Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good luck.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Someone's going to get offended. It's just the way the
world works, so hopefully save everyone a little time and
or energy. Here's the opinions that you hear are those
of the host and callers and not those of iHeart Media,
It's management or advertisers. You are now listening to the
Jim Colbert Show on Real Radio one oh four point one.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
That's right, guys, here we go on a Wednesday edition
of The Jim Colbert Show. Thank you so much for
tuning in. We appreciate that, as we do every single day,
and we have a stacked up program for you. This afternoon.
We will get caught up on what's happening in the world.
DEVI will do that at three twenty with JCS News
four Block hour's Animal House Central Florida. Zoos Coo is
coming in to talk about the sloth updates, which everybody's
(00:46):
on the edge of their seat for. Scott Maxwell will
join us as well. Forward Slash coming in today for
a bourbon and sampling. Five o'clock hour will do trivia.
We'll ended up with Ross Paget and you heard it
here first. You're a calls, text and talkbacks all day long.
Welcome to the show. I'm Jim. To my left, leveling
very dangerous. Co host was Dev Roberts. Hello there, Carson Day,
Straight Ahead producer Jack Bradshaw, Good after all right four
(01:08):
O seven nine one text us seven seven zero three one.
Find us easily on social Instagram, Facebook at d Jim
Colbert Show one x, just at Jim Colbert Show All day,
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Just grab the iHeartRadio app, go to Real Radio and
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We'll get you on there. And your three o'clock keyword
(01:29):
is bills b I L l s. Get over to
Real Radio dot FM and send that away for your
chance at one thousand dollars guys, bills. That is your
three o'clock keyword. Good luck. You cannot even begin to
understand how happy I am to look over that screen
and see your beautiful, shining face. How are you, young lady?
Speaker 3 (01:47):
I am doing all right.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Yeah, you are doing exceptionally well.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
Still getting my voice back?
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Yeah? What happened to your voice?
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Lost it?
Speaker 4 (01:57):
Man?
Speaker 3 (01:58):
Talking Jack, A lot of talking.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Interesting thing. The last couple of days, I've been able
to sit and talk to our guests about our experience
at your beautiful wedding on Saturday, and what a remarkable time.
I mean, everything about it was absolutely perfect. It was
absolutely perfect, one of my favorite weddings I've ever been
to in my life. And I am not blowing smoke.
It was so special, so awesome. The venue was great,
(02:21):
the priests was great, You guys were awesome. Everything about
it was organic and fun and not pretentious and guided.
The reception was beautiful and a beautiful spot. The food
was amazing, the DJ was great, all of the things,
all the special people said about you guys was great,
(02:41):
just fantastic. A plus A plus rating from Jim Colbert.
Speaker 5 (02:47):
Dittoh that although thank you there was it started off
on a strange foot when I was in the church
right waiting, you know, for this to start a couple
minutes before I would say, twenty minutes before the ceremony.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Let me help you, JACKO seventeen.
Speaker 5 (03:03):
I looked at my class seventeen minutes before the ceremony?
Speaker 1 (03:06):
What happened? Jack? I got a text message? Who is it? From?
Jim Colbert. What did he say? Where is this place
you got married there? I did not?
Speaker 5 (03:15):
Well, let me, I responded, I go, you you need
the address of the place where you got married.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
He's like, I looked at you invited hole. And so
I'm texting a response and then he calls me.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Now I'm in the church.
Speaker 5 (03:28):
I can't take the call, and I go outside interrupt
people getting their picture taken in front.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Of the church, which is true because I heard him apologize.
I sudn't blame it on me. I said, blame Jim Colbert,
and I laughed, and then I go, yes. And the
funny thing is I literally was two blocks away from
being able to see you on the phone while we
were talking. That's exactly how close I was to it,
because it was not the church we got married in.
It was that's not the one we got married around
the corner there. But it doesn't matter. We rushed either,
(03:56):
like I told you in my emails, that we were
working in the yard, lost track of time. Next he
knows thirty We rushed inside to get ready and blah
blah blah blah and everything like that, and rush out
the door because it's like two thirty. I want to
get there a little early, and forgot the blinking invite
to say where it was. And I hated calling Jack,
I hated I love it, but I didn't. I'd gotten
so far away from the house to realize I did
(04:16):
not have time to turn around and grab it. So
I had to and he learned out we were right there.
Speaker 5 (04:21):
He was on time, and he was in time to
catch the pastor do that that type five warm up?
Speaker 3 (04:26):
Yeah, Reverend Gary Marshall as a.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
Will open mic action. It was on my second to
last wedding.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
It was so funny because at the rehearsal the night before,
you know, we were cutting up and laughing, and he
had monished us. He said, all right, now tomorrow, no
joking and laughing. It's going to be a very serious day.
And then he's the first one to cut the joke.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Well, he never stopped literally never stopped up until it
was time for the ceremony and then kind of kept going.
And then you guys, it was so funny. I thought
you did one of the funniest things in the entire day,
that stereotypical moment where the you know, if anybody here
any reason of why they this, this couple shouldn't get married,
you know, say it now or was it right?
Speaker 3 (05:07):
And when I went on, Columbian did.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
The ultimate death thing, which is snapper head around and
look at the like death stare of the audience as
if if you were thinking about doing this exactly, do
not think about it one second longer in that s
and let's move forward.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
Yes, we will have a wedding and a funeral all
in one day.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
I need to show you the video because we were
busy as hell today getting for any for the program.
But I have the video of you and Chris trying
to ring the bell and that damned rope almost pulling
you off the ground.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
I almost marry popping my way out of the church
that day.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
It was. It was great. And then we went down
to the reception. You guys came into the perfect time.
Everything was wonderful. The staff at the yacht club could
not have been better. It was such a fantastic afternoon,
It really was.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
We had imagine snafoos, but oh yeah, we had two
out of our three uh lift black car ride scheduled
days ago not show up. Oh so, thank goodness that
my cousin made it here in town because he had
to go pick the groom's men up and then pick
them up again.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:09):
And then the car that was supposed to take our
wedding party from the church to the reception didn't show up,
so yeah, what so Chris got on the phone call
and next thing you know, we got a nice six
person golf cart to take him down.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
That's great to do. What I did?
Speaker 5 (06:24):
I you know, I when I was leaving, it's like, oh,
I parked over, you know, a little further away.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I'm like, let me try this.
Speaker 5 (06:32):
I downloaded the freebie app right, and Tim, the driver
came with the golf cart and gave us a ride.
And boy was he talking even pleasant. Yeah, that was
very nice guy. I was like, I love this.
Speaker 3 (06:43):
And then our cake, the company that we had contracted
for our cake, they didn't show up till it was
they were like two three hours late.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
Oh my goodness. The cake.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
Like we were bride and groom were already there at
the reception before they arrived with the desserts.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
And not only did they arrive late, but if you
guys remember during the cake cutting, we could not cut
the cake. It was still frozen. Oh no, so now
we know not only do we not get a fresh
wedding cake, but we don't know when it was baked.
And during our cake cutting again I had to go
all Colombian on the cake and just really take the
knife to it. Yeah what I'm saying, uh huh, just
so we could break off enough of a little past
(07:22):
that we get each have.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
A taste and setting the standard for the marriage exactly
what I want, and then I combs out and we
get what we want.
Speaker 3 (07:29):
Yeah, but thank you guys for coming.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
It was so wonderful, like the pre stuff, like the
cupcakes and everything like that, and the or dirves you
guys brought up before, and I'm telling you, I sent
it right there and oh yeah yeah, I literally could
have made my meal out of those orders. I did,
and the chicken and the chicken with a beautiful sauce
with with also bisket. It was man, it was just
such a great time, Debora. It was so much fun.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Well, thank you guys for coming and celebrating.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
With stop it.
Speaker 5 (07:53):
Sitting next to Penny and Darryl, you know, at the
reception and then they've come around, I was like scoping
out the food I'm like, uh and doing play by playing,
and then Ross.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Would tell me He's like, no, try this one. This
one the best shrimping grits as it was, those little
Greek those little Greek cups with that feta cheese and
cucumber and tomato and fresh herbs. Absolutely delicious. The little
beerry a taco kind of thing that you had that
was awesome. Yeah, like a Minia Panada. Yeah, simply amazing, dude.
(08:22):
It really was trumpets. Oh, by the way, your your
cucumber spritzer drink was also a giant hit, was it really?
Speaker 8 (08:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Yeah, the girls loved them. I mean me too, because
it was a perfect price. Like I said, the girl
loved them. Yeah, nothing like free right Jack, you love it?
Still spend some money at the bar they'll get yeah. Good. Yeah.
I still spend a hondo at the bar drinks because
I had to get in there. I mean like the
first thing I did, I was like I just walked in. Uh,
I saw table five. I'm like, go send their stuff down.
(08:48):
I'm going to the bar. Because we were like one
of the first people there. We drove down from the
church the corner, which is only a couple of blocks
We passed Olivia and Ross's that were walking down, but
it looked like it was going to rain, so and
we didn't know where the parking. They opened the parking
for the ut clubs. Right, we parked like for me
to jack from the front door. It was the greatest Yeah,
exactly idea. So I passed.
Speaker 5 (09:08):
Matter of fact, I saw Olivia and Ross walking and
I was debating whether we were parked closer where we
were by the church. We might have been the same
distance away from the reception. That's where I ended up
parking for the which is crazy.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
We we uh, we drove by Ross and Olivia and
I rolled my window down. I said, you guys want
to ride, And by guys, I mean the chick you
can watch. You can walk your scarecrow ass on down there.
We'll take the hotway.
Speaker 3 (09:34):
Watch watch your husband walk down.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
That was your perspective of it.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
I mean, uh, it was a magical day.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
Yeah it was crazy y, Yeah it was.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
But man, talk about a roller coaster of emotions, right,
Like I couldn't stop smiling on my wedding day. But
now I've just like we drove by the church yesterday,
I got all weepy reading the cards, I got all weepy.
So but we had a great time. So after the
reception we went to remains over at Lakeside End where
most of us stayed. Shut that down. Then went to handlebars.
(10:05):
Shut that down, you guys.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
And behavior, And I'll tell you. I'll tell you why.
First thing, she walks in and says, hey, everybody, I'll
walk up to her. First thing, you need to drink
And she looks at me, she goes, not right now.
And what that meant. I knew she's gonna be sloppy
by the end of the night, much jo You guys
(10:30):
a handleb Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:30):
But see that's the problem. Then you would have talked
about it.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Oh yeah, I would have never shut up about it.
Have been great.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
But yeah, we had a great time. Spent a couple
of nights at the lake Side End. You know, even
even though you think you're in town, right, we're literally
our houses from your house. That you felt a world
you could go get exactly. Yeah, we felt a world away.
