a little lather reservoir. Yeah. Yeah,
then I kind of can't take that everywhere from there.
Speaker 4 (01:32:56):
It is kind of magical how they were what it's
a simple little plastic device. Ye's the greatest, the amount
of SuDS you.
Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
Get out of it, I do, man, I can only
imagine what's trapped in that thing, though. You can only
why you're supposed to change it. And I rent it
out like hardcore when I get through using and I
run a lot of super hot water through it because
you don't know where it's been in and whatnot. Once again,
here's the thing. I'm not making it a big deal
that you share a loof. You are making it a bull.
You're actually trying to make me feel bad about I
(01:33:24):
say this.
Speaker 5 (01:33:25):
I will point out that I don't know if you
should share that with that much comfortability. That's when I go,
that's when I go, oh, that's different.
Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
I don't think that. I think you're making a much
bigger deal. I think more people out there share a
loofo or a wash device with their partner than you. Thing, buddy,
I do believe that. Oh man, you don't think so.
We already have a question of the day. I don't
know that's that's a good one man. We could do
it on the texting service for sure too. I mean,
do you share a loofah or a why can we
just say lufa? Because of the washrag? The same? Do
(01:33:55):
you guys feel the same about the washrag? Yeah? Same thing, right,
same thing if you're cramming the wash track, same sera. Lord,
Well you take that washrag and you get one side
on one side of your your carriage and the other
side used to do this like thing, you get a
clean you know, like you're cleaning a bowling ball. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
(01:34:17):
I should stop sharing. Maybe I can't tell you, And
you guys are looking at me weird, like this stuff
is very odd, it's very common in my spot all
right para seven nine six one four one text us
at seven seven zero three one. Back in a second
with more of the Jim Colbert shows. They put Today
is mo.
Speaker 7 (01:34:32):
Better with Ross pageant sponsored by jose Como Orlando's injury attorneys.
Still to the common sense financial advice you need. It's
only money with Scott Brown today at six twenty on
The Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 22 (01:34:50):
Jammy, Jammy, Jammy, that is just nasty.
Speaker 8 (01:34:56):
Okay.
Speaker 22 (01:34:57):
You can't expect your wife just grub herd down stairs
after you done crammed it in your BH buddy, Love
the Show, Love you guys, ram it.
Speaker 2 (01:35:07):
I didn't say where God please, those are not lupas.
Speaker 15 (01:35:12):
Sent you a picture of a real lupa and that's
the wrong strap.
Speaker 2 (01:35:18):
Rock awesome call.
Speaker 22 (01:35:24):
This is John from Summerfield.
Speaker 2 (01:35:27):
Love the Show. Guys.
Speaker 22 (01:35:28):
Listen year round, every day, NonStop. Deb Yeah, Jack, Ross, Jim,
have happy holidays, Happy holidays, Jammy, Jammy, that is just nasty.
Speaker 2 (01:35:50):
Okay. For the record, if you look at the testing service,
it's about fifty to fifty. Hi, I think that's very
giving for the ones I've read. Yeah, there's a couple
of texts, multiple texts that said, yeah, we have a
same loofah, but we have one lufa per like another region. Yeah.
(01:36:12):
One says that they they watched their body with it,
but not their face. And then somebody said the number
one thing like you share body fluids with your partner
of life? My god, man, what could be the I mean, what,
look you a.
Speaker 6 (01:36:22):
Dead skin cells? You really want to clog your pores
with out? She want to clog her poors?
Speaker 2 (01:36:27):
It's just in support from doud fund for Jimmy. Man,
he can only afford one loofah. Come on, he only
brought one damn helmet to the bike drive. He's scratching
his back with a damn pullet brush. We have to
save Jimmy. I'm fine, buddy, start it. I'm fine. Thank
(01:36:48):
you though, thanks for it. I appreciate it, but I'm
gonna make it.
Speaker 5 (01:36:52):
Don't forget about him bringing twenty four deviled eggs, which
is just twelve eggs.
Speaker 2 (01:36:58):
Wait, wait, he brought fifteen, didn't he? Oh it was fifteen? Yeah,
wasn't that it? Fifteen deviled eggs?
Speaker 7 (01:37:05):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:37:06):
Why are you guys wrecking my ball so much today?
Did you not get a double egg. Is that what
you're You didn't even come to the event. Listen. I
just couldn't come. I'm just good at simple math. You're
taking Johnson. You didn't even get involved. Unbelievable. It's just
a very small amount of eggs. All right, Welcome back
to Real Radio one oh four point one. I'm Jim.
(01:37:27):
There's deb Jack Angel at them all and uh and
Ross as well. Yeah, this amazing me a picture because
I just took the last four or whatever it was.
It just I thought it two seven, that's almost half.
It's almost You guys played a lottery last night. Yeah, no,
not a match man. I'm gonna tell you.
Speaker 8 (01:37:48):
I was.
Speaker 12 (01:37:48):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
I was so excited. I was so excited. I wanted
to stay up last night and watch the drawing. Last
night Live had a vibe.
Speaker 3 (01:38:00):
It was the little laugh that made so so cool.
Speaker 2 (01:38:05):
My wife is considerably less optimistic. We're sitting there having dinner,
you know, Cereal for dinner last night, and uh oh
yeah yeah, and uh, I said I got lottery tickets.
She goes, oh, yeah, really think somebody, sir, only except
he goes, We're not gonna win. I'm like, why would
you even say that? Like why would you even put
that out there. Somebody's gotta win. There's no reason it
can't be us. I bought ten tickets. I dropped a
(01:38:27):
cold twenty on it. I mean, somebody's gotta win, right,
So hold on?
Speaker 3 (01:38:31):
Did you win?
Speaker 2 (01:38:32):
Hell no, not even close. This is the first time
I think out of my because the last time I played,
I got the power ball. I've yet to charge. I
have yet to turn that ticket in. And last time
I bought ten numbers, I actually chose five the numbers
and then quick picked the other five numbers, And I
mean could not have whiffed any harder, I mean, stone
(01:38:53):
cold whiff. Do you guys feel when you're when you're
picking lottery numbers that you're obligated to pick one from
each group? Do that one through ten, ten, ten through
twenty twenty three? You do quick picks every time? Yeah?
I used to do my favorite Yankees and most of
them are the retired numbers, all under ten. And I'm like,
that's not gonna win anything, but you I just do
(01:39:13):
quick picks, and you say that, and then last night
there's like they group the numbers up. It's like twenty one,
twenty two, twenty three, and then sixty four, sixty five,
sixty six or whatever the hell it is. I mean,
they do that all the time, but I feel obligated
to take one from that group and like make sure
that happens. For me to pick like three of them
in the thirties, that'll never happen. I'm so curious. This
(01:39:34):
is so odd. You never play your kids ages on
the on the first card I did. This is the
first time I've done that in a while. Then the
quick picks, I got the others, and then you know whatever,
You're just like, well what I think you come off?
And I agree that you're a very logical, logical person,
a realist yep. And then when your wife goes, we're
not gonna win, you go, hold on, well, why did
(01:39:58):
you say that? Logic? What I said is true. Somebody
has to win. Theoretically, my odds are as good as
anyone's out there, right, yes, yeah they are. They two million,
theoretically as good as anyone's out there. So I like
to think on the positive side, and I pre spend
that money. Well, we got a bank on that. Karma
is a thing, Yeah, I mean, what do you mean?
Speaker 11 (01:40:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:40:19):
Yeah, buddy, do you think that my life karma would
keep me from winning.
Speaker 5 (01:40:23):
I think if they got that bad, I think I'm
a bad person. I don't think it's applause, don't hold
up for a second.
Speaker 2 (01:40:30):
What do you think of my life? That's not a
plus so much that I don't deserve the win in
the lottery. It's just a vibe, just the hunch, you know, like,
just for the record, pause for a second. You two
just got more money if I Yeah, that naysay, m
(01:40:51):
f R. There he's not getting the nickel. And I
swear to god, I'll walk in here in a suit
of gold every day and I'll make him lick it clean.
You'll never get a nickel, mark my word. No one won.
So it's rolls over to tomorrow night. Yeah, one point
twenty five or something, isn't it. Yeah, that's a lot
it's wild. No lines to get a ticket. Yeah, last
night walked right. Yeah, no lines And I was like
(01:41:13):
seven thirty a night at a at a public's no
lines at all. Nobody buying lottery tickets. I've never quit.
Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
Smart though, to go to publics because they're on one.
Speaker 2 (01:41:22):
Yeah they are. I've never quick picked, I've never chose
numbers and I don't say that in a brack of
docious way. I waste my money in very different ways.
Well I don't. The thing is I don't like I
don't waste money like that. So for me, it's got
like really kind of a fun luxury to buy that. Occasionally,
like every like twice a year, I'll buy scratch offs.
I'll by like twenty dollars in scratch offs, and that's
my lottery gambling for the year I played poker. Now
(01:41:43):
I'll do that, but I've got a good much better
chance of winning at that.
Speaker 5 (01:41:46):
Yeah, I haven't scratched off in a while. I but
I do enjoy a good scratch off and I love
a good sports wager.