It was just a really beautiful place to stay. It
was so fun to wake up and see Chris's uncle
(10:59):
Tom and aunt deb being breakfast and so we got
a really good chance to spend with family and friends
that we normally don't get to see.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
It was also cool to meet your family members that
we've talked about for so many years. You meet your brother,
who was nothing like I thought it was going to
look like I bet like he is not. I don't
know what my pre like my perception would have been,
but when I met him for the first I was like,
this is not what I expected from deb brother.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Yeah, dude was butt, Like you know, it's like real, well,
he's a marine, so yeah, he and his wife. He
made me cry. I have never had someone's reception speech
make me cry. I mean he even apologized. He's like,
oh babe, I didn't mean to make you cry.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
There had It was very sweet, it was it was
really sweet in the fields yeah yeah, yeah, which you
don't have really, which is kind of mile all right
for seven nine one six. By the way, thanks for
the invite. Wonderful time, guys, It was an absolute blast.
Could not be happier for you too. Your man is
one of the greatest dudes. You guys are a wonderful
couple and I cannot wish you anything but the absolute
(11:54):
happiest time for the remainder of your existence and.
Speaker 5 (11:56):
So happy it went the way you wanted. But also
congratulations on planning it all and executing it, man because
to manage that and then find out, okay, cake is
like this and that, but not let it interrupt and
interfere with the day of and enjoying the day. Bravo
to you and be able to plan it that well
and then step away from it and then just enjoy it.
Speaker 3 (12:16):
It was a lot of frontloading to make sure that
on that day. I made sure everyone had all the
important phone numbers they needed because once that day began,
literally you guys, from the moment we woke up until
the moment we arrived at the end of the night,
it was doing something. I mean, it was sixty miles
an hour. It was no time to slow down.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Way your dress was beautiful. Thank you.
Speaker 5 (12:37):
And by the way, Jimmy and I will both be
out the entire month before SuDS, pops and pints.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
So did you prove you can? You can? You can
run the show and plan an event. What did I
tell you when you first got on the show? Never
show them you can do more than one thing? Will
never just tell them you talk and that's it. You
don't know how to do anything else. You rely on
the helpers for everything else. All right, four O seven
nine one six one again text us seven seven zero
(13:03):
three one deb What are you for news?
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Well, we're going to talk about Trump hosting the Artemis
two astronauts at the White House. Closer to home, the
Florida House passes a controversial new congressional map and uh yeah, sure,
go ahead help yourself. We'll talk about that and more
coming up next during JCS news.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
You got it, don't forget guys, bills is your three
o'clock keyword? That's b I L L S. Slide over
two Real Radio dot FM and send that away for
your chance at one thousand dollars. Let's take at a
break back with dev's news and more than Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
Real Radio is on Facebook at Real Radio one oh
four one, sponsored by the law offices of Aner Jar
and Levine. Accident attorneys called the Law Offices of Anna,
Jar and Levin at one eight hundred seven four seven free.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven three seven
three three.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
From the ODU dot Com Traffic Center. ODU dot com
the only business software you will need.
Speaker 9 (13:52):
Earlier accident John Young Kirkwoy northbound at Old Winter Garden
Road has been clear.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Just some minor residual.
Speaker 10 (14:07):
Good afternoon, JCS crew.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
What up Tommy?
Speaker 10 (14:10):
Welcome back to everybody on the show. Full fledged yay
watching the show start. I just want to say congratulations
to the beautiful miss Deb Carsons and I don't think
I've ever seen a smile so big on her face
as the show started. Congratulations and same to you other bubbas.
Have a great show. Bye bye, h.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Right, welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show. Real Radio.
One of four point one bills is your three clucky worth.
It's b I l ls sign over to Real Radio
out of him and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars. Remember Animal House at four o'clock today, Well,
we will have the Central Florida Zoo COO. It's a
cheap operating officer to talk about what's going on with
the slows as they are there tasked to bring them
(14:50):
back to good health and then find good home swimmer.
We'll find O what's going on with that? A little
bit later. I'm Jim. There's Deb hello here as well. Yeah,
Deb has your news. Oh Jack feels good.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
Wow, this guy got to put his name on everything.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
It's in my contracted here's the news on the Jim
Colber Show.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
He even missed hearing that. Yeah, and JCS news is
brought to you by that mortgage guy. Don President Trump
elize there's a shot at a moonwalk happening. During his
time in office, he welcomed the four astronauts from NASA's
historic Artemis two mission to the White House Today.
Speaker 8 (15:25):
We don't like to say definitely because he say, oh,
we failed and failed, because we're I think we could
say we're ahead of schedule, so.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
We have a good shot.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Commander Read Weisman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Cook,
and Canadian mission specialist Jeremy Hansen were invited by President
Trump when he called the crew while they were in space.
The four crew. The four member crew rather returned to
Earth earlier this month. After that ten day mission that
took the astronauts further into space than ever before. It
marked a significant step for the Space Agency as it
(15:56):
looks to return to the Moon by twenty twenty eight. Meanwhile,
SPACEXA is celebrating its flawless Falcon heavy rocket launched the
first time in eighteen months.
Speaker 11 (16:06):
At T plus thirty seconds into flight, Falcon Heavy has
successfully lifted off from Launch Complex thirty nine, a X
Kennedy Space Center.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
The Falcon Heavy is topped with the huge VIASAT F
three Communications satellite about five point one million pounds of
thrust at liftoff, making Falcon Heavy the second most powerful
launcher and operation history. The satellite that carries will provide
high throughput broadband service to customers throughout the Asia Pacific region. Nice,
(16:36):
there you have it, There you go.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
All right.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
So far, Media giant Disney does not appear to be
bending to a new round of political pressure. The company
owns ABC, and the network is again being criticized by
the Trump administration. Now, the FCC says ABC must file
for an early renewal of their TV station licenses. The
(16:58):
request follows a controversy your joke from comedian Jimmy Kimmel
about Milania Trump a few days before Saturday shooting incident.
At the White House Correspondence Association dinner, Kimmel said she
had the glow quote of an expectant widow end quote. Now,
President Donald Trump and the First Lady want ABC to
fire Kimmel Disney owned ABC affiliates will have to prove
(17:20):
to FCC Chairman Brandon Carr that they're operating in the
public interest. Car says the company must file renewals for
all of its licensed TV stations within one month.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
I got faith. I got faith faith in the system.
I got faith in the system. I think this is
obviously because I mean, now, the funny thing is when
they were vote, when they were asked about the whole
thing with it, you know, being retribution on Jimmy Kimmel,
they they said, no, we just want to make sure
there's no DEI going on at ABC. Yeah, that's exactly
what they said. One percent.
Speaker 5 (17:51):
Meanwhile, the event itself was celebrating the First Amendment and
free speech right. Yes, the White House Correspondent Center overall,
that's that's what it's supposed to for work. Yes, Oh,
you hush up over there, Okay, just checking out, just
wanting to make sure we're on this area. I've not
done frosting your flakes, gentlemen, easy with that logic. The
Florida House has passed a new congressional map mid decade
(18:12):
that cuts Democratic leaning districts from eight to four by
an eighty three to twenty eight votes for.
Speaker 9 (18:18):
Communities in Central Florida and South Florida is that their
voice is being diminished and they are losing representation.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
House Minority Leader Fenteries drescill And anticipates this map will
be challenged in court claiming illegal partisan jerry mandering. Bill's sponsor,
Jenna Persons Malika argues the map is based on twenty
twenty data should be upheld in court and repeatedly stressed
she couldn't speak on the map draws intent. Everyone's like, listen,
we don't know who drew this, right, That's the true. Seriously,
(18:46):
that's exactly what. We don't know who drew this.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
By the way, the guy who drew it said that
he's who is an aid. By the way, he drew
the thing and said that it had a lot of support,
and they asked him who's supported it. He wouldn't name anybody.
And then now Daniel Webster, who is the one who
said don't think about doing this, has retired today.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
Yep, he announced that he's been you know since twenty eleven. Yeah,
he's not seeking reelection.
Speaker 12 (19:07):
Well.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
The vote came shortly after the US Supreme Court this
morning struck down a Louisiana congressional map it deemed quote
unconstitutional racial gerrymandering end quote. Governorn DeSantis was quick to
post his team's newly drawing congressional map for Florida corrects
the quote legal infirmities end quote and a Florida district.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Fox News got it first, though, I think right that's
where he announced it. Yeah, fox News got it first
before the legislators did. Jerry Mandering is illegal. They have
a special term for it because this is the only
way where something like this happens. We obviously can't trust
local governments or state governments to do this without it
(19:47):
being a part of an issue on both sides, right, yes,
So how about a new system, yeah, not by county
or or a different ranking system right away where you
just kind of take it out of it, where it's
we just vote for the top five candidates or something.
And maybe the focus on this will allow people to
draw some legislation that says that very thing. The problem
is getting support for it. By the way, he hasn't
(20:08):
passed the Senate yet, which is going to be a
little bit tough for fight a belief.
Speaker 5 (20:11):
And again, politicians have a really bad record at approving
things that limit their power.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
Yeah, yeah, true, on both sides, right, yes, all right,
victims of natural disasters may be closer to getting what
Rick Scott calls meaningful tax relief. Senator Scott's Federal Disaster
Tax Relief Certainty Act unanimously passed the House on Monday.
Scott says the bipartisan bill will provide long overdue tax
relief for victims of hurricanes and other natural disasters. He
(20:39):
adds it'll provide Americans with critical clarity and the disaster
relief process. And to that end, the City of Lake
Mary and the Seminal County government are teaming up to
host Storm Prep Live.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Storm Prep Live.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
It's a hurricane preparedness event featuring interactive activities, giveaways, and
informational sessions. Local meteorologists will also be on hand, you
answer questions and chat with community members. Yeah, it is.
The event will be held on May second at Central Park,
Lake Mary City Hall. Hard to believe that is Saturday? Yeah,
that is Saturday.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Details are online at lakemaryfl dot com.
Speaker 5 (21:16):
And also a real radio dot FM slash Events. We're
helping our buddy Allen Harris and this whole team. Yeah,
that's cool.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
Are you going to go on Saturday?
Speaker 1 (21:27):
I'll be on the Monster Brewbus. Well yeah, I can't. Yeah,
you be making your own hur king. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:35):
Well, hopefully they fill up that brewbus sooner rather than later,
because I'm so happy I have to fill up my
tank today.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
Oh boy, No, you're not.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
No, I'm not. Because gas prices are up again in Florida,
Mideast olled peace talks with Iran and the rising cost
of crude oil. Now Triple A says the Florida average
is now four fifteen a gallon, up seven cents since Tuesday.
It's also eighteen cents more than a week ago, and
nearly twenty cents higher than this time last month. But
you said you paid even more today.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Four dollars nineteen cents a gallon at the racetrack right
there in Mount Dora off of North four forty one,
seventy seven dollars to fill my tiny little pickup truck.
Twenty dollars more than the average is what I paid today.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
Nationally, the average is four to twenty three, the highest
since April of twenty twenty two. All right, Oh, I
feel so bad for Sumter County residents because they a
company's plans to get rid of waste has residents in
Sumter County worried. Waste Connections owns the heart of Florida
landfill in Bushmill, and it plans to drill a deep
(22:38):
injection well to get rid of a waste product called
leachate or what they call trash tea.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Yeah, its garbage juice. Yeah, it's trash tea. It's stormwater,
a wash off mixed with a breakdown from the stuff
that goes into landfill.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Yes, it consists, like you said, Jimmy, I stormwater runoff
in chemicals that may be dangerous. The leechhate would be
stored underground below the Florida Aquifer, but residents are worried
a leak could pollute the aquifer and the drinking water
it provides. One woman says it's not a matter of if,
But when another resident recently told WESH two, this isn't
about public health and the only reason they would do
(23:14):
it is for money. Now, keep in mind, this same
landfill is getting ready after they build this particular rail
line to accept forty eight hundred tons of garbage from
Miami every week to this particular landfark.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
That's why they're doing this, because all that trash coming
up from Miami. Yep.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
And remember when we spoke to the waste management gentleman
who talked about what they're going through right now from
Bravard County looking at new locations for another landfill. Yeah,
and it would be brought in and that's just by train.
That doesn't include everything that would be brought by truck.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Yeah. Yeah, let's put it in there in Bush now
where there's no super expensive property, not like Miami, in
Day County right exactly.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
And residents already complaining about smells. I don't blame them
crazy dealing with landfill smells myself. Mount Dora, now you
know what the mountain is. It's terrible. Yeah, some noxiouses
and you have that garbage juice that goes gage juice.
You don't want that anywhere near the aqua fer Oh no,
we're just schedule a whole thru it and so don't
about to see here, folks, move on, all right. Changes
(24:12):
are in store for one Orlando attraction, and not everyone
is happy about it. A meeting was held Monday at
Harry P. Lou Gardens to reveal and discuss the details
for the Botanical Garden at Lake Rowena. Executive director Jennifer
to Hollander says the plans no longer include an amphitheater, but
they do include a larger visitor center, more parking, and
a cafe that'll only be opened during business hours. About
(24:35):
two hundred people attended that meeting and ask questions about
the cost, traffic, traffic impact the garden itself.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
Man oh man, the traffic in that area when they
have those plant sales or giveaways. We've talked about this
before because Osmin lives right over there. Yeah, and Russell
and Olivia go to these things all the time. I said,
you're going to park two miles away, Yeah, so bring
a wagon or something. It is going to be a
blank And by the way, the people who live in
that area can't stand those things because that traffic that
rolls through there. It's twenty five miles an hour to
(25:02):
begin with, right, and it's only two lanes and it's
already built for like neighborhoods. It is not a thoroughfare.
Speaker 3 (25:08):
It's gonna be parking.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
It's gonna be gnarly over there. Those Winter Park blue
hairs already beat him. Down, they took out the amphitheater.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
All right, exactly. Orlando City Commissioner Roger Chapin was there,
and he didn't leave very impressed. In fact, he tells
The Orlando Sentinel the meeting didn't instill confidence and there
may be more questions now than before.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
The federal trial for a sixteen year old who's accused
of raping and murdering his stepsister, Anna Kepner during a
cruise is scheduled to begin on June first. That's according
to US District Judge Beth Bloom. The team is charged
as an adult and has pleaded not guilty to charges
of first degree murder and aggravated sexual abuse for killing
the Titusville cheerleader while at sea last November. Interesting first
(25:52):
degree murder, I mean.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Yeah, premeditated, they say, planned it, and I gotta tell
you it's where. Did you see what he showed up
wearing for the arinment? I guess no camo hoodie with
a Camo hat pulled like cinched up, or you couldn't
see anything in jeans.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yeah, well that I had seen. That image has been
so far the only image that has been floating around
of him when he was indicted initially as a juvenile.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Oh what it was.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
I haven't seen any new video of him, but I
mean the ship eventually docked in Miami after a maid
found the body of the eighteen year old Kepner under
the bed in a shared cabin. Imagine he and his brother.
I mean they slept there that night.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
They did.
Speaker 3 (26:28):
They slept there that night. Prior to being charged as
an adult. The step brother was released into the care
of his uncle. The state is moving to have his
release revoked though before his jury trial begins in Miami.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
Damn yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
Investigators have made an arrest in a thirty seven year
old kidnapping and sexual battery case. Detectives say sixty nine
year old young Tom Talmadge was taken into custody in
the Philippines for the nineteen eighty nine abduction of his
seven year old girl. Authority say Talmage approached the girl
inside of a bowling alley a north Dale, Maybury and
lurder into his car. Based on DNA evidence, and it
(27:06):
was familial DNA evidence genealogical DNA, Talmage was identified as
the suspect and arrested by Philippine authorities. He has reportedly
not yet been returned to the US.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Did he kill her? Yes he did? Oh wow, yes
he did.
Speaker 3 (27:19):
And after thirty seven years they caught his ass coming
back to Florida, where the laws now are even worse
for when you do these kinds of crimes. Right, yeah, yeah,
all right to speaking of South Florida, Cruiser having a
tough time with a wildflower, a wildfire in the Everglades.
As of last night, the Highway forty one fire covers
over thirty three hundred acres zero percent contained. No injuries
(27:43):
or damage have been reported, but some nearby businesses have
closed as a precaution. The fire started Monday, but there's
no word on a cause, and of course the entire
state has just been dealing with a multitude of Wildfire's.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
Supposed to get some soaking rain this weekend, which is great.
A couple of days of that, starting on Sunday, going
in the Monday. It's supposed to be pretty bad covering
the entire state, which is great. I say pretty bad,
but it's good.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
It is good news, especially when you look at we're
already looking at mid nineties.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Yeah, I told you that. Like tomorrow, I was talking
to Jack earlier this week, when you were gone for
the last six months. If you look at that, if
you if you look at the drought map, one of
the worst places in the entire country is up there,
just west of Tallahassee and that Spring area. We used
to go up there Lake City in that area. Yeah,
it's literally like maroon dark red. It is one of
(28:29):
the worst places in the US.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
Yeah, it is. The Panhandle is dealing with it so
so badly right now, all right, closer to home, a
Seminole County woman is accused of smearing feces around her neighborhood.
Alexis Weber of Eltamont Springs was arrested yesterday for criminal mischief.
Alcheimarty slipped into her DMS don't say slipped.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
I said, I said DM, not BM.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
Month Springs police say she's read him and fees is
around the Spring Oaks community. Neighbors tell News six it
was found on cars, mailboxes and the yards.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
She literally I got somebody who is like video or
pictures of her like copping a squat in somebody's front yard.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
In the middle of the day. Oh no, just ripping
it right there in the middle of the day. Can
you say baker acting right. There's no word.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Oh no, it's wild.
Speaker 3 (29:22):
There's no word on a motive. Yeah, you got to
be real careful how you do that.
Speaker 5 (29:25):
It's all about the something Yeah, comfortable two words squat walk.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Exactly, because there's some places, Jack, you just don't want
a mosquito?
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Bite?
Speaker 1 (29:36):
Am I right? Am? I? Right? Well?
Speaker 3 (29:38):
This next man said, here, hold my beer. It's not
even mine. A man is facing charges after allegedly breaking
into a man's home in Broward County, using a shower
and raiding his fridge. Abraham Rossino's is accused of breaking
into Bruce Casey's home recently. Casey told deputies he entered
his home, found the bathroom door was locked, and when
(29:58):
he pounded on it and asked two was there, he
heard someone say, quote, it's only.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
Me and me is somebody I don't know?
Speaker 3 (30:05):
I don't know? Casey says he had no idea who
that could have been, and when Rossinos opened the door,
he was armed. So the guy who broke in opens
this dude's bathroom door and he's standing there holding a gun.
So Casey says he punched the guy, grabbed the gun
and chased him out of the house, he tells CBS
News Miami. He later found that Rassinos had helped himself
to some wine, some chocolate milk, and some blueberries.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Wow, what a diet, he say.
Speaker 3 (30:31):
He also broke into some other homes.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
Dude, this guy was in this guy's shower and when
he opened the door, the dude who broke in had
a gun.
Speaker 7 (30:38):
Here.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
This guy's reaction was punching straight in his face and
snatch it from him. If it's Miami, dude, like, deputize
that dude immediately. Are you serious? That guy's got more
balls than half of the people I know in the
police department doing Bruce lest this story Toghbor's house, shaking
under a table, calling the cops straight out of Hollywood.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Straight out of Hollywood?
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Right?
Speaker 3 (31:01):
I love that you know it either way? That concludes
your JCS news.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
All right, borrow seven texta seven seven zero three one bills.
That is your three o'clock keyword. B I l s
go over to real Radio out of him and send
that away from your chance at one thousand dollars. Back
on a second with more of the Gym Cord Show.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
Real Music Weekends are classic alternative, Classic alternative. This weekend
on Real Radio one oh four point one.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
This weather report is brought to you by Mills Air.
Speaker 13 (31:41):
Hey, they're Central Florida Fox thirty five Storm Team Meteorologist
Laurel Blanchard here with your Wednesday.
Speaker 14 (31:51):
Gratulations. Deb on getting hitched? Is it still deb Roberts?
Are you gonna go by a different surname? And I
was very to see that you got married in a church.
I thought for sure it was supposed to be at
the Yelvis Pressley Chapel of Love.
Speaker 15 (32:08):
Hey, Hey, Hey, how was little Hannah? Oh it's just
a deb Carson in this hiszle.
Speaker 7 (32:16):
Oh.
Speaker 15 (32:17):
You know we've been thinking about you so much, Femini,
all leading up to it.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
Oh, your special day. I'm just wishing you all the.
Speaker 15 (32:26):
Best always, everything that includes your marriage with your wonderful husband.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Love the show, Love you guys, you know that.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Talking to you soon.
Speaker 12 (32:37):
Hello, Never leave us with the dads again.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
It was awful. There were no uppies. All they feed
us was hot pockets and water. All they did was fight.
Oh my goodness, it was so awful. Soul.
Speaker 9 (32:53):
Congratulations on everything that you have going on, all of
you guys, truly truly.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Later that was very funny. That was very funny, right,
was chocolate?
Speaker 3 (33:09):
That's all you fed them?
Speaker 1 (33:10):
Yeah? A little warm beer.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
I left you prepared leftovers.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
We had no one left over. Welcome back to the
Jim Colbert Show over the radio one oh four point
one time, Jim, there's dead, but hello, Jack is here
as well. Yeah, l's the first time we worked together
since April sixth. I know, isn't an amazing aprilrip strength
April six with the last time all three of us
were in the studio together as a show everybody else
and we've had uh substitutes for one or all of
us for the last three weeks. Crazy. It is never
(33:35):
happened in eight years of the program that seven. No,
and it's was it third? Yep?
Speaker 5 (33:40):
Because the sixth was a Monday. My birthday was Tuesday. Tuesday,
the birthday you missed.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
The sixth was a Monday. That's what I meant though, right,
because that would have been the Monday because I left
for my cruise on the fourth, which was a Saturday.
But it means sixth will have been the first day
you would have been on your cruise on the sixth. Yeah,
that's what I'm saying. April Friday, April third, was the
last day. Got you got you got your hundred percent?
Speaker 7 (33:59):
Right?
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Oh it's E've been crazier all right? Seven seven day?
Jim missed my birthday? Seven seven zero three one. You
want to tell him? I did not. You want to
tell him. You want to tell him, you're tell him
he brought your card and gift today. I did not
bring your card and gift today. But what I did
was I totally forgot that. Listen, no, no, no. What
(34:22):
I emailed you today and I said, do you want
to do Jack's birthday on Friday? Because we didn't get
to do it together because I didn't know that you
guys did Jack's birthday? So I was actually setting it
up to be set it up to be Friday so
Ross would be here and we could do that, give
you a day of decompressing before we got into something else.