Speaker 2 (01:41:54):
Yeah, man, I saw a thing. I saw a uh
story today on sports wagering. Have you heard of the numbers, oh,
of the earnings of how much each state spends on
sports gambling in twenty twenty four. Florida didn't rank because
I don't think the law had been passed. Then, how
much do you think, like, like a city like New
(01:42:15):
York spends on sports gambling in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 5 (01:42:19):
That's such an interesting question just because of how it's worded,
of like you so gambling. We're not talking about nets losses.
This number is going to be very hot sports gambling. Yeah,
twenty billion just in New York. Yeah no, it's not
in the billions.
Speaker 2 (01:42:33):
Yeah no, I'm by the way, the total value of
sports gambling in this story was about eighteen billion, So
I mean, you know that's closed.
Speaker 3 (01:42:42):
But this seven hundred million, about one hundred and.
Speaker 2 (01:42:44):
Thirty million is what New York spent gambling. Well yeah,
I mean one hundred but I mean all the states
up there was Funny Jersey, I mean all of them.
Like we're in the tens of millions of dollars. I
mean only a few of them. A couple of them
are one hundreds of millions of dollars, but still in
a staggering amount of money just spent on sports gambling. Yeah.
And then you'd say ballpark rough estimation, a third of
(01:43:08):
it wins. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean obviously they're
not doing it to state out of business, you know,
obviously it's you know, and again even last night, people
call the NFL into question because of a kick that
happened last night, because of the over I believe in
the Pittsburgh game, you can see that, really I did not.
There's a guy I followed that after every single NFL
week he goes through and he kind of tries to
figure out where he believes the NFL knew what the
(01:43:30):
stats were on the game because they're kicking field goals
or scoring that and it doesn't mean anything. You know,
it's the last minute of the game. You're down by twenty,
you know, and you run a play that score a touchdown,
and it just winds up, you know, beating the over
or under by one or you know, half a point,
whatever the case may be.
Speaker 5 (01:43:46):
It's not that far fetched because a lot of it
not because the reason why is that at least for
me and I still believe in the integrity in the game,
but might be play the devil's advocate here is way
and it doesn't make an impact on the winner of
the of the competition or the game. It's just a
(01:44:07):
point difference, which means you're telling me that, well, if
that field goal goes in, someone benefits more than note.
Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
Yeah, but you can't also sit there and tell me
that a professional football team would kneel if they thought
they had a chance to score. The idea of the
game is to score points and win. So if you have,
you know, thirty five seconds left, you're on the twenty
five yard line, you can kick a field goal. It's
a chip shot. I mean you're not kneeling that. You know,
even if it's three seconds left, You're not gonna just
down the ball and go, Okay, we've lost. I mean,
(01:44:35):
you're not gonna do that. You're gonna kick the field. No,
if you're down, if you're behind, yeah, I mean you're
gonna keep They're gonna put points on the ball. You're
gonna kick the fieldal the idea is to score points.
So I'm saying if you're down and that that and
that point, that that field goal makes the over come
in or whatever the case may be, the overwhelming over
that That's how it is. But they're not going to
just kneel the ball and not score. So it'd mean
all head coaches are in on it. No, I sill,
(01:44:58):
I don't even know have to be that. It would
just have to be a head coach that know somebody
it made a big bet and has access to the
quarterbacks earpiece.
Speaker 5 (01:45:05):
Massive massive theory dropped on the Raiders game with the
field goal at the very end that's exactly what I'm
talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:45:11):
That was that was two weeks ago, and that was
looked at as what is going on, like why you're
scoring your down by twenty and one.
Speaker 5 (01:45:19):
Of the reasons why you might knee and take the
knee and just take the losses you don't want to
risk injury.
Speaker 2 (01:45:25):
Yeah, but I mean we've seen that not being the case.
I mean we've seen them, like, you know, kind of
put people in peril because if they you know, they're
paid to be on the field and people pay their
money to see the number one players on the field.
I understand what you're saying, but I think it would
be equally as controversial if a coach kneeled or nelt
a game welt it just basically took a knee to
(01:45:46):
end the game and didn't try to score. You would
make the exact same argument if they did that and
they were trying to manipulate the score by not scoring
when they could.
Speaker 5 (01:45:53):
And that instance with the kicker with Raiders, and it
might have been Denver, I forgot it was two weeks ago,
but in that instance, the refs did step in and
throw a flag for a delay a game that was
highly controversial which then lets the Raiders go ahead and
have one more opportunity to kind of cover the spread.
Speaker 2 (01:46:12):
There have been some crazy calls lately, and I'll tell
you something else, man. I don't know if you guys
have noticed, but when I watch NFL last weekend, man,
they're letting these they're they're letting these safeties and corners
get very very comfortable with these receivers. I saw what
I thought were like at least three like blatant pass
interference calls with the with the ref right there. No call,
(01:46:33):
I mean, dude, straight mugging the guy, no call at all.
So I don't know if they've just decided to let
them play more and throw fewer flags because that's what
the fans want, But it seems that they're a little
a little more loose when it comes to calls like that.
Two of the most swept underneath the rug stories that
I can remember in my sports watching time is Tim Donaghy, which, yeah,
(01:46:54):
that was big news, but then it really died until
the Netflix documentary that was the ref that got caught,
Yeah gambling. Yeah. And also anybody here about Johnson Billets recently, Yeah, yeah, Yeah,
there's a lot of players yeah, yeah, well the whole thing,
but got a lot of heat for about four days
and then that story just I don't know, yeah, not
on the forefront. Well, it's gonna be litigated now. I
(01:47:15):
mean they're you know, they're being you know, they're being sued.
I mean it's criminal, right, they were arrested, were they not? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:47:20):
But yeah, I'm just saying that headlines last four hours
these days. Yeah, yeah, and the lines and headlines do
make a difference when it comes to influencing the people
who to give.
Speaker 2 (01:47:32):
A damn, I would agree one all right four seven
nine one six one four one textests seven seven zero
three one. We talked about this a little bit last week.
I want to end this up because we once we
do tribute get Ross talks, we won't have many more
things to talk about h today. But remember the last
pennies rolled off of the presses last week?
Speaker 11 (01:47:49):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:47:49):
Yes, you guys remember what I said there.
Speaker 4 (01:47:52):
About the people who are around when they were printing
those last ones.
Speaker 2 (01:47:55):
Yeah, the value of them, because how could you verify
that those last sets of pennies were the actual last
minted pennies?
Speaker 13 (01:48:02):
Right?
Speaker 6 (01:48:02):
Well, if somebody had texted us and said there's some
kind of like special mark and.
Speaker 3 (01:48:07):
Mark on it or something, yeah, or Omega.
Speaker 2 (01:48:09):
It's an Omega Mega. It's Omega mark. Exactly what it is.
So it came out today exactly how they handled this.
There were two hundred and thirty two sets of the
final pennies sold that have that Omega mark, and it
also has the Omega Gold Penny Reserve. So you have,
you know, the pennies that come from this year, they
have the Omega mark and they have the D. One
(01:48:29):
of them has the D, one from Denver, one from Philly,
and it's an entire set. It's five pennies total, I
believe what you get and or maybe three pennies. And
they sold two hundred thirty two sets of them. Y
two thirty two. That is the area code where Abe Lincoln.
That's so funny. It was born no because then the
(01:48:50):
penny was first minted in seventeen ninety three, so it's
been two hundred and thirty two years it's been in circulation.
Oh wow, So they sold two hundred and thirty two sets.
What do you think the total amount of money they
raised by selling these pennies? These last sets of pennies
raised for whom, yeah, just right when they sold them,
I don't.
Speaker 4 (01:49:08):
Meant yeah, how they government one hundred and fifty million.
That's a little hot on, that's two hundred thousand.
Speaker 2 (01:49:17):
You can't spend one hundred and fifty million dollars on pennies,
you can. That's a bad that's a bad deal. Sixteen
point seven million dollars, oh wow. And here's the crazy part.
So the first two hundred and thirty two sets they
sold for an average of about seventy two thousand dollars
for each. It's three coins, so it's the gold one,
the Mint one from Denver, and the Mint one from Philadelphia,
(01:49:38):
right with those Omega prints the only ones that exist
like this, right, they sold those for two hundred and
But that final set, the very final set, was verified
to be the final set, sold for eight hundred thousand dollars. Wow.
So it raised a total of sixteen point seven million dollars.
And again that's a fine question where that goes. But
we knew this was gonna have a lot of value.
(01:49:58):
And that's funny because you know now they're never coming back.
Like I thought of myself, like there's a possibility, this
is just this administration doing something that it's going to
be reversed with an executive order in four years or
five years, whatever the case may be. But that's that's
not the case. Right, they're done. I mean that's gone.
Speaker 3 (01:50:13):
Keeping my penny jar, that's right.
Speaker 2 (01:50:14):
The pennies will not be coming back, and you you
should find some of those rare ones and keep them
for sure.
Speaker 3 (01:50:19):
Oh, I used to find an Indian head.
Speaker 2 (01:50:21):
That's a bummer that abe. Lincoln really got the short
strong coins. Yea, they also got the short strong life.