That's what I was going to do. But now that
I missed it, I don't have to give him anything,
which is great. Hey, let me ask you a question
(34:44):
real quick. Have you've shot a gun before? Right, yes,
you've shot a gun before, because I've shot it. Do
you think the president has shot a gun? Do you
think President Trump has ever shot a gun? Yeah? Do
you think he has? When? When would he have done that?
You think I had to range? Yeah, you think so.
Speaker 5 (35:01):
I think at a certain level, people afford you opportunities.
It could have been a hunting excursion. It his sons
do the hunting thing. But I don't know if he does.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
I probably have. And the reason why I asked this
is like, I don't. I don't like one of the
weird one of the strange things about President Trump is
that I don't believe he ever. He doesn't vacation. Have
you ever read that about him? I don't. He doesn't vacation.
He doesn't go on vacation. Even when he wasn't president,
he didn't vacation much. All he did was work like
it wasn't like a thing. So his sons did the
safar he's that. That's well documented. But I always I
(35:34):
was wondering the other day because I was reading a
story about that very thing, because there was a did
you read the story about the elephant hunter, the big
game hunter out of California trampled by a by a
pack of elephants. I'm trying to feel bad about it, try,
but this guy had a long history of you know,
Safari hunting a bunch of pictures with him with lions
and whatnot. He was hunting a specific antelope that lives
(35:55):
in this area that he wanted to add to his
collection of prizes. And in that turn, he wandered upon
a pack of female elephants with a calf. That's bad news,
and they stomped his ass out. And that kind of
got me wondering. I was like, do you I wonder
if the President has ever fired a gun, I mean
handgun or long gun. I wonder, I wonder if that's
(36:15):
the case.
Speaker 5 (36:16):
It's from New York, I would say, odds are yes,
you think so that's.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
Crazy, I know, because it was upbringing. You remember, from
the very beginning of his life, he was you know,
he was part of of aristocracy. I father was one
of the most successful real estate developers in all of
New York and Jersey in that area there. So he
was kind of born in that silver spoon thing. I
don't know when he would ever been like exposed to
something like that. That's what I was just kind of
thinking about it, Like, I wonder how many of our
(36:40):
audience has never shot a gun before? So back to
the vacation thing.
Speaker 5 (36:44):
Yeah, vacation when you like go to a different place,
But when when you're president in vacation, it's like going
to your home. Like for Obama it would be Hawaii,
it would a week in Hawaii that would be considered
his vacation. When President Trump he goes to mar Lago
while time he's playing golf.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Yeah, but that's just a lot. But that's not like
a like, that's not like, hey, we're gonna go because
even does he even go to Camp David, Like, I
don't know, he doesn't like Camp Yeah, I don't think
he uses Camp David or any of the stereotypical like
presidential spots where they could go and be safe and
and the kind of unwind a little bit. I don't
think he uses that.
Speaker 12 (37:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
And I'm telling you, even before this, even as a developer,
the story was he never really took vacations. He doesn't like,
he didn't go to Paris and tour, he didn't go
to Barcelona. The family vacation thing. I didn't like, I've
not read that they've ever done that, and uh, and
I don't know why. And then the Safari thing hit
and I just gotta put im like, I wonder if
he's ever shot a gun anyway? All right, for a
seven I would love to have somebody ask him in
(37:41):
one of the president in one of those press conferences. Hey,
we're gonna get away from Iran and Thatpscene files, I've
got a real question for you. You ever shot a gun? Dog?
Do you think that he would say yes? Because he
knows the value of that to to that audience, Like,
even if he hasn't, do you think he would say
yes because of what it means to uh, like the
members of MAGA, because they're so you know, that's a
big Republicans in general embrace you know, gun ownership up
(38:04):
and stuff.
Speaker 5 (38:06):
Yeah, well, so it benefits him to say yes. But
do your risk, say, do you if it wasn't true,
do you risk saying it?
Speaker 1 (38:15):
It would be so he would get away with you.
It would be so hard to prove that it wasn't true.
So I think automatically he would say yes. I mean,
if I was in his position, and even if I
hadn't fired it, based on you know, what I've leaned
on to get there, I would immediately say yes. I
would start naming guns. But if they didn't exist. Did
he go to military school?
Speaker 3 (38:35):
Yes he did.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Yeah, I think he did. That would be an opportunity
right there, right, Do you think that that's not necessarily
the case. My daughter was in the Air Force four
eleven years. I don't know that she ever fired a gun.
I'm telling you, dude, you know basic training. I don't
think so, dude, I'm not one hundred percent sure on that.
But I'm not I'm not sure. And I'll tell you
something else too. People like I didn't know this either, Like,
if you're in the military, automatically you believe that, you know,
(38:58):
you have access to guns everywhere. You do not. As
a matter of fact, I think that she said that
she was not allowed to have one on property of
her own. Yes, it's because she's a liberal, right.
Speaker 3 (39:10):
Because they actually just passed a law actually in Florida
where service members will be allowed to carry their private
firearms onto military bases.
Speaker 1 (39:19):
Oh, I did see that.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
They just recently passed that. But no, that the before
that is completely against the law.
Speaker 1 (39:25):
And she knew a bunch of people that were in
the Special Forces that actually trained at the very first
place that she was stationed, because it was a joint
army Air Air Force Base, and she said even those dudes,
like even the Special Forces guys didn't walk around with
ars or anything like that. That stuff was locked up,
kept behind keys. All that stuff you got that issued
to you when it was time for you to have it,
(39:46):
and that's it.
Speaker 3 (39:47):
Nothing. Wellye Nelly here.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
No all right? Four oh seven nine one six four
one text us seven seven zero three one. All right,
So we go to break. We're gonna have another keyword
for you. But on the other side of this break
animal houses. Coming up. We have the COO of the
Central Florida Zoo and the reason why is is when
the sloth World thing happened, which is now international news,
the zoo was tasked to bring these slaws that were
alive back to health and then of course find them
(40:10):
homes at other zoological that were AZYA rated to be
able to handle uh slaws. So we're gonna get an
update on what's going on with this slass and what
the plan is and all that stuff. We'll do that
next right here on the Jim Gulbert Show.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
Your chance to win a grand in your hand is
minutes away on Real Radio one oh four point one,
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Speaker 9 (40:28):
Mills Air accident blocking two right lanes right now, I
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Another crash block by l y family. Enter it now
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Speaker 1 (40:43):
If you get the call, good luck.
Speaker 2 (40:46):
Are you offended yet? Obviously were only kids? You're listening
to the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 1 (40:55):
He yes, I hope you guys are doing well.
Speaker 8 (40:57):
Deb breah ne bruah de bruah de breah Debrah congratulations.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Tell Quis congratulations too. Thanks, bye bye, Hi, Welcome back
to the Jim Colbert Show Radio one oh four point one. Family.
That is your four'cluck keyword. FA M I L Y.
You know what to do. Get over to real Radio
dot FM and send that offer your chance at one
thousand dollars. Family, guys, that is your four clucky word.
Good luck, Welcome back. I'm Jim. There's deb Hello Jecks
(41:22):
here as well. Let's do Animal House.
Speaker 2 (41:25):
She likes them fuzzy, furry, feathery, tough and scaly. It's
time for Animal House with the Roberts.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
And as always, Animal House is generously brought to us
each and every week by Personal Injury attorney Glenn Klausman
over a Klosman Law. We'll tell you how you can
get in touch with Glenn at the end of the segment.
But now please join me and welcoming the Chief operating
Officer for the Central Florida Zoo, mister Bob Shabou. Yay,
(41:55):
first timer. Welcome Bob.
Speaker 1 (41:56):
Thank you so much for having me.
Speaker 3 (41:58):
Yeah, we appreciate you coming in. Normal, we'll have a
couple of your zoo teachers will come in and bring
in an animal and we'll learn some fun facts about that.
But this week, yeah, yeah, with the sloth world story.
And then I bet, I bet it's been because you
took in what thirteen of the slots from the sloth warld.
Speaker 4 (42:16):
Has to take thirteen in and provide care for them,
and so that happened last Friday.
Speaker 3 (42:21):
Go ahead and get a little bit closer to that.
My force, if you would, what we call it in
the industry is eat, then eat. You got to eat
the mind.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
So who contacted you to on behalf of the sloss
to take them? Was it the facility?
Speaker 4 (42:35):
It was the facility itself. They called and asked if
we'd be willing to basically adopt thirteen animals, which we
did a couple of days later.
Speaker 3 (42:44):
Yeah, yeah, and then sadly we already have a sad
update from today.
Speaker 4 (42:48):
Sadly we lost one yes today actually, despite some heroic
efforts by zoo staff and veterinarians. It's been an amazing
team effort to try to really rally and do everything
we can for these animals. But despite our best efforts,
we did lose one animal today.
Speaker 1 (43:03):
Yeah. And I think when we mentioned yesterday that you
were going to be on today that we knew that
most of them were looked like they were going to
be okay, but we knew that there was one that
was kind of teetering and that was the one that.
Speaker 4 (43:14):
One was in very critical condition, right, and it was
a little up and down for a couple of days.
But sadly, he just really he declined today. Yeah, yeah, Bob.
Speaker 5 (43:24):
It's been reported the conditions that the sloths were in
when they were under the care of Sloth World.
Speaker 1 (43:29):
When you get the call.
Speaker 5 (43:31):
With the facilities you have at the Central Florida Zoo,
what did you have to do to convert a space
being able to accommodate thirteen sloths and also keep them
in quarantine.
Speaker 1 (43:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
Well, fortunately we have some pretty large quarantine facilities at
the zoo and even more fortunately they were empty the
hell yeah when we got the call. So so we
needed to do some cleaning up for sure, and you know,
bring in new perching for these animals, what we call browse,
which is leaves and tree branches, you know, treats for them. Basically,
(44:03):
make sure they had enough warmth. These are very cold
sensitive animals, so we had to set up heat lamps
as well. So we it was an amazing thing to
see every every team coming together at the facilities folks,
the horticulture folks, the animal care staff, the vet teams
and just get all these areas ready and but thankfully
(44:23):
we had them and they were available and it was
they moved in nicely.
Speaker 5 (44:27):
Yeah, that mentioned that we occasion once a month we'll
have representatives from the zoo in. But you talk about
facilities staff and how many people work at the zoo,
it's about one hundred and forty people, all nice sized crew. Yeah,
a lot of you know, people just think about zoo
keepers right invest when they think about zoos, but it
takes all kinds of different people.
Speaker 4 (44:45):
Horticus. Sure, it's marketing people, finance people. It's a it's
really a small business. Really, you don't want to ask me.
Speaker 1 (44:51):
Just text in and asked a very interesting question and
they said, you're basically the cost of doing this, right, Yeah,
you know, zoo is a taxpayer and UH funded by
UH donation.
Speaker 4 (45:03):
Non We are a five O one C three nonprofit organization.
Speaker 1 (45:06):
Right right, So you know, when you have something like
this that is not expected. I mean, you have thirteen
animals that came in that were that need extra special care,
special vet care, special employee care. You know who is it?
You guys wind up kind of putting the bill for that?
Do you Is there a fund that you can reach.
Speaker 7 (45:24):
In for that?
Speaker 8 (45:24):
Well?
Speaker 4 (45:25):
There is, and I'm so happy you asked me about that,
because we we did. This is very much an unexpected
expense and it will be expensive to provide these animals
with the care they need. Right So we have a
fundraising drive going on right now. People can go to
Central Florida Zoo dot org and and and to learn
how to contribute if they'd like to help us with this,
(45:46):
because yeah, unexpected and were which we are raising and
we're having some success in raising some money to help
with this effort.
Speaker 3 (45:54):
Yeah, that's incredible, And folks can donate right there at
Central Florida Zoo dot or. Is there a designation buttons
so that they can make sure that if they're donating
just for the slows, well they can go and check
that out or I'll check it out in a little bit.
Speaker 4 (46:05):
Yeah, they just there's there, there is, and I think
there'll be a tag there. People can it's uh, actually
it's Central Florida Zoo dot org slash sloths at.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
The Central Florida Okay, go to the main page. I'm
sure you'll be able to find it for sure. Bob
Shibo win with us today. He's the COO at the
Central Foida Zoo. We're talking about the unfortunate incident with
sloth World. These guys are tasked with bringing these laws
kind of back to great health. We did have an
unfortunate death today with one of them. We still have
twelve healthy ones that we're opening to kind of get
into really safe places.
Speaker 3 (46:37):
And that's that's my next question, Bob. So, after all
of this exhaustive work of getting these twelve remaining slows
back up into good condition and good health, what happens
then does the zoo simply make a new home and
habitat or do you look to maybe send them to
other zoos and other associated locations.
Speaker 4 (46:56):
Yeah, that's exactly what we will do. We will we
will probably have a few that stay with us. We're
not sure exactly yet. We work through the Association of
Zoos and Aquariums the AZA, which is the accrediting body
for zoos across the country. There are thousands of animal
facilities across the country that keep exotic animals. There are
two hundred and fifty accredited zoos in this country and
(47:21):
we are in that group. It's an elite group and
it you know, it means we need to maintain very
high standards. Sure we take care of these animals. Right So,
within the AZA, there are coordinators that work with something
called Species Survival Plans, right so, which monitors all the
individuals in a species in our AZA zoos. So we'll
be working with the SSP as we call it in
(47:43):
the coordinator there to find good homes for all of
these animals.
Speaker 1 (47:48):
Yeah, I mean, it seems like this could be like
a bidding war kind of scenario. I'm not trying to
make light of this, but I mean I mean, is
that is that kind of how this happens, Like if
you have a zoo. I mean you said you ran
zoos in Jacksonville and Boston before you made it to
Central Florida. Is this the situation were a zoo keeper
or a zoo ceo just much like you would reach
out and go, you know, hey, Bob, hey, look, you
know we we've actually wanted to add a sloth to
our zoo for a while. Is there a waiting list?
(48:10):
Is there a bidding process? I'm not really sure how
that works out.
Speaker 4 (48:13):
Yeah, yeah, and that's that's a good question. And uh,
and it does happen to some degree that people just
kind of call up, hey, we can sure you use a.
Speaker 1 (48:20):
Slaw thy bob, remember me from mom.
Speaker 4 (48:22):
But it doesn't actually work that way. Everything is channeled
through the species survival plans run by these coordinators that
work with a ZA and so they they know which
zoos are looking for animals. And what's interesting is these
animals have come in from Peru Guyana directly. So we
(48:43):
in zoos, we typically work with the same groups of
animals within our national collections. So in some way this
is helpful to the genetic diversity to have these sort
of new founders as we call them, come in from
other places that will actually help the species survive long
(49:03):
term in captive.
Speaker 1 (49:04):
Wow, that's awesome.
Speaker 3 (49:05):
Well, Bob, I was wondering, how does how does a
facility like slothware? What was that? I wish there could
be a fly on the wall for that phone call,
of course, because how do they contact you? I mean,
did they say, listen, We're sorry to dump this on you,
but we really need your help.
Speaker 4 (49:19):
I mean, well, I mean I think a lot of
us were following this story course are sure, yeah, and
we sure were as well.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
But no that I mean we just uh that you
were happy you got that call, right, We.
Speaker 4 (49:30):
Were happy we got the call. We were happy to
jump in and help, honestly, you know, but uh, we
weren't expecting it, you know, we didn't know if this
was coming, but we were happy to jump in and help.
Speaker 1 (49:41):
How was the inundation of press for you guys over
there who was handling that, because I don't know if
you know this. I mean, you know, I read a
lot of websites every day before the before the program,
and this thing went from local to statewide to national
to international in about five days. It's everywhere. Have you
guys been inundated withood press request We have.
Speaker 4 (50:00):
There's been a lot of news teams and news showing
up at the front gate, but all the animals are
in quarantine. They're in a behind the scenes area. I mean,
we would do that typically for any new animals coming
into our collections, just to make sure there are no
disease concerns, health concerns, path pathogens that could transfer to
our collection.
Speaker 3 (50:20):
Well, I can tell you that these laws are certainly
taking the place of Punch the monkeys, which the world
fell in love with, ye as well as the other
small primate in Mexico City that had a stuffed animal.
I mean, the world is just invested in these in
these you know, innocent animals in that warehouse.
Speaker 1 (50:35):
That's a great point. Pop.
Speaker 5 (50:36):
Did you ever think about, like, do you have live
animal webcams? Because we show animal webcams all the time
during our broadcast, whether it's with Explore where you know,
it could be owls, it could be kittens, whatever. But
with Punch the Monkey and that success and the interest
in the sloths, have you thought about maybe creating a
place where people can just view them live.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
Well, we only if you want to increase your website
traffic by a trillia, do that. But that's exactly what
would happen.
Speaker 4 (51:05):
And a lot of zoos do use webcams, and some
of my previous is we did. We don't have we
don't have any live stream webcams set up right now
at these at the Central Florida Zoo, but we are
talking about it.
Speaker 1 (51:17):
Yeah, that would be a cool thing. And I did
want to ask you one more thing about the facility
as well, because you know, you said it yourself, these
things and we know that what led to part of this,
uh that like untimely freeze that we had really kind
of helped distribute to this terrible tragedy. But what are
these more acclimated to zoos that would be in the south,
like Miami, maybe South Texas, southern California because of the
(51:39):
because of the warmth, or do would this task at facility?
You have to build in any enclosure that that offers
the humidity and heat that they really used to thrive.
Speaker 4 (51:51):
Yeah, I mean we're a little fortunate in Florida because
we have, you know, conditions that are closer to what
you know the environments these animals are from right, and
the more nother en zoos we I've worked in some
You know, we have to build very tight climate controlled
spaces in habitats for them and provide that enough heat
and humidity. But these animals are so cold sensitive that
(52:12):
we literally, you know, below sixty degrees fahrenheit, we have
to provide heat for Wow, that's crazy, and we're still
there even in Central Florida.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
Yeah. And then one more thing about the health of them,
So you know they're quarantined obviously, is there a specific
disease or pathogen that they're more susceptible to experiencing that
other animals and that's maybe not unique to their species.
But you kind of understand what I'm saying there.
Speaker 4 (52:36):
I understand what you're saying, but I don't know. Okay,
answered the question. I'm afraid.
Speaker 3 (52:41):
Yeah, still learning, Jim.
Speaker 5 (52:43):
And credit to your web crew at the zoo at
Central Florida Zoo dot org. On the main page one
side you click there for updates, follow live updates about
the sloths, and on the other side how you can help,
and a donate button that's right on their main page.
It's Central Floor at a Zoo dot o RG.
Speaker 1 (53:01):
Do you have a do you guys have a target
number that you're looking to get to or is it
just one of these things where you need funds to
make sure that just every daily need for this loss
is coming through it.
Speaker 16 (53:10):
One billion dollars, well, that would be nice and we
would take that check, but no, we're just we're going
to try to generate as much money as we can
to offset this increased expense for sure, but it will
be significant.
Speaker 3 (53:24):
And I did want to let folks know that I
saw this story earlier as well. The Ovito Mall is
also partnering with the Central Florida Zoom and Botanical Gardens
to support sloth rescue efforts during their Great Greek Gathering
and beyond. The mall will collect donations in person and
through its official links. So if you're going to be
going to the Ovido Mall, you can go ahead and
make your donation there, But like Jack just said, Central
(53:44):
Florida Zoo dot Org makes it so much easier to
do it right there on their website.
Speaker 1 (53:48):
Sure does. I wanted to ask you, I don't know
how much knowledge you have of this, and if you
can't say anything, you can't say anything it's how it goes.
Are you aware of any criminal charges coming toward the
guys of a sloth world? We are not. You're not.
We're not. Are you aware of any relations that that
bind owners or purchasers of sloughs to a certain type
of ethos treatment.
Speaker 4 (54:09):
Well, you know there's permits required depending on the category
of animal, but so so you those things need to
be in place to import animals from other countries, that
sort of thing. But we don't know of any other yeah, okay,
any other action their actions being taken against them.
Speaker 3 (54:28):
From what I had seen and heard was that because
of the kind of classification that the animals were under,
they weren't duty held to certain things that you would
think that would have been that would have needed to
have taken place.
Speaker 1 (54:40):
But we know the permitting was supposed to be for
an enclosure that was for them, and the enclosure they
were using was an.
Speaker 3 (54:45):
Old car shop, right exactly. That hadn't been yet, no heat,
no water, and electricity. But Bob, thank you so much.
Please keep us updated and we wish you much luck.
Speaker 1 (54:55):
Supposed job today, buddy. We're preciate that I new Central
Florida in the entire area we'll put this up online
and people would love to hear this interview. You did
a great job. That information has been really nice, and
I know that Central Florida feels a little bit better
when you know with the information that you've given and
knowing that the facility is really taking care of these
(55:15):
laws and it's become part of the community already.
Speaker 3 (55:18):
Yeah, it has, it has and we're good. I know,
I'm happier to know that the Central Florida Zoo is
taking care of them. Yes, and I'll be posting the
Animal House podcast in just a couple of minutes, so
folks miss that web address, they can get it there.
But as always, Animal House is brought to you by
personal injury attorney Glenn Clausman over a Colosman Law. So
if you've been in any kind of an accident, car, truck, motorcycle,
(55:39):
even a slip and fall, just a couple of reasons
why you need to call Glenn first. Glenn isn't going
to pass you off to a caseworker. Glenn is going
to handle your case so much so he's going to
give you a cell phone number and then pick it
up when you call. Even if he happens to be
in Paris. It's just a couple of reasons why a
year after year he's voted super Lawyer and legal Elite.
He truly is an animal lover and truly is a
(55:59):
friend of the show. So if you've been in any
kind of an accident, give him a call four oh
seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen, or check them out
online at Klosmanlaw dot com.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
That's k l a U s m a n Law
dot com. Thanks, I appreciate that. Let's take little break,
Scott Maxwell Ford slash is time miss sample subourbon. We'll
do that next here on the JIB Colbert Show, Real Radio.