But we'll considered the greatest president. You figured he want
a more, Yeah, I.
Speaker 5 (01:50:32):
Guess they were like, he's number one, number one, one cent,
and then we inflated ourselves out of carrying about pennies.
Speaker 2 (01:50:39):
Yeah. It cost them eighty five million dollars to make
pennies in the year of twenty twenty four, which is
forty million more than they're worth. Is a two cents
per penny, so they decided to cut that out and
move forward. There you all right, four seven nine one
six four one text us at seven to seven zero
three one lit them up. It's time for trivia. Let's
get some stuff away.
Speaker 20 (01:51:00):
Game.
Speaker 1 (01:51:00):
Should Jim Covert show Trivia is next came down?
Speaker 2 (01:51:06):
Four seven nine four.
Speaker 21 (01:51:12):
Good afternoon, Jim Corbet Show, Prince of the Islands. Uh, Jack,
I'm in to support Jimmy, you know. I mean he's
going downtill.
Speaker 2 (01:51:23):
He not go to wars.
Speaker 21 (01:51:24):
He's to get turkey, go to Walmart.
Speaker 2 (01:51:27):
He goes.
Speaker 21 (01:51:28):
He buy one bike with no helmet. I have to
buy two helmets extra. He's using ships here. I mean
we need to help this man.
Speaker 2 (01:51:37):
Bro. What's next? He's gonna go to all these.
Speaker 3 (01:51:39):
Here we go, come on, Oh he made it.
Speaker 2 (01:51:43):
Wow, Well my Christmas wish has been answered. He got
his message in and under thirty seconds. Very proud of
you and thanks for your concern. I'm fine. Welcome back
to the Jim Covert Show. We're already on one to
four point one. Your money, I'm Jim. There's dem hello.
Jack is here. Ross is as well. It's all true
(01:52:06):
and Jack has a Jackie sack. I wonder dev what's inside?
All aboard Chuck itt Chugga too too. Clickety clack, clickety clack.
You can either choose.
Speaker 4 (01:52:17):
The winner gets to choose between one of two items.
First is a four pack of tickets to the Orlando
Science Center, where you can celebrate the holiday season with
its new dinos in light show. Hey, I practice join
Stan the t Rex and its fossil friends in Dino
Diggs as they show up their twinkling talent in a
(01:52:39):
festive display of music and light that happens now through
January sixth.
Speaker 2 (01:52:45):
Never forget also the other prize.
Speaker 4 (01:52:49):
We have a pair of tickets to Kings of Leon
nice that they're playing at the Benchmark International Arena on
January thirty. First, are you familiar with the Benchmark International Arena.
Speaker 2 (01:53:01):
I'm not. That's the formerly the Amilie. So it's Tampa.
Speaker 4 (01:53:04):
Oh yeah, yeah, so Kings of Leon coming to Tampa
at the end of January. Or it's four packs to
the Orlando Science Center. Those are your choices, and that
switching to.
Speaker 2 (01:53:16):
Jackie Sack, So back to you a clickety class. Hey
you never one, two, three, four, or five.
Speaker 3 (01:53:22):
Let's just go number one.
Speaker 2 (01:53:23):
Number one is stand Stan. How you doing buddy? I'm
doing well, sir. How about you doing good? Stan? Wanna
play a little game with us? Yes, all right, buddy,
let's do it show all right, Stan, you know the deal.
This is a real easy game to have a questionnaire
for you have four answers. One of these answers is
a lie trying to fool you, buddy. But if you
(01:53:44):
can find it, I will send you over to Jack,
where a ton of cool stuff waits. Are you ready, yes, sir,
here we go, buddy. On this day in nineteen ninety one,
the Republic of Kazakhstan is recognized as independent for Russia
for the very first time my life. Here are three
fun facts about Kazakhstan and one very nicely. Sorry we're
(01:54:08):
talking about Kazakhstan. By which one of these is untrue?
Number one, Kazakhstan is the world's largest producer of roodium,
which is used in catalytic converterers. Number two, Kazakhstan is
the world's largest landlocked country. Number three Kazakhstan is the
birthplace of apples or Lastly, Kazakhstan's national drink is fermented
(01:54:33):
horse milk, which does con in the world. Which one
of those is not true? What number two, sir, No,
that's absolutely true. Kazakhstan is the largest the world's largest
landlocked country, so it's the ninth biggest country in the world,
and it is landlocked, although it is on the Caspian Sea,
(01:54:56):
which is not an ocean, though, so that you give
it twenty years, I'm sure someone will change it, all right, Two, three,
four or five? Let's go to two. Is Tony, Tony?
How you doing good?
Speaker 14 (01:55:08):
How are you doing good?
Speaker 2 (01:55:09):
Tony? We're talking about Kazakhstan here. Which one of these
isn't true? Number one Kazakshan is the world's largest producer
of rodium, which is used in catalytic converters. Number two
Kazakshan is the birthplace of apples. Or lastly, Kazakshan's national
drink is fermented horse milk. I'm gonna go at number four.
I No, that's absolutely true. Kazaks Sans national drink is
(01:55:31):
a fermented horse milk kind of drink. They also have
one that's camel's milk as well, but they like the
horse one a little bit better.
Speaker 3 (01:55:38):
Sounds tasty.
Speaker 2 (01:55:39):
Three four or five? Let's go four? Four? Is Rick? Rick?
How you doing I'm doing great? How about y'all? Good? Rick,
We're talking about Kazakhstan and you have a fifty to
fifty shot at going over to the old Jackie sack here?
Which one of these isn't true? Number one? Kazakshan is
the world's largest producer of rodium, which is used in
catalytic converters. Or lastly, Kazakhstan is the birthplace of apples.
Speaker 11 (01:56:04):
I don't believe they had the apple first.
Speaker 2 (01:56:07):
They did have the apple first. It's one hundred percent true. Yeah,
the the when they go through the lineage of where
the apple came from, they figured it came from from
Kazakhstan that area right there.
Speaker 3 (01:56:19):
Wow, that's interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:56:20):
And then lastly, here it's another Sophie's choice between Mike
and Chris.
Speaker 3 (01:56:24):
So oh, I've gotta go with Chris.
Speaker 2 (01:56:26):
Yeah, Chris is the answer. Chris, Chris one last time.
Because of that, Chris.
Speaker 3 (01:56:31):
Might not be the same Chris.
Speaker 2 (01:56:32):
Anybody tell me this is Kazaksan the world's largest producer
of rhodium, which is used in catalytic converters. Not it
is a lie. Can you tell me what very important element?
Kazakhstan is the world's largest producer of gold uranium either
the number one producer of uranium in the world. But
(01:56:54):
you're a winner. The I'm gonna put you on hold.
There is Chris wins Sophie's choice.
Speaker 5 (01:56:59):
So you telling me because of the whole uranium thing,
that if they get really, really wealthy, we should be scared.
Speaker 2 (01:57:06):
Well, I don't know. I'm just saying if before then
all of a sudden, if Kazakhshan starts hosting a World
Cup and then all of a sudden, you know, you'll
be like, man, they've really invested in their infrastructure. Right,
where did all that money come from? Are we safe
the other things? Before we get to the top of
the hour and do some rass thoughts. Kazakhstan translates to
it actually means something. The name you'll never get it.
(01:57:29):
It's the land of wanderers really because it's actually kind
of a nomadic land. It was in an area where
a lot of tribes, as they were moving from one
area to the next, is they were, Uh, what's the
word would you? Nomadic? Yeah, yeah, there's a word for that.
Why can I think of that? Migrating there you go?
(01:57:50):
When then we're migrating mechodforth to areas because of seasonal situations, hunting,
whatever the case may be. Uh, that's where they where
they would set up shop. That's why it's called the
land of wanderers. Uh. The World's Halls Chimney is in Kazakhstan.
It's the g R E. S two power station Chimney
and it's house tall four hundred feet. Nah, it's going
to be seven hundred eight fourteen hundred feet tall. Oh yeah,
(01:58:15):
fourteen hundred feet. That's pretty tall. It's like a quarter
of a mile or something like that, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:58:20):
Don't want that to fall.
Speaker 2 (01:58:21):
I wonder if there's billboards over there that's saying like, hey,
this next extent thinking about going there for spring break?
And then lastly here what country was the first to
recognize Kazakhstan as a sovereign nation when they If you
think about this, it makes perfect sense when they broke
away from the when they claim their independence from.
Speaker 3 (01:58:40):
The USSR, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan.
Speaker 2 (01:58:44):
United State. It's the United States, baby, you think about that.
I mean that was during the Cold I mean the
height of the Cold War was like the early nineties.
Speaker 3 (01:58:50):
Was thinking of our current Yeah yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:58:52):
So you figure if they wanted to stick it in
the booty of you know, everything that is Russia, they
would definitely be the first people to say, yeah, yeah, sure,
your sovereign nation. Yes, greatest country in the world.
Speaker 5 (01:59:03):
Ye that movie, Yeah, I don't know how well it's aged,
but I do know what it did when it first
came out.