Speaker 3 (56:21):
Monsters in the Morning.
Speaker 7 (56:22):
Angel Am I right, I got people in the brulesqu
world all around me, So I got questions man, and
I'm like, you're staring at the man's jump.
Speaker 1 (56:29):
Yeah, yeah, the Monsters Real Radio one oh.
Speaker 2 (56:32):
Four point one.
Speaker 9 (56:34):
Accident blocking the left lane Greenway southbound before the beachline.
Also left lane has still blocked the I for Expresslan's
headed westbound at Southwest.
Speaker 1 (56:44):
Ibords Show, Real Radio one oh four point one. Don't
forget family F A M I L Y. That is
your four o'clock keyword. Slide over to real radio do
FM and send that away for your chance at one
thousand bucks. Let me tell you we need somebody to
get this thing rolling. We have not had a winner
here on TKS the entire time, So guys go get
that money again. It's family, good luck, Welcome back on Jim.
There's deb Hello, Jack is here as well. And man,
(57:07):
do we have a very very special occasion. Now, usually
we talked to the very very smart and astute Scott Maxwell,
but these guys have done something very cool. Scott told
me about this, I don't know, about a month and
a half ago or so. He goes, hey, man, when
we did the Bourbon Bus, I mentioned, you know Ford
Slash you guys at Ford Slash over Winter Park that
(57:27):
we're gonna be doing. You know, our first stop was
gonna be there, and he goes, well, that's wild because
we're doing something cool with him as well. That is
exactly right.
Speaker 6 (57:34):
And it's been a long time in the making and
it's finally about to come to Fruition next week as
I understand.
Speaker 1 (57:40):
Yeah, is that right? Yeah, that's right. You guys give
it up a good lave for Tim and mic front
Ford's line. Yes, yes, now you know, with a whole
bunch of bourbon and yeaheah with you guys, it's a
good day. Well, I told everybody on the audience, and
we actually just mentioned it the other day. You know,
I think that us having a bourbon us and having
(58:00):
you guys at the first stop was pivotal to how
unbelievably fun that was. Because everybody when they left that place,
they were on the bus that were like those dudes
are maniacs, Like they are maniacts. I don't know how
you know that thing went, but I mean, you guys
poured bourbon for like two and a half hours, and
then when it was all done, you went behind the
curtain and pulled out a barrel and we kept drinking.
It was crazy. Yeah, it was.
Speaker 11 (58:21):
That was a that was a blast, and that didn't
make it didn't feel like two and a half hours.
It felt like thirty forty five minutes or something like
That went by so fast. And that's the thing is
like you can you can come and spend the entire
day at Forward Slash, and it's we have plenty of
regular customers that as soon as we open, they just
parked their seats at the.
Speaker 1 (58:37):
Bottom and it's one of the chillest spots out there
too also, And you can rent that spot right to
do private events if you want to. Yeah, it's kind
of built for that.
Speaker 7 (58:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (58:45):
We have a private event space inside the actual distillery
and then we have a pavilion outside that's more geared
towards cigar focused events.
Speaker 1 (58:53):
Yeah. Yeah, which we're gonna be talking about soon.
Speaker 6 (58:55):
And they sound, by the way, like people got pulled
over by a cop. You're like, all of a sudden,
I didn't think it felt like two hours.
Speaker 1 (59:01):
And by the way, the two cigars you gave me
were unbelievable. You told me they were, and they were
damn good.
Speaker 11 (59:06):
Yeah, those are that's all Michael's relationship with Cordova Morales
out of Nicaragua. Yeah, yeah, that do these incredible box
prass Nicaraguan cigars for us.
Speaker 1 (59:15):
That are just they're some of the best I've ever had.
They're simply amazing. Yeah, And just.
Speaker 11 (59:19):
For us to have the opportunity to be able to
make that, it's just, man, it's a gift.
Speaker 1 (59:22):
So let's let's talk about what we're doing now. I mean,
this is kind of a wild thing. Scott, what's so
proud of this. You guys actually made a proprietary whiskey
for the guys over at the Orlando Sentinel. Now, how
did it come back when you die? And this is
is this a is this a blend? Is this something
you guys came up specifically for this?
Speaker 17 (59:39):
All right?
Speaker 1 (59:39):
Tell me about the story about the Old Watchdog.
Speaker 11 (59:42):
Yeah, so we're blenders, right, So we're we just stole
some stuff, but not whiskey.
Speaker 1 (59:46):
Agave are run.
Speaker 11 (59:47):
We source all that stuff from high quality and individuals
from all across the country. So Michael and I traveled
quite a bit, and we go to independent farmers and
distillers and hand select barrels that we think are exceptional,
and we bring them back to our facility in winter
Park and we create unique plants. And we talked to
you about it. One hundred percent transparent. We tell the
story of the distillers through the art of blending.
Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
Very nice.
Speaker 11 (01:00:08):
So we created this, Yeah, we created this Old Watchdog
for the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary celebration of the
Orlando Sentinel, which.
Speaker 6 (01:00:15):
And they gave I should say they gave us a
lot of options. Like I only came in for round
two of the ta. You weren't even there for the
first round of yesing and I find and I was
out of town. But the thing that was neat about
this final round was, I want to say it was
six to eight six maybe that we were coming down
to and most of these things were very good, uh,
(01:00:38):
but when we got to this one, it was unanimous.
I mean there was it was like, that was good,
that was good, this one's in. Yeah, yeah, it was
everybody agreed.
Speaker 1 (01:00:47):
Were there specific notes you were looking for to kind
of create the old watchdog feel? I mean, when you
guys are coming up with this, did you think, well,
we wanted to be a little smoky like the old
news rooms or did you have any inspiration of that nature? Yeah?
Speaker 11 (01:00:59):
One tasty that doesn't work with bourbon as cigarette stench.
So we didn't want we didn't want that speak for yourself.
So we went through our you know, our brick house.
We have about one hundred barrels back there with various
different secondary maturations, and we you know, we have this
really old barrel of armagnac that we've been aging bourbon
(01:01:20):
and now for almost three years. That barrel the last
time was full of brandy was in nineteen seventy six.
But the wood itself that was just constructed as over
one hundred and fifty years old, damn. So we we
thought we should definitely incorporate some of this into the blend.
We also have a producer out of Owensboro, Kentucky that's
been around since eighteen eighty five called Green River and
(01:01:42):
you know nine years you know, prior to that is
when the Orlando Sentinels started printing papers, right yeah, and
the Green and Green River Distillery when they first launched
exclusively advertised in newspapers. That was their number one ad
campaign was only newspapers.
Speaker 6 (01:01:54):
We see the research these guys did, y Yeah, I
mean it's impressive words that we did, is it?
Speaker 1 (01:01:59):
Is it the you did just one best bourbon? Yea, yeah,
it's one of the It's one of the best whiskeys
I've ever tasted in my life. It's delicious. Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:02:05):
So this is their high Ride Mashville that we used
for that seven years old. That's the base for it,
and then we added on that armagiac cast finished bourbon.
We added in some eight year old Virginia bourbon in here,
and then just a touch of some PX sherry cask
finished pot still bourbon out of Kentucky form Membah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
Great color on that, by the way, it's dark. It's amazing.
It looks it looks ominous. I like that, and the
bottle is pretty kick ass too.
Speaker 11 (01:02:28):
In my estimation, Orlando Sanuel completely designed the entire label,
so that's their entire design team designed the entire label
for it. We sat down with them over multiple tasting
sessions and then we we yeah, we created this product.
Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
Now how many bottles are this going to be available
for purchase and how many are still left?
Speaker 11 (01:02:43):
Yeah, we made We did a special event for just
for the Orlando Whiskey or for the Orlando sent in
the last month where we sold about sixty bottles to
them at costs sor right, So we didn't want them
to have to pay outside of what wholesale costs. Sure
for that, well we've got awesome So not a lot,
but I mean that's that's great.
Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
That how much bottle?
Speaker 11 (01:03:03):
Uh, they are pricey, they are one hundred and fifteen dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:03:06):
But nothing for a good bottle of whiskey.
Speaker 11 (01:03:08):
Well for us, it is we try to make whiskey
approachable and so when you come into fourth slash like
you can get a poor whiskey for four bucks or
five bucks?
Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
No really, yeah, we try, we try. So we just
texted and said, you guys make the best espressio of
martini in Orlando.
Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
Yeah, and your crampis rise amazing every year.
Speaker 11 (01:03:24):
Well yeah, well we had to rebrand that one, so
that is now bad santsa and we we might.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
Call you got a copy, right, yeah, so on crampis.
But I can't.
Speaker 11 (01:03:36):
I think I'm legally not allowed to even say the
words anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
I think the amount of Wow's so sorry does want
you guys are? You guys are? But the product is good.
Speaker 11 (01:03:46):
So it's like listen the method the product that that's
a rye that's our oldest docks of rye whisky that
we age and a spiced rum barrel man and it
tastes like Christmas. So the people don't care about the wine.
It's it's the product.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
That's one. That's the one when we were at the event,
you guys were pouring and you specifically said you have
to try this, and I drank it and I said
exactly that that's that's like drinking and alcoholic Christmas morning.
It is like everything that that all those notes of
spice and that warmth of that whiskey is exactly what
you would expect that to be, right, so delicious.
Speaker 11 (01:04:20):
We luckily we sell out of that before it gets
too hot, because one thing, I don't. I love that whiskey,
but when it's ninety four degrees outside, I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
And that's not that's not it's time for So do
we have a little of the old Uh?
Speaker 6 (01:04:32):
All right, Jim, First of all, I have to correct
you keep putting the D on that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
Watch watched all right.
Speaker 6 (01:04:43):
Way, Bourbon tasting is uh about as good on radio
as like three D glasses.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
Right, it doesn't matter, man, we're here to drink a
little bit. God, it smells so good. It's like right
off the bat, right off rip. I mean, what note
should be getting here on vanilla? For sure.
Speaker 7 (01:05:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (01:05:00):
We don't really get too much into tasting notes, mainly
because I think everybody, depending on where your palate is,
is going to pick up something different. What we truly
just try to focus on is really just there's enjoyment,
right Like, as long as you enjoy the whisky, we've
done our job.
Speaker 1 (01:05:13):
Man, that's delicious. Point. What proof is this is.
Speaker 11 (01:05:15):
That forty six abv Son two, which we which that's
the lowest proof bourbon we've ever created. Wanted to be
more approachable to a wider market and for those those
individuals that you know, appreciate the Orlando Sentinel but don't
really know anything about bourbon, they can still come and
pick up a bottle of this and enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:34):
Oh yeah, this is extremely approachable.
Speaker 6 (01:05:36):
I'm going to say it's it's it's really smooth for
forty six, I mean for forty.
Speaker 3 (01:05:40):
Six splashing around.
Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
And I got to tell you one thing.
Speaker 6 (01:05:44):
I think it's neat that you all will appreciate. I
you know, most everybody's worked at the Sentinel through the
course of one hundred and fifty years is now gone
because they fled the newspaper. But this very weekend, I
have four of my five, my four best friends we
worked with for a bunch of years, coming in from
all over well different states, and we're getting together at
(01:06:06):
the beach this weekend. And the thing I have promised
to bring them is the first bottle of all.
Speaker 16 (01:06:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:06:12):
Yeah, four other reporters who covered for twenty years, and
I just thought it was a perfect thing for us
to drink together.
Speaker 11 (01:06:18):
It is that is man, I'm going to tell you
that warms my heart.
Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
Well, I mean that's yes, it is warming.
Speaker 11 (01:06:25):
But you know that's that's the reason why Michael and
this is going to sound so corny, but the reason
why Michael and I got into this was to connect
with people through whiskey, through something that we love, yeah,
and something we've built a community around. Yeah, and yeah,
we love hearing that.
Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
But I gotta tell you, man, when you go to
the spot and meet you guys, and you're there perpetually,
so when you come and meet you guys, it's impossible
not to get into a nice, really good conversation about
the whiskey, about what it takes to get it to
this point, how you guys choose what blends go where,
and you know how it affects the flavor of the
whiskey and stuff. And I think that's really cool because
it's just a different kind of artist, right instead of you. Right,
(01:07:01):
And when you go to I mean back in the
day when the breweries, the crap brew thing was exploding,
it was kind of cool to talk about that. Now,
Bourbon obviously is like the dominant spirit in America and
has been now for a while, and it's cool to
hear these stories about this, dude. I mean, I think
people who enjoy these spirits really do like those stories.
They like the fact that this is an American product.
You know, I love it.
Speaker 18 (01:07:21):
Yeah, I think I got into whiskey just because of that.
Was really about connecting with people more so than it
was about the spirit itself. So I think whiskey is
just one of those things that really bring people together.
Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
So guys all.
Speaker 5 (01:07:34):
Watchdog will be available to the public May seventh, I
believe after seventh four pm. They seventh to four pm.
But in the meantime this Saturday, don't you have a
Kentucky Derby event going on?
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
We absolutely do.
Speaker 18 (01:07:46):
We have the Kentucky Derby.
Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
This is where you get face down in a puddle
in your best suit ye to get dressed out.
Speaker 11 (01:07:54):
So we're in winter Park right in winter Park is
you know, it's a nice, nice part of town. But
you know, there's so many great establishments when to park by,
most of them charge a ticket price. So when when
we were like, well we're a bourbon spot or you know,
we're just a spot. So but if we're going to
do we're gonna do the Kentucky Derby. Let's not do
a ticketed event. Let's make it up to the public
and well, and when we get max capacity, we're at
max capacity.
Speaker 1 (01:08:14):
That's a bold decision.
Speaker 11 (01:08:16):
But you know, you don't know what you don't know. Yeah,
it pays off for us. It's a lot of fun.
But you know, one of the things that we do
is every year we go out to because I you know,
we were talking about this earlier, I hate mint jewel loops. Yeah,
and everybody feels so compelled to drink a mint jewel
up on the Kentucky Derby, So like, how can we
make a mint.
Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
Jewel it better?
Speaker 11 (01:08:34):
So what we do is we go out to Southern
Hill Farms out in Claremont area and peach season runs
about three weeks here in Florida, and they're they're sporadic
right now. They've had a lot of troubles with the
frost that we have year on that, so they are sparacus.
So what they're doing is they're they're releasing slowouts of
peaches now. But we were able to get about thirty
five pounds of pieches off of them. We choose that
(01:08:56):
into bourbon for a couple of weeks. Uh and then
and then we make jewels out of that, and the
acid and the peaches bounces out the sweetness of the
drink perfectly.
Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
Actually an enjoyable Well, that's amazing. That sounds amazing, by
the way, I mean it really does. I cannot wait
to try that. That's this weekend. By the way, May
second open till close. There are no hours. It is
when they open and then when they close. That's when
the party's happening. You want to dress up. They're gonna
have speakeasy Burger is gonna be there, the famous forward
slash pete jewelip is gonna be there as well, plus
a bunch of other cool stuff. So you got to
(01:09:26):
kick over there and excuse me. The bourbon got me
in the throat there. And that peach combination. That's a
Kentucky staple also, isn't it.
Speaker 11 (01:09:32):
Yeah yeah, yeah, so yeah, I mean peach is just
you know that a whole Southern thing, right, and a
lot of.
Speaker 6 (01:09:37):
People guys South Carolina, Kentucky peaches are amazing. Oh yeah, yeah,
this guy's source this stuff. It's not like we just
they go out to Seattle and get something. They're like, well,
I went out and got Seattle and then that's run
by a guy named Don and he got the grain
from his brother in law.
Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
Fourth generation. These guys are knowing their sources. Yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
Yeah, sorry, I was just gonna say somebody texted us
at seven seven zero three one saying their knowledge of
bourbons and whiskeys as out of this world. I never
had so much fun learning and getting hammered on the.
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Yeah. And I guess you also have a release of
a Repisados coming out as well, that is correct.
Speaker 18 (01:10:17):
Yeah, So we have our tequila and mescal blend we
call sonombre. So for those that don't know, sonombra translating
loosely means no name or without a name, because what
we what we've done, really doesn't have a name. So
we thought that was kind of fitting. And so that
was we releasad about two years ago, and we thought,
you know what we need to We need an extension
(01:10:39):
of that, So why not take son Nombre and put
in some ex bourbon barrels and let it sit in
there for about eight months.
Speaker 1 (01:10:44):
We have extra whiskey barrels.
Speaker 11 (01:10:46):
We have extra whiskey barrels to put stuff in.
Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
We have so many barrels. So inside joke between the two.
It's a Sinko celebration from four until ten on May fifth,
they're gonna have a food vendor there called is it Mexicana,
and they're gonna have Berria tacos. Some of the bottles
gonna be out there for cell as well.
Speaker 11 (01:11:06):
Yeah, we're also doing a pecanya fat washed old fashion
with the reposato too, So we're taking pekanya fat from
Fuyo and then we're infusing that into the repo and
that's going to be in an old fashion form just
for that day. We're not gonna this is not going
to be a menu thing. It's just gonna be available
for that day. That's delicious. Uh, this is incredible. This
is some of the best.
Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
Really, that's amazing. Hey, real quick on the old Watchdog,
I mean, could you order that online? If I went
to Forward Slash's website, could I could I reserve a bottle?
Is that a situation where you have to.
Speaker 6 (01:11:35):
Get all this state has all kinds of rules about
how you get and by the liquor distribute, but you can't.
Speaker 1 (01:11:40):
Even reserve a bottle or something like that.
Speaker 11 (01:11:42):
Or Scott is my guy gets it like, yes, we were.
Speaker 18 (01:11:46):
Unfortunately, all transaction actually have to happen on premise, so
we can't take money over the internet or anything like that.
Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
Yeah we got you boo. Yeah, catch you boo. There
we go showing, and so guys, don't forget the big
Kentucky Derby parties coming up May second. That's this weekend.
It's open till closed. Party starts around two o'clock. No
tickets are needed, but you do want to come dressed
in your best Kentucky Derby speak. Easy Burger is going
(01:12:15):
to be there, right yeah, because once it gets capacity.
Speaker 11 (01:12:17):
Yeah, we we've turned people away unfortunately. Really and once
we hit about one hundred and fifty, people were like.
Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
Wow, okay, that's it, So get there early for sure.
Anything else, guys, because I'm going to I want to
taste the episode of really.
Speaker 5 (01:12:28):
Website is drink forward slash dot com, where you can
find out where they are and all their contact info.
Drink forward slash dot com. Can you spell the word
slash out correct correct drink forward slash Yeah, we didn't
think about that when we were name of the company. Yeah,
by the way, real quick, we only got a couple
of seconds here left. But how did that? How did
the name come up?
Speaker 11 (01:12:46):
Well, we're Transparent Blenders, right, So we're we're writing out
what it is that we do, and so we're like, well,
we're making a blend from Green River slash, you know,
j Henry slash and be Rolling slash. And we're like, well,
we're kind of like the forward slash. We're kind of
like the symbol that brings together all the separate but
equal parts to create something uniform. Oh, that's cool, it's cool,
but most people think we're a tech company.
Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
When I heard the name of the first time, I
was like, well, that's unique. Whatever.
Speaker 11 (01:13:10):
It's really hard to name a whiskey common. We don't
want to call it Bradstreet in Boofa or anything like that.
I mean, that isn't a well firm. Yeah, it's done
and Bradshow.
Speaker 6 (01:13:19):
And that sounds like your fraternity brothers who are gonna
hate Youah, that sounds like And by the way, a
lot of people have heard about them, but they don't
know right we're there because they're tucked right in between
two really busy streets. I guarantee you ninety percent of
your listeners have driven right by.
Speaker 1 (01:13:33):
Yeah, we hear that all the time. We're right.
Speaker 11 (01:13:35):
We're right on Fairbanks. We're right behind the porch, right
across the street and down the block from the Ravenous Pig.
So yeah, find those.
Speaker 18 (01:13:41):
Jason from the Rollins baseball field.
Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Yeah, if you just park somewhere in that area, you
can walk and find it for sure, stumble. Yeah, without questions.
So don't forget. Get over to Port Slash and get
yourself a bottle this old watch Dog. There's only like
two hundred and fifty or sixty so left, that is correct,
And it's about one hundred and ten dollars a bottle,
plus some taxes or whatnot. And then you can get
out of there and enjoy yourself. And I get to
try this repisodea, which is very nice. Are you a
tequila guy, Scott, I can't.
Speaker 6 (01:14:01):
Remember I've had a repisodo old fashioned at reyes. I
think I was before I thought it is great.
Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
Oh my gosh, that's great too, man. You gotta goad
dang guys. That was wonderful, man, because some of these
things get too sweet and rosy. I don't like that
so much. We're out of the Free Company.
Speaker 11 (01:14:19):
We don't put any sugar and there's been a lot
of you know, news articles recently about you know, miss
misguided and decisions in the in the agave world. So
we don't put any sugar, no glycol, no, no nothing.
It's one hundred percent pure product.
Speaker 1 (01:14:31):
All right. Drinkforward slash dot com. That's drink Forward slash
dot com. Visit the website. Lots of cool stuff going
on going on, including the Kentucky Derby party and the
Sinko to Mayo party coming up as well. So guys,
thank you so much, wonderful spirits. We love you guys
and cannot wait to do another event. We have a
bourbon cigar. We're giving your way soon. Trust we're gonna
do that. We gotta do that. Yeah, Yeah, for sure, Scott.
You stay where you are, all right, all right? One
(01:14:54):
text us at seven seven zero three one got a
few minutes for your keyword family. That's f A M
I L Y. Just slide over to real Radio dot
FM and send that away for your chance at one
thousand dollars. Good laugh for our friends from boards last.
Speaker 7 (01:15:07):
When you go there, you're gonna be.
Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
Addicted to this spot. I promise you you're gonna love
this spot. It's gonna be one of your favorite places
in Orlando when you go one time. That's all it's
gonna take. Thanks, guys, appreciate it, Thank you, you got
it all right. I gonna say, hey, I predict trench.
Speaker 2 (01:15:19):
We create moments. Real Radio one oh four point one
guaranteed human.