Speaker 2 (01:59:12):
But I will tell you this, you don't even have
to watch the movie to get Have you ever seen it,
by the way, deb No. Yeah. If you want to
see some funny stuff, watch him doing the promo of
it on late night talk shows. If you watch Sasha
Baron Cohen as Borat, go on like Letterman and the
shows to promote bor At the very first movie. It
is mind bending funny. The stuff he says to like
(01:59:33):
Conan and Letterman blows you away because they are not
expecting it. It is not scripted, and he gives it
to him with both barrels. He gives them all the Borat.
Speaker 5 (01:59:41):
He's yeah, that Borat performance is close to comedic perfection
that I have ever witnessed. But also at the same time,
I can get on board with the argument and criticism
of like this.
Speaker 2 (01:59:54):
Makes me feel ichy? Yeah, yeah, is this happened to people?
I yeah, this is real life.
Speaker 5 (02:00:00):
These are real people at the consequences of comedy.
Speaker 2 (02:00:03):
They're not in on the joke. They're not No, the
joke is happening to them for sure, all right? Four
seven nine one six four one text dos seven seven
zero three one. Rash had some thoughts for you.
Speaker 5 (02:00:12):
I've got a hot take about classism and Christmas. I
is very aggressive. If you are affluent, do not miss
this segment. I'm talking about you. If you are Poe,
if you all Poe, poor broke. This is also I've
got some silver lining for you for Christmas.
Speaker 2 (02:00:33):
I like all of this. We'll do that.
Speaker 12 (02:00:34):
Next horrible bottle helps frizzlef here to give you another
Hellada joke.
Speaker 2 (02:00:47):
How do shoot sub merrild Christmas to each other? Come on,
I don't know, but this love that.
Speaker 16 (02:01:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 12 (02:01:06):
Oh, dear.
Speaker 2 (02:01:09):
Fermented horse milk. Oh, come on ay, same react to
my wife had when she found outout the.
Speaker 3 (02:01:22):
Loofah, only after she uses on her face.
Speaker 2 (02:01:29):
Text us seven seven zero three one. Thanks for tuning
in to the Jim Colbert Show here on Real Radio
one oh four point one. We appreciate that greatly. I
make it your number one pre set on the iHeartRadio app.
That's a big help for us. Thank you for doing that.
I'm Jim. There's deb Hello, check it's here as well.
Good evening. Let's get some ross thoughts. Oh man, it's weird.
It's a hot take. It's fun, but I'm gonna die
(02:01:49):
on this hill.
Speaker 1 (02:01:50):
Sometimes brought to you by It's Ross spelled Lake sauce
It it's Ross thoughts.
Speaker 2 (02:01:58):
That's right. Injured on the go, just call MO. Moe
is the reason why I'm here.
Speaker 5 (02:02:02):
MO is also the person you need to call if
you're in a slip and fall or car accident. Just
call Moo dot com. All right, here's my hot take.
Jack dramatically cut the music. I don't think wealthy people
can enjoy Christmas as much as poor people.
Speaker 2 (02:02:19):
How's that for a take? How what's that for a stance? Jimmy,
do you like Christmas? Now? I think you immediately know
where I'm coming from. I actually have no idea at
all where you're coming from. Funny, you should mention that
I am completely utterly clueless and where you're coming from?
And can I tell you most of the time where
(02:02:40):
you're going. Let me get ahead of this. This is
not me talking about Jim and I'm not even trying
to talk about how you know Jim's made some good investments.
I'm not talking about that, but we will use you
as an example. Thanks. I guess it is all right.
Speaker 5 (02:02:58):
Listen, I don't want to live in a lot. I
don't want to live a life where I think wealth
is bad. I won't, but I will say, like everything
in the world, nothing is perfect. And I think one
of the asterisks that comes with having extra Commas in
a bank account means your Christmas experience takes a dent.
(02:03:20):
And and and here's why, here's why. What do you
get a wealthy person? Jim, You're not the wealthiest person
in your life.
Speaker 2 (02:03:27):
Right now, not even close.
Speaker 21 (02:03:29):
So what do you do?
Speaker 2 (02:03:30):
What do you do to the people who are wealthier
than you? Will you get them? I don't know.
Speaker 5 (02:03:35):
I mean in my circle, I mean I don't. It's
a problem. You see where I'm getting.
Speaker 2 (02:03:41):
I will tell you where this does come into play.
My wife, her boss, is a woman who's done quite
well for herself, you know, and she has, you know,
all of the material things you could possibly want. Down
to a beach house in South Florida. She has all
the cool stuff, right, you know. Every year for Christmas,
it's very difficult for my wife to purchase for her
because you know, she can get whatever she wants. So
(02:04:03):
it has to be something kind of personal rather than
something like you know, you would think you got you're
going to impress her. You're not going to impress her.
Speaker 5 (02:04:09):
Because that that wealthy person can't appreciate a new video
game the same way some people can appreciate a new
video game.
Speaker 2 (02:04:19):
I will give you, I will. I think this argument
has some validity. I really do. I do think that
if you know you've been lucky in life and you've
been able to, you know, get the things you want
in your life, that Christmas morning probably doesn't have the
same appeal as somebody who has to wait all year
for somebody to buy them something that they really want.
Speaker 5 (02:04:37):
I'll even use myself as an example, because this is
the first year. Granted I'm not killing it. I'm not,
but I'm trying, you know, like I there's I'm not
in the negative. I'm not in debt. So with that said,
now that I'm spending this money on Christmas gifts for
my wife and my friends and my coworkers and whatever
it may.
Speaker 2 (02:04:57):
Be, the whole time, I'm like, God, we should just
get a driveway. What do we do?
Speaker 5 (02:05:03):
We got to repaint the house. Why am I buying
a damn neck massager?
Speaker 8 (02:05:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:05:07):
Yeah, yeah, And that's been weird and I think that
only happens with a certain age. And also, I can't
lie financial status plays a role in the experience that
is Christmas.
Speaker 2 (02:05:22):
I will tell you funny, you should mention this. My
wife and I had this very conversation this year about
this Christmas and what we were gonna do for each other.
We've kind of come to the conclusion we're gonna get
you eat each other like a couple of little somethings.
But really, these the vacations that we take are kind
of our gifts to each other. Yeah, and you can't
and which doesn't really which really doesn't have any verb
under the tree on Christmas far exactly.
Speaker 5 (02:05:43):
Although a great gift and all that, you can't wrap
it and you're it's planned.
Speaker 2 (02:05:48):
It's weird to.
Speaker 5 (02:05:49):
Surprise that, like, hey, we're going We're going to Alaska
and there, like I didn't want to go to Alaska
and it's a ten day trip.
Speaker 2 (02:05:57):
When do you remember being a kid and.
Speaker 5 (02:06:00):
That experience when you had no relationship with money, or
at least not maybe not none, but you had a
different perception.
Speaker 2 (02:06:08):
Well, you heard your parents talking about where they couldn't
couldn't afford during the year, so you had an idea
when it came to making your Christmas lift list? What
was out a bound? Right If they say, hey, make
a Christmas list and you put bike, you better put
one other thing? Yeah yeah. But if you put you know,
Christmas list, and you say, well, this toy and that
toy and that toy, you get an idea as a
kid of what mom and dad could kind of pull off.
Speaker 5 (02:06:28):
And then I believe and then think about this that
right there, even at a young age, you know that like, hey,
you might want to put another thing because I don't.
Speaker 2 (02:06:34):
We don't know if this is going to happen, which means.
Speaker 5 (02:06:38):
That there is a possibility of receiving a gift with
that mindset that rich people can't have, meaning, oh my god,
I can't believe they got me a bike.
Speaker 2 (02:06:49):
I know that they went above and beyond.
Speaker 5 (02:06:53):
They know that the extra thirty dollars went that much
harder versus you can't beat around the bull in the
reality of thirty dollars means something very very different from
one family to the next.
Speaker 3 (02:07:05):
Way we assault wanting the you know, golden goose.
Speaker 2 (02:07:08):
Who'd grabbed the golden goose for Lucas salt from Willy
Wonka the spoilt little rich girl. Oh yeah, I just
didn't know it was Goose. What you're saying is the
balls to ask for it, just you know, being a commedator,
like being an accustomed to having that kind of demanding it. Yeah, yeah,
I just don't. I don't.
Speaker 5 (02:07:25):
It's the inevitable when it comes to having a higher number,
I think in the savings account. And so if you
aren't doing great financially, first of all, listen to Scott
brown Edgewater Finance.
Speaker 2 (02:07:37):
Do that, okay.
Speaker 5 (02:07:39):
Second of all, there is a silver lining that you
can appreciate things. Granted, I'm sure you're sick and tired
of like I'm done appreciating you know, I don't want
to be grateful, I know, but you there is a massive,
unique silver lining to your financial status and Christmas, and
I think it's important to find people that that extra
(02:08:01):
twenty thirty dollars is very different from family to family.
Speaker 2 (02:08:04):
I agree with that. I will tell you I fully
am on board with that because you know, growing up,
we grew up kind of humbly. So if you know
Christmas was the year, you know, is the time of
year that you got the stuff you really want, new cleats,
you know, everybody's on new glove or something like that.
These aren't things you can just kind of walk up
to mom and dad in the middle of the year
and go, man, I'd really like some new cleats, and
they're forty dollars. Forty dollars back in nineteen eighty five,
it's like one hundred and thirty, you know whatever it was, So,
(02:08:27):
I mean, I know exactly what you're saying. I actually
agree with that one hundred percent.
Speaker 5 (02:08:30):
And also if and this is the worst case scenario here,
this is a little heads up when it comes to
getting gifts. Are wealthy people. I started off the show
with this today and I'll say it again, don't make it.
You're out of time. It's gonna be awkward. Can you imagine,
you know how you know you've made it and you're
super wealthy when all of your gifts go straight into
trash because it was handmade by a guy who convinced
(02:08:52):
themselves that he can be a carpenter for this one gift, right, yeah, yeah,
And they go above and beyond and all of a
suddenly it probably comes off a little obsequious five dollars word,
but dang, and it's this this painfully servient thing.
Speaker 2 (02:09:07):
That comes off as desperate.
Speaker 5 (02:09:09):
Yeah, so that's why I'm like, all right, well, if
that's the case, when you give a gift to somebody
who already kind of has everything, then their Christmas experience
is so different. And also, while we're at it, here's
another little PSA about Christmas Christmas parties. PSA for Christmas parties.
(02:09:30):
Don't get too drunk because it's like getting drunk at
your wedding. Right, everyone's gonna remember it, right, all right,
And now only you're the water cooler talking topic.
Speaker 2 (02:09:40):
Yeah, yeah, you just crashed out. You're the guy from
twenty twenty five. Remember, Yeah, that's that's work. You're talking
about work. Christmas party, Christmas, I would say, any Christmas party,
your Christmas party.
Speaker 5 (02:09:51):
Any Christmas party. Here's another thing, another hell that I'll
die on. They are exactly like weddings, where every action
and every event is compounded into like, all right, don't
you better act yourself and this is a wholesome event, and.
Speaker 2 (02:10:06):
Then everything's recorded. Yeah I found out everything is recorded.
Speaker 5 (02:10:11):
Also, while we're at it, Christmas party etiquette. Don't go
to the bathroom like that, Yeah, like that, you can't.
I need you to take a proactive session in your own.
Speaker 2 (02:10:22):
Home, right you need to. You need to kind of
figure something out before you leave that day. Yeah, I
agree with one hundred percent. You need to leave and
go to the store for something that that's a big
one and also just rip it at Cumberland Farms and
come back.
Speaker 5 (02:10:34):
And you know what, I got a third leg. I
got a third leg for this Christmas. So much advice
to so many, so many thoughts here that ross sauce.
Speaker 2 (02:10:42):
You can't And man, I'm not sure if you guys
have been in this situation scenario for white Elephant at
the work party and everyone's trading gifts or stealing gifts.
Ye can't be upset.
Speaker 5 (02:10:54):
You can not show any bit of frustration when the
gift that you obviously wanted because.
Speaker 2 (02:11:02):
You chose it and kept it, uh huh, get stolen.
You can't do it, right. Yeah, yeah, I'll tell you
something else you can't do. You can't take chances at
the white Elephant party because you never know who's going
to get your gift. You can't come in there with
a glove that has French tickler fingers. Can't Are you
sure how many of these ross stem from your own
(02:11:25):
act experience all of them party, but you.
Speaker 6 (02:11:30):
Do have to make sure your guests are comfortable if
they can't make it to Cumberland Farms aka is spray.
Speaker 3 (02:11:37):
Yeah, why not do the matches?
Speaker 2 (02:11:41):
That's such access to your neighbor's house anything. Yeah. I also,
I've never been in the backyard.
Speaker 5 (02:11:48):
I'm right, I'm with you, deb, I've never understood the
whole light of match thing because now it just smells
like a forest.
Speaker 2 (02:11:52):
Fire exactly, which is way better than pop. Yeah. Yeah,
it just smells like sulfur and pool. It doesn't over and.
Speaker 5 (02:12:04):
This summer we will drop it, which is weird because
say that, well, we're dropping it out the summer, because
I just told you we will not drop this out
of Christmas party. Those are three rules to live by
when it comes to Christmas parties. And there's also a
friendly reminder that if the bank.
Speaker 2 (02:12:23):
Account needs me, feed me, Yeah, let me.
Speaker 5 (02:12:25):
You can appreciate Christmas in a different light than I think,
than the than the affluent does.
Speaker 2 (02:12:30):
But let me ask you. You have somebody in your
circle that lives in that world. Yeah, what do you
get her? Bru? Yeah? What do you get her? A photo? Yeah? Yeah,
something like that. Honestly, the best thing you can do
for her. You know she would That's probably the best
thing you could ever do for her.
Speaker 5 (02:12:47):
I think the thing that I do, uh, because I
have a family member who is wealthy, but I have
never bought her a gift.
Speaker 2 (02:12:53):
Yeah, you should get her something I like outside of
like a card or I mean a nice a nice
photo of you in the fan. She would absolutely love
that kiss the Yeah, we just did that.
Speaker 5 (02:13:03):
But the reality of the situation is is that she
knows it. I know it ain't going in the trash.
It's just the question is when. And those are your
ross thoughts.
Speaker 2 (02:13:13):
I'm out all right four seven nine one text us
at seven seven zero three one say we'll break our buddy,
Scott Brown. On the other side, Edgewarderfamilywealth dot Com, It's
only money is next here on The Jim Colbert.
Speaker 9 (02:13:24):
Show, Day, how's it o'hannah? All right, yep, just a
little bit behind on YouTube.
Speaker 16 (02:13:38):
But Broda Jim, you know everybody cuts you slack when
you started to use a dirty toilet brush on your back,
even sent you a clean one. However, sharing aloofah with
your partner wife, that's unacceptable, bro.
Speaker 2 (02:13:55):
My wife. Sam says, no, you guys all see anybody?
Thank you? Hello, Prince of Allen got him a right,
welcome back to me. It's contagious. Colbert Show, Real Radio
one O four point one. I'm Jiminer's deb Hello Jack. Yeah,
Ross is here as well. That's true everybody around this time,
(02:14:16):
we invite this gentleman to drop by and talk about
how he can make your financial life a little better.
Let's do its only money, Oh, people passionate about planning
for the future. Ross above investments, myths to build real
Isn't that really just common sense financial advice? It's oh okay, it's.
Speaker 9 (02:14:40):
All with your money.
Speaker 2 (02:14:41):
Wis Scott Brown's on edge?
Speaker 9 (02:14:43):
Our family?
Speaker 2 (02:14:44):
Good love everybody, Scott Brown, Scott Brown. Before we do
one thing in regards to finances, I'm gonna ask you
a very simple question. You gotta turn his MinC on
there check check all right, very simple question. Yeah. When
you bathe? Oh god, oh jeez. Oh no. Then when
(02:15:06):
you bathe, I'm supposed to bathe? Stop? Okay, when you shower, bathe,
when you clean your body? What implement do you use
to do? I hate this question. That's a that's a
trick question. No, it's not a trick. Question is a
simple questions do you use a washcloth or not?
Speaker 23 (02:15:21):
And then you get the judgment, well there's a loofah
washcloth or like deb does she's straight bar to the bod. Yeah,
I'm mostly bar to the body. That's all I'm gonna say.
Speaker 3 (02:15:30):
Okay, Jimmy, you want to fill him in what you do?
Speaker 2 (02:15:33):
Yeah? Straight bar of theod? Same thing anyway, A couple
of money.
Speaker 3 (02:15:38):
And his wife's share a loofah?
Speaker 2 (02:15:39):
How did this happen? She doesn't know it yet. That's
what I heard the show. That's how it happens. Your fault,
not our fault. You're the one who asked him in here,
it's I asked for it. That's correct, all right, Scott Brown.
Of course, as you order Familywealth dot com. They're a
fiduciaries in town for thirty eight plus years, providing, say,
(02:16:00):
advice for people to make sure that their finances are
taken care of as they move toward retirement, or just
maybe getting you a setup for saving money and make
your life a little bit better. How you doing, buddy,
I'm good.
Speaker 23 (02:16:10):
I was listening to Ross talk about how it sucks
to have Christmas for wealthy people.
Speaker 2 (02:16:14):
Yeah, is that the that the that THESS you were
working on? Do you agree though a little bit? I
want he's saying though, the idea of once you start
kind of accumulating the money, when people try to give
you gifts, because you're able to buy things for yourself
throughout the year, it lessens the excitement of that morning.
Do you do you agree with that at all? I
think there's some truth to that.
Speaker 23 (02:16:33):
I was going to play Devil's advocate to say that,
you know, one of the things we're told throughout our youth,
and like you, I came up from.
Speaker 2 (02:16:40):
Humble beginnings, is that it's not about the gifts. Right.
We keep saying that, Yeah, right, yeah, right?
Speaker 23 (02:16:46):
So I mean it could it be possible that if
you're a person of means, you focus more on the camaraderie,
the fellowship, the unity of family.
Speaker 2 (02:16:55):
Could that could that be an offset.