Speaker 1 (01:15:24):
From the ODO dot Com Weather Center o DO dot
Com the only business software you will need.
Speaker 13 (01:15:32):
Hey, everybody at Fox thirty five Storm Team meteorologists Laurel
Blanchard here with your Wednesday night forecast. Very pleasant rest
of the evening. We're gonna see those temperatures staying mild
through the overnight.
Speaker 1 (01:15:44):
All right, welcome back to the board show, Real Radio
one oh four point one. Big thanks to the guys
that were at Forward Slash. What uh man? Listen, sweet guys,
let me tell you something, man. That's how you know
people care this. Guys. You get one of these dudes
into a conversation about whiskey and you better pull up
a chair dog because they are in it. It is
so much fun going there, it's so much fun being
(01:16:05):
around them. Their love for this is completely infectious. And
if you hadn't been to the spot, get over there.
It is really cool. It is not pretentious. It is
not Winter Park at all, although it is just a
really cool spot with two really cool guys, and you know,
meeting them this year has been a blessing because we
their space is like perfect. We built for what we
like to do on the Jim Colbert Show, for cool
(01:16:26):
events like bourbon tasting, Cigar Tastes are a cigar events
and stuff food events. Perfect. So you'll be hearing a
lot more from board Slash and JCS for sure.
Speaker 6 (01:16:35):
Really plugged into the community because I mean like when
we first partnered, we were looking for somebody to do
this with. They were like so excited to be working
with us, and I was like, oh, you must think
you're working with a different company because the newspaper and
I'm not even sure anybody your age reads the newspaper anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
But no, they were.
Speaker 6 (01:16:54):
They were They understood how long the paper has been
around here, the role it's played here, and they were
excited to be partners, and they like they put a
lot of you know, their heart into crafting something up
that's such a great.
Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
They're just good guys. Man. Welcome back. I'm Jim, there's
deb Jack is here, and of course you hear Scott
Maxwell's voice. It's Wednesday. He usually drops by. This is
a special occasion, is yeah, Jack, Jeb something else, Bunny.
Speaker 5 (01:17:14):
Well, I was just going to say we got so
lucky because we were planning the bourbon by something like
where are we going to go? And I just did
a Google search. I said a bourbon distillery around us,
and they were the first thing that came up. And
when we reached out, they're like and Tim, yeah, one
of the owners said.
Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
Yeah, I've been listening to you guys. Yes, this is
going to be perfect. And I'm telling you the people
who are on that bus when they came out of
that place, they were so I mean, it was the
perfect first stop. It really was. And again we love
those guys with thanks. So Scott Maxwell's here orlandosent. We
talked to him on Wednesdays every time he came in
just to drink our whiskey for free today and also
(01:17:53):
I didn't believe that is his whiskey. Actually, yeah, I
didn't get to read the column today. What about why
do we want to talk about something that depressing? After Yeah,
let's know, then let's talk. Let's we'll talk about something
I will tell you. It's still sort of depressing. But
I have a column tomorrow that mentions a couple of things,
and one is the I know, deb I'm sure looked
(01:18:15):
at this in the news last week, the final resolution
to the chalk arrest, which is just they dropping all
the charges, did they not?
Speaker 7 (01:18:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 19 (01:18:22):
Yeah, because it's freaking chalk, Because because every kid in
America has used chalk on the street. And when they
got down to it, the State Attorney's office was like,
first of all, like everyone uses chalk. We don't have
a good we don't have a good reason why we've
thrown these six people in jail, and the most suspicious
(01:18:43):
and I'm laughing, but it's surely not funny. Thing about
the whole thing was to make this an actual crime,
the Florida Department of Transportation had.
Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
To claim the damage. The damage from chalk exceeded fifteen dollars,
which is insane. I mean, it's not simply not true.
It's a garden hose.
Speaker 6 (01:19:00):
And in fact, the state attorney said, well, that claim
sort of withered away after one rainstorm got rid of
the damage from the chalk over there. But you know,
this has been now it's almost a half year and
the State Attorney's office said they spend I think one
hundred hours. That's unruch because you can't just say I
don't feel like charging something.
Speaker 1 (01:19:19):
You got to go into it.
Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
But I just think these stories that sort of come
round is flash in the pans, and then people don't
realize their real lives. There were six people charged with
crimes and felonies because of this. One of their lawyers
is saying they should have their records expunged. I probably
agree with that because this.
Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
Is just stupid. Yeah, and it's so funny because I
driving around in the area on a daily basis where
there's still that green paint that they had no veto
that they painted up that they was to take that
out though, because they can't have any color because and
it's still there, and it's so funny. I drive by
it every time. I should write my senator, I should
my commissioner tell them that we're not gonna have this
green paint making it safer to go across these roads.
(01:19:57):
I mean, they already proved right after that thing happened
that that they literally I think Ovino did it. They said, look,
we know for a fact this green paint that doesn't
represent anything makes this safer, and they still need them cover.
Speaker 6 (01:20:12):
You're exactly right, the Seminole County trail. I can't remember
what the program is of. They had done their research
and they said, oh my gosh, and by the way,
this doesn't This didn't surprise anybody. There's a reason stop
signs aren't black and white, right, because exactly they catch
your attention, and study after study, including a seminal county,
They're like, when we make these things pop, then people go, oh,
maybe I shouldn't run over the skateboarder going across.
Speaker 3 (01:20:36):
Maybe I should.
Speaker 6 (01:20:37):
Yeah. But another thing I was just gonna mention. I
also did a little, uh little tribute to a local
legend of sorts, Charlie Gray, who passed away last week.
Charles Gray of Gray Robinson, the founder of the largest
there I think, the largest law firm in the state.
Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
They really did not know that.
Speaker 6 (01:20:55):
Yeah, and uh yeah, they got offices all over the state.
And he was responsible for a whole lot of things, UCF,
helping make UCF happen, camping world standing, all of all
sorts of big venues. But one of the things I'd
forgotten because whenever somebody dies I've been doing this long enough.
Speaker 1 (01:21:12):
This sounds a little depressing.
Speaker 6 (01:21:13):
I go back through my email and look at the
last all the emails I've exchanged with them over the
past twenty years.
Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
Wow, that's crazy.
Speaker 6 (01:21:19):
Yeah, And almost always there are some and I'd forgotten that.
In twenty eighteen, on the heels of Parkland, Charlie Gray,
who was one of the most powerful lawyers in the state,
a prominent Republican, longtime gun owner, and member of the NRA,
marched down to the Sheriff's office and surrendered his AR
(01:21:40):
fifteen along with his membership to the NRA. Wow, and said,
I just can't be party to this anymoy.
Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (01:21:47):
And I said, I believe in gun rights. I believe,
I do not believe in high capacity assault weapons and
everyone having those. And I found myself thinking, that's the
kind of thing that I think people will be remembered
for when they take a stance that's not easy, right, right, right,
And that wouldn't be easy as a powerful Republican attorney
in the state of Florida to do. But he just said,
(01:22:09):
I couldn't watch what was the total number, I don't know,
forty dead kids and faculty members thirty nine something and
and not say something, and in his letter to the
NRA said you all have been an obstacle to reducing
gun violence.
Speaker 1 (01:22:21):
And I won't be a party too. Wow, that's crazy.
When he passed he passed away last I want to
say Friday. Wow. Really, I got rest his soul last week.
So he did a lot. But I think you remember
for the tough things you do and not the easy Yeah,
one hundred percent. I mean the ones that are difficult
to pull off for sure. I did want to ask
you before you get out of here, though we posed
a question earlier. Did Jack did you put that up
as the question of the day. No, I'll do it
(01:22:42):
right now, yes or no. Do you think Donald Trump
has shot a gun before? Oh? Probably for some sort
of theatrical purpose. I mean, somebody brought up earlier that
he was he went to military school. But I don't
know if the requirement of being in a military school
is firing a weapon. I would think you would at
some point. And I even mentioned by the way I
(01:23:03):
text my daughter, she said yes, as in boot camp
going into the Air Force, she shot a bunch she says,
AR fifteen's and handguns as well. So she did that
quite a bit. But but I remember her telling me
that just because you're in the military on a military
base doesn't mean you automatically get to walk around like
you're in the Old West. That they really do regulate
who gets the weapons. When they get them, you're like,
(01:23:26):
you have to check them out. Like even the Special
Forces guys don't get to keep their stuff all the time.
They have to check it in and out when it's needed. Well,
and I mean, I'm not telling you anything you don't know.
A lot of the I would say military and law
enforcement folks are some of the hardest core about following
gun both regulations and laws and safety. I mean, the
cops are the ones that say, we don't want thirty
(01:23:47):
capacity magazines out on the streets because there's only one
thing those are made for, right, and it ain't target shooting. Yeah,
and a lot of us don't aren't able to fight back.
We have our standard, we have our standard side home,
which is like what eleven shots, eleven rounds round something
like that, But.
Speaker 6 (01:24:00):
In any sort of recent like no, I mean, I'm
I'm I'm not the biggest gun guy, but I grew
up in the South and I knew you had to
go hunt and just to wear your pantsaw, you know
when you walked across the college campus. So I did
it a number of times, but it was mostly shot
guns in twenty Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
Sure. I think a lot of people their experience with
that as they grew up in like in rural areas
of central Florida. I've said one hundred times, if you
wanted the most guns in my hometown, you went to
the high school parking lot, because every every young man
that I knew it had either a shotgun or a
thirty all six or a two seventy or a thirty
thirty or whatever in their window with their doors unlocked.
Because everybody there just learned to respect guns at a
(01:24:36):
very young age, right. They didn't look at them and
his weapons against people. They were always just choosing them
for hunting. It was never like that when I grew up. Yeah,
and they probably weren't semi automatic. Uh yeah, yeah, they
were not any of that for sure. Always goot, seeing
you big dogs. You enjoyed the whiskey. I did.
Speaker 6 (01:24:49):
I did, and I'm looking forward to it. It's it's
kind of a nice connection between you know, old and
new with this celebration.
Speaker 1 (01:24:55):
And really, to be honest with you, isn't this really
uh an attribute to these guys hooking onto something that
like you were You've even said yourself like this is
an old kind of thing in Orlando, and with these
younger guys, you know, to kind of you know, pay homage.
Speaker 6 (01:25:08):
Just something that really built the city is very cool
to It warmed the cockles of my heart. And it
wasn't just the bourbon sentiment for something that's been around
that's bigger than them, that's bigger than me, that's really
bigger than anybody who's still living one hundred and fifty years.
Not to get too corny is a long time. It
is a long watching over serving as a watchdog for
the community. So I like the bir Yeah, good laugh
(01:25:28):
for Scott Maxwell, what are you trying to do? Step
just got married? Who are you seducing with that?
Speaker 1 (01:25:38):
Who told Jim this horrible shirt? That one is too much?
Speaker 6 (01:25:43):
And the second one looks like I should be guest
starring on Three's companies.
Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
And I don't know which way to wear the last
buttons and your belly button dog, he looks sexy, all right?
Good See, he's very slimming alright s seven seven zero
three one got another keyword for you right now.
Speaker 2 (01:26:00):
Celebrate the arrival of summer at the fifth annual Sandford
Riverwalk Rhythm