Speaker 5 (02:16:58):
Ross It's just going to be hard to rap camaraderie. Yeah,
it's gonna be hard to sell that on Christmas morning.
Speaker 2 (02:17:04):
I will tell you what I do. This is a
true story too. Like if I was gonna get somebody
a gift, first thing I would do. Let's say I
was gonna get Scott a gift. I know Scott enjoys
a couple of things. But Scott can also go out
and get that bottle of bourbon or that nice cigar,
whatever the case may be. I know he can do that.
I could just give him the recommendation he could go
out and buy, and I could tell him, hey, this
is a great bottle of whiskey, this is a great cigar.
He could go and buy it. But what I would
do is I'd find out what your favorite band is
and I would try to find a vintage t shirt
(02:17:26):
from that band's concert for back in the day. It
still may cost thirty or forty dollars. You can still
find those things relatively cheap. But if I was gonna
buy for you and you were like of that situation,
I would go find you a what's that band you
like too much? I like, Yeah, I love that punk,
Like an old Daft punk tour shirt. That would be
hard to find, because that's thoughtful. You're buying something for
somebody that really kind of throws them mac nostalgically where
(02:17:47):
they can kind of relive part of that line. That's
that's something I would do. I know my wife is
doing that for her boss because her boss is a
big fan of a certain bandiler alert. Well, she didn't listen,
she but she didn't listen. You work and all she
does is work. But I mean that's kind of the idea,
you know.
Speaker 5 (02:18:01):
And also, consumables are always fied. You just said a
you know, a bourbon whiskey, those things because you're saving
a trip for it, let's say, fluid Russian and Christmas
cookies doesn't have any type of class when it comes.
Speaker 2 (02:18:20):
To social class for cookies.
Speaker 5 (02:18:22):
He's show me your grandma's Christmas cookie and I'm gonna
eat it.
Speaker 2 (02:18:26):
You know, get back in the money.
Speaker 10 (02:18:31):
As crazy as my grandma made money, cookie Jack, she
got to eat talk about money.
Speaker 2 (02:18:43):
I'm so sorry. Scott sends us a few things to
talk about every week when he comes in, and we
have those. Now let's start with number one here. Bitcoin
predictions were predictably awful.
Speaker 23 (02:18:53):
Yeah, I mean, come on, Like, first of all, trying
to predict the price of bitcoin is just ludicrous to
start with, because there's a It's not like you say, well,
earnings this year for bitcoin are going to be this,
or Bitcoin's going to come out with this new product.
Speaker 2 (02:19:05):
Therefore, the price. That's stupidity. Its value is based on
what somebody else will pay. It's just a greater fool theory.
So let's go through.
Speaker 23 (02:19:13):
JP Morgan predicted it just everybody's everybody's aware. Bitcoin's trading
a little less than ninety thousand right now. I think
eighty seven eighty eight thousand. JP Morgan predicted it would
be one hundred and seventy thousand.
Speaker 2 (02:19:24):
They were off just by a tad, a little bit.
Speaker 23 (02:19:27):
Robert Kaiowski, I think that's how you say his name
is the rich dad, poor dad guy. He predicted three
hundred and fifty thousand. Kathy Wood of arc fame, who's
predictably awful most of the time, predicted two million dollars.
Speaker 2 (02:19:41):
She was off by just a tad. Amazing.
Speaker 23 (02:19:43):
So the point being, this is the year, this is
the time of year where we get predictions. So people
are going to predict what the S and P is
going to do in twenty twenty six. They're going to
predict what small gaps in global markets in bitcoin, and YadA, YadA, YadA,
and they're all going to be awful at it. It's
every single year, it's the same thing. They predict things
and they're horribly wrong in what they say is I
was right except this thing happened. I would have been
(02:20:06):
right had these other things that I had no control.
Speaker 2 (02:20:09):
No what you were was wrong.
Speaker 23 (02:20:10):
So keep that in mind when you're listening to experts
this time of year and you say, well, so and
so said the stock market's going to do this.
Speaker 2 (02:20:16):
Therefore I'm going to act this way. But just out
of curiosity though. You know a lot of people like
this guy Kramer on what was MSNBC, CNBC, Yeah, CNBC.
So he he does a lot of that, Jim Kramer.
You know a lot of people online now do that.
So when people have success and you can see this success,
I mean Robert Kayashi a Kayakshki, I'm sorry, he had
great success with that book. Sure, when you see that
(02:20:38):
and you're a you're new to this world, you know,
and you and they make these predictions, it would be
difficult not to listen to them. I mean, where else
do you turn then? Like if you if you're out
there and you see these people who are very successful
giving advice financially and you're saying that, you know, there's
a possibility they don't really know what they're doing. Where do.
Speaker 23 (02:20:54):
I go, well, I think that's you got to understand
the motivations, right, what's in it for them?
Speaker 11 (02:20:57):
Right? Right?
Speaker 23 (02:20:58):
So Jim Kramer has a following. He's he's as wrong
or right as anybody else most of the time. You know,
if you listen to somebody and his motivation is to
keep your attention. Right, he's in the media business. Yes,
he's selling all that, carrying on, honking horns, doing you know,
spinning levers, whatever he's doing. And the reality is all
he wants is your attention. No different than any any
(02:21:19):
channel like that. And what I would say is he's
no more right or wrong than anybody else, somebody like
Warren Buffett who doesn't care what you do. He doesn't
benefit from you buying and eat the S and P
five hundred ETF which he says all the time. Right,
he doesn't get paid for that, he doesn't care. If
you do it, you can do it, you cannot do it.
But the reality is guessing what an individual security will
do in any given year, let alone crypto is a
(02:21:43):
fool's Errand I mean, yeah, you might say, well, I
don't know starlink is going to be good. Therefore SpaceX
might do an IPO and I think that Tesla's got
a new model coming out and they might do Okay.
Those are things to talk about and consider, But Tesla
could come out with a new model and it could
flop in This stock could drop by one hundred.
Speaker 2 (02:22:01):
Bucks for all you know. Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 23 (02:22:02):
So again, people overestimate the value of prediction or investing
in a year. They want they want this year to
be a difference maker.
Speaker 2 (02:22:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 23 (02:22:10):
Yeah, they overestimate what they can do in a year.
They underestimate what they can do in ten years. Any
given year, three one out of every three years is negative.
Probably let the number of ten year periods that are
negative or.
Speaker 2 (02:22:24):
Are almost no.
Speaker 23 (02:22:24):
Yeah, yeah, so you're better off just saying, look, I'm
gonna have a diversified portfolio.
Speaker 2 (02:22:29):
I know it's boring.
Speaker 23 (02:22:30):
I know everybody's rolling their eyes right now, but if
you have a diversified portfolio over a ten year period,
you're gonna do Okay. If you're guessing at crypto or
you're guessing at even at individual large cap stocks in
any given year, you know, it's a flip of a coin.
Speaker 5 (02:22:43):
Do you think people could be better off financially instead
of calendars reading one year reading ten for sure.
Speaker 23 (02:22:51):
Well, I think people would be better off if they
didn't get their statements mailed to them but once every
ten years.
Speaker 5 (02:22:56):
Yeah, because I think you just like you touched on
something that was so big. I know you've said it before.
I've heard you say before. Is the you know, they
underestimate one year, they overestimate ten years, or sorry, they
under way around, yeah, the other way around.
Speaker 2 (02:23:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:23:10):
Uh, and it's I fall guilty of it. I think
everybody falls guilty of it. We're at the end of
the year January first. We think this is going to
be the year that I turn it around, yea, when
in reality, what we could be thinking is this is
the year that I changed my life from here on forward.
Speaker 23 (02:23:26):
This is going to be the this ten years, how
about this ten years? How about from twenty six to
thirty six, I'm going to save three hundred bucks a
month in my four oh one K. They're going to
match fifty percent of that, which is now puts me
at four hundred and fifty dollars. And if I do
that for the next twenty years and I earned seven
and a half percent, I'll probably have about eight hundred grand.
Speaker 2 (02:23:42):
How about we do that.
Speaker 23 (02:23:43):
How about we have that conversation because people have they
have these these their goals for the year, or their proclamations,
or I'm going to do this or I'm gonna do that.
How about you just design a process not for next year,
but for the next ten years. Well that's a good
way to look at it for sure, then, right. I mean,
it's how I look at it. I don't start out
every year and go, how am I going to get rich?
Speaker 12 (02:24:03):
Right?
Speaker 23 (02:24:03):
AAI, I think, okay, what's what process am I following?
How do I need to tweak that process?
Speaker 21 (02:24:09):
And my on goal?
Speaker 2 (02:24:10):
Am I not on goal?
Speaker 23 (02:24:11):
But I don't rearrange everything every year, hope. It's like
taking your baseball team and fire, you know, getting rid
of everybody and getting all new players every year, thinking okay.
Speaker 2 (02:24:20):
Now we got it. Yeah. Right. Talking to Scott Brown
Edgewater Family Wealth, that's Edgewaterfamilywealth dot Com. It says here. Now,
this is something we've talked a lot about because this
is getting a lot of online action from a lot
of financial advisors or people who are out there telling
people that it's not necessarily a disadvantage to retire at
sixty two years old. So the second thing you hear
you have here is retire early, live longer a question mark.
(02:24:42):
In other words, does retiring early equal a longer life?
The answer is yes, But the question that begs asking
is why? Right, because it's kind of a chicken or
the egg kind of thing.
Speaker 23 (02:24:52):
Right, you say, well, because if you look at the
statistics that just came out, if you were retired at
fifty five, your average lifespan was to eighty three. If
you retire tired at sixty, your average lifespan was to
seventy eight and a half. If you retired at sixty five,
your average lifespan was short of seventy damn real. Well,
huh right, that's what I said. So the question that
begs asking is why? Why does retiring earlier? And then
(02:25:15):
so again, is it a chicken or the egg? Did
you retire early remove stress? You slept better, You have
a less cardiovscular disease. Because you have less stress, your
blood pressure goes down.
Speaker 2 (02:25:26):
Is that the reason that you live longer?
Speaker 23 (02:25:29):
Or is it that people who retire early are more
mentally stable, they have better health to begin with? Maybe
they're wealthier, they're better planners. So if they're wealthier, we
know that wealthy people have better health outcomes, they have
better doctors, they have more preventive medicine. So again, if
we say to ourselves, what if you retire early, you
live longer. But the question you have to ask is why.
(02:25:50):
And I don't really know the answer to that. I
suspect people who retire early are probably slightly better planners,
more mentally, their mental health is better, and their physical
health as well.
Speaker 2 (02:26:01):
You deal with people who retire all the time, and
I fact, that's kind of your gig. Do you see
that in your place? Do you see the people who
retire in that's sixty, right at sixty or between fifty
five and sixty, or maybe at sixty two that first
ear of getting your soil security? Do you find that
people are happier? Do you find that they live longer?
Do you see it in their lives?
Speaker 23 (02:26:17):
I think that's probably true. I would say my guess
would be that's true. And I'm thinking it through in
that I've had people retire early and that didn't go well,
and because they kind of maybe were forced into that retirement.
But people who do the planning the gal that says,
you know, I've been saving this long I knew I
wanted to retire at sixty. I knew I wanted to travel.
(02:26:38):
I knew I wanted to join the Peace Corps. I
knew I wanted to do this, that or the other.
Those are planning people, and I think planning people on
average have again better mental health, they have better physical health,
maybe they exercise more. I think there's more to it
than just retire early, live longer, right, There's more details
that we need to understand.
Speaker 2 (02:26:58):
Yeah, it's interesting though, I see that a lot online,
a lot of dudes out there who are in the
financial space are are really taking a lot of questions
and doing a lot of content on that whole were
retiring at sixty two and pulling your Social Security year
one and really diving into a lot of the stuff
that you just said. On top of some of the
(02:27:18):
financial stuff, but also saying that, I would say, also
the job you're retiring from probably makes a giant difference, right,
I mean you're a retirement I mean, we could both
retire if we wanted to, but we don't. We both
have really fun jobs that we enjoy a lot, So
I think that also kind of comes into play. I mean,
you can work with seventy five years old. If you
like what you're doing, I mean, you look at like
Keith Richards just said today, I guess they had to
cancel some of the Stones tours because he doesn't know
(02:27:38):
if he could make it through the tour. He's eighty two. Yeah,
eighty two.
Speaker 23 (02:27:42):
Years old if he looked eighty two at twenty five.
So that's but yeah, yeah, I think that there's some
fairness to that. What we're looking at in the financial
services and at least myself personally as I've passed sixty now,
is I'm starting to look at the utility of working
longer and having more money, right, Is there really any utility?
At some points? At some point you got to say
(02:28:03):
I have enough. I'm probably not gonna outlive this money.
I'm not suddenly gonna change my lifestyle and drive a Bentley, right.
I like my lifestyle. I like to play golf once
a week. I like to go fishing once a week.
I like to hunt whatever it is. But I'm not
going to the taj Mahal. I'm not eating out every night.
I don't go to Roost Chris every single night. I
don't need instead of having a million, I don't need
three million, right right, I don't need to keep working
(02:28:23):
for that purpose. And I think to the reason the
sixty two thing with social securities catching so much traction
is I think people have realized, aside from Keith Richards,
that between the AA up to the age about seventy five,
on average, people are active, their health is pretty stable.
They can go to Europe, they can do the kayaking,
they can do the hike, they can do those things.
(02:28:44):
But once you get past seventy five, things become a
little bit more questionable. And what is the utility in
working to seventy when you're cutting off maybe five.
Speaker 2 (02:28:53):
Of those really productive, enjoyable years. Talking abou Scott Brown
Edgeward or Family Wealth, that's edgwordarfamilywealth dot com. We'll give
you some more information that in the second. He's got
a couple of books you can download for free. Plus
you can also make a consultation right there and talk
to these guys about where your finances are headed as well.
Let's ended up with this whole idea of how one
becomes a financial advisor. How could somebody do what you
do well or why would they even do that? Yeah,
(02:29:16):
that's a good question. I asked myself that quite frequently.
Speaker 23 (02:29:20):
Really, I think the point is that becoming a financial
advisor is hard for people to understand. How does that happen?
What is a financial advisor? And the reality is it's
not very well defined. You know, a life insurance person
can call themselves a financial advisor, a health insurance person
can call in on and on and on, a stockbroker,
you name it. There's a lot of people to call
(02:29:41):
out there calling themselves financial advisors. And it's hard, I think,
for the general public to understand the difference between a
product salesperson and a person who truly does financial planning.
And the reality is, even in my industry, the average
financial advisor sells product. And I'm not saying they're bad.
I'm not saying they're not them faris. I'm not even
saying they're not talented or smart. But the reality is
(02:30:01):
most of them are trained to sell you products. They're
trained to sell you a mutual fund, They're trained to
sell you an annuity. They're trying to sell your life
and sure so.
Speaker 2 (02:30:08):
All the conversations you're having with them for a minute
you walk in are focused on getting you to buy
something that's right, that's right that they're probably to going in.
But that's a major leverage point.
Speaker 23 (02:30:17):
And again I'm not saying that maybe you don't need
those things. In fact, you might need those things. But really,
when it comes to financial planning, is you want somebody
who backs up and takes a holistic look at your
whole situation. How much su are you saving, what type
of return do you need to earn? How long do
we think you're gonna live. What are your plans for
the future. Are you gonna go to Europe? Are you
(02:30:37):
gonna are you a fishing person? Are you gonna sit
home and read a book? This call goes back to
what we were just talking about is what is the
utility of money in your life?
Speaker 2 (02:30:45):
Right?
Speaker 23 (02:30:45):
And most advisors are not concerned with the utility of
money in your life, right. They're concerned that you have
money and they needed for their utility.
Speaker 2 (02:30:54):
Your utility. There's a lot of utility for them.
Speaker 23 (02:30:56):
So and again I say that somewhat tongue in cheek
because the reality many of them are perfectly nice people
and very thoughtful and very well intended. But I think
if you truly want financial planning, you really need to
find somebody and maybe interview several somebodies to find out
what is your process? How do you find out about me?
What matters to me? How long do you think I'm
gonna live? What do you think is going to cost
(02:31:17):
me to get a new car every five years? I
want to give way to charity. All of these things
come into play. They need to be asked before somebody
breaks out the fancy brochure to say, here's the problem.
Because if they've already got a solution to your problem
and you haven't described the.
Speaker 2 (02:31:30):
Problem, yeah, that's that's trouble. That's a red flag. That's
a I got what you need and you haven't said
a word, it's probably not a good thing. All right.
It's Edgewaterfamilywealth dot com. That's Edgewater Familywealth dot com. When
we come back, we'll tell you how to download the books,
where you can go to make a consultation, all that
fun stuff. Deb What do you have for news?
Speaker 6 (02:31:46):
Rob Reiner's son is formally charged with murder, Cases are
up for a new strain of flu, and Miriam Webster
announces it's twenty twenty five word of the Year.
Speaker 3 (02:31:55):
We'll be talking about that next during you heard it
here first.
Speaker 2 (02:31:57):
Allright, say little break, will come back and get Deb's news.
Been a couple more minutes with Scott, then get the
hell out of here.
Speaker 4 (02:32:02):
On a Tuesday, Hey, boys and girls are friends at
tklaw want to remind us to look ahead. So tomorrow
on real radio checking out the Monsters in the morning,
they're getting ready for their cure Bowl. They'll be there
tomorrow afternoon, but in the morning Lawyer right freendly will
(02:32:24):
be on with the folks in Ambernova as well as
tomorrow and a Wednesday edition of the Monsters. When it
comes time to look ahead for you and your family,
whether it's an estate plan, a trust, a will trust.
The team at TK law online one firm for life
dot com.
Speaker 2 (02:32:53):
Hey, is anybody asked Jimmy what color this loofah is yet?
I'm just wondering what kind of pink village's freaky peaking
stuff they're getting down with. Yeah, acquiring minds want to know.
I bet check a wild Wow. Just made my wife
(02:33:14):
recoil in disgust by the way, sir.
Speaker 3 (02:33:18):
After hearing about you using the lufah ramming in.
Speaker 2 (02:33:21):
That she found out that your loofah is a twofa
Join us new year's eve. We are going to be
out there a mount door are ringing it in December
thirty first myself, Deb Jack All, along with live performances
from Mel's Mighty Motown Machine and Blues Brothers Tribute. Bring
the family, enjoy, great food and Bev's gonna be a
good time. Fireworks display, drone display, just a big party.
(02:33:43):
We did it last year, an absolute blast right there
at Sunset Park, kicking off around nine o'clock. All brought
to you by Geico Guinness, Pisces Rising. Visit Lake and
the city of Mount Dora to see out. There's me
a good ass time. Welcome back. I'm Jim, Deb Jack
Ross and Scott Brown all here for you. Speaking of Deb,
Let's get some new use great time for you. Heard
(02:34:03):
it here first on The Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 6 (02:34:06):
Director Rob Reiner's son is being charged with two counts
of first degree murder for the stabbing deaths of his parents.
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hokman made the announcement today.
Speaker 20 (02:34:16):
These charges will be two counts of first degree murder
with a special circumstance of multiple murders. He also facts
a special allegation that he personally use a dangerous and
deadly weapon, that being a knife.
Speaker 6 (02:34:32):
If convicted, Nick Reiner would most likely face life in
prison without parole. Hochman said he could seek the death penalty,
but California has a moratorium on the death penalty, and
legal scholars say, listen, it would really only be a
symbolic charge. The bodies of seventy eight year old Rob
Reiner and his wife, seventy year old Michelle Singer Reiner,
were discovered in their Los Angeles home on Sunday afternoon.
(02:34:54):
All Right, there's a new flu strain that's causing a
spike in hospitalizations across the US, including here in Florida.
So doctors say a new mutation of the H three
N two strain, known as subclade K, is undermining the
flu SHOT's effectiveness. They tell the Panama City News Herald.
It could mean the US is in for a rough
(02:35:14):
flu season this year. The strain has already had severe
impacts in the UK, Canada, Japan, and Australia.
Speaker 2 (02:35:21):
Still, get your flu shot right.
Speaker 3 (02:35:22):
Some protection is better than none.
Speaker 6 (02:35:24):
All right, Miriam Webster is selecting slop o god as
it's twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (02:35:30):
Word of the year, Yeah, AI slop.
Speaker 6 (02:35:33):
According to Miriam Webster, the term slop originally referred to
quote soft mud end quote and the seventeen hundreds, and
later evolved to mean food, waste and rubbish. However, in
twenty twenty five, it has come to be defined as
quote digital content of low quality that is produced usually
in quantity, by means of artificial intelligence end quote. The
(02:35:54):
PICKFO word of the year is based on a significant
increase in searches and the dictionaries editors show. Is it
to reflect the year's trends and events? Yep, twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (02:36:04):
Has been a whole lot of sun. It's been a
whole one.
Speaker 3 (02:36:06):
And you heard it here. First, I'm the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 2 (02:36:09):
Thanks DEEB Scott real quick. I want to make sure
Scott gets a plugged him because we want to make
sure people can go and get the book. I was
supposed to do this before news. My apologies. Edgewater Familywealth
dot com. You you have the two books there we do.
Speaker 23 (02:36:19):
If you go to Edgwaterfamilywealth dot com you can pull
down the menu there and grab the books. I Never
Made Anybody Rich, which is my main book. Every time,
every time everybody laughs and rolls their eyes. And then
the next one is I got a guy, which is
a guy using a financial advisor, whether you use us
or somebody else, that'll be really helpful in that conversation.
Speaker 11 (02:36:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:36:35):
Also, let me tell you, man, these guys also will
take your phone call for a consultation. You can go
on book one right there online. Next year we'll kick
off with some live events where you can actually come
talk to Scott some of the people there at the
building that specialize in things like social security and Medicare
and Medicaid and things of that nature. So really tune
in to what these guys are offering. All of that
can be found right there at the website.
Speaker 23 (02:36:54):
Yeah, God, just go again, go to Edgewaterfamilywealth dot com.
It's all right there front and center, and we probably
do three or four of those consoles a week.
Speaker 2 (02:37:00):
That's awesome. Yeah. Yeah, And they're very inviting guys, so
don't think they're going to be intimidated. They want you
to call, they want to talk to you. They want
to make sure that you have peace of mind moving
into your retirement or just starting off your life with
a good savings plan. These guys are all about making
sure that road is paid for you. So again Edgewaterfamilywealth
dot Com deba. Who do you have to thank to that? Well,
we want to thank the fabulous Scott Brown.
Speaker 6 (02:37:20):
Yeah, you're talking to him and if you missed his
segment where he was talking financial advice, you can find
his podcast now at the Jim Colbert Show. I also
want to thank Attorney modu Witt for saucing up our Tuesdays.
Speaker 2 (02:37:33):
Thank you, Mo Yay, Thank you Moe.
Speaker 6 (02:37:34):
Congratulations for that twenty five dollars gift card, Matt that
you received from Froggers Grilling Bar.
Speaker 3 (02:37:40):
Thank you Froggers.
Speaker 6 (02:37:41):
And then, last but never least, Sam Bowen and Candice
Rich for running our YouTube chat.
Speaker 2 (02:37:45):
Absolutely thanks guys, appreciate that. Jack question oh the day.
Speaking of our YouTube chat, that's where we posted. We
invite the people there too. Posted Late Pube. He's the
late puber.
Speaker 4 (02:38:01):
The question have you ever had a package stolen from
your doorste Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:38:07):
Have you ever been porch pirated? We did not get
to the to that story today, but there is a
h There was a like the numbers were pretty crazy
about how often this happens, and according to the numbers,
we should know somebody who has been porch pirated before.
I mean it's like one out of ten, one out
of eight, something like that. Have you guys ever had
something stolen from your porch?
Speaker 7 (02:38:26):
Not?
Speaker 2 (02:38:26):
No, not to my Knowune, I don't. I don't think so. Yeah,
I don't think I don't think so. I don't think
so either. The properties we've had haven't really lent it
to that self. When we were in bald when I
thought maybe we had something, but no, it wasn't like that. Yeah,
they know I keep that hammer. Yeah, I bring out heat.
Speaker 5 (02:38:40):
Take that literally, I'm talking about a heat, a black
and Decker hammer.
Speaker 2 (02:38:44):
All right, So I think, you know, I'll go fifty
to fifty on this.
Speaker 4 (02:38:48):
I say fifty percent have but you said it was
like one in eight or two out of ten people. Yeah, yeah,
well two out of ten wouldn't be bad. Nineteen percent
say yes, yeah, yeah, that's pretty accurate. Yeah, for sure,
or else, I know you don't any stand up coming
in December. But also we do have good Sauce.
Speaker 5 (02:39:03):
Yep, we have Good Sauce with Ross and Joel. A
new episode dropping tomorrow and it is a great listen.
Speaker 2 (02:39:09):
A lot of.
Speaker 5 (02:39:14):
A lot of very fun PSAs for the Christmas season.
Speaker 2 (02:39:19):
Also, do you guys have more episodes of Aftermath ready
to go as well? I mean, are they still up?
Speaker 23 (02:39:23):
Yeah, they're still up, and we're we're gonna do what
two or three more tomorrow?
Speaker 21 (02:39:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 23 (02:39:27):
Yeah, yeah, so they're there after Math aftermath pod dot com.
Speaker 2 (02:39:31):
Aftermath pod dot com, that's where you can get all
the episodes. There's a few already out there. Ross and
Scott's podcast about Scott's business, and you can kind of
check that out. It's very easily accessible. Ross breaks it
down into terms that normal dudes would do. Yehow going on?
And then s Good tries to raise him up. Yeah, bars,
he's getting heavy, but we're getting there. All right. That's
Aftermath pod dot com. Let's get the hell up out
(02:39:53):
of here.
Speaker 3 (02:39:53):
Sounds good.
Speaker 2 (02:39:54):
Coming up tomorrow we'll have Animal House.
Speaker 6 (02:39:56):
Central, Flow to Zoo will be in h Yeah, Emily, yep,
We've got Emily, Christina and Roberta.
Speaker 2 (02:40:02):
Yeah, Scott Maxwell and tomorrow as well. Plus we'll find
out what's on good Sauce from Ross. Exciting, Yeah, very good.
I'll be having debt Jack Ross and Scott. I'm Jim.
We follow the new Junkie. They follow the monsters in
the morning. After us, it's Sam Dame with the Corporate
Time and our friends from Real Aughs. We'll see you
tomorrow three for more of The Jim Corport Show. Until then,
have yourself a fantastic Tuesday evening.
Speaker 11 (02:40:22):
See you tomorrow, bye, yeah right whatever.
Speaker 2 (02:40:55):
If you be part of today's.
Speaker 1 (02:40:56):
Show, check out The Jim Coomberg Show on demand, and
for highlight feature segments, listen to The Jim Colbert Show
The Goods. Both are available for free on the iHeartRadio app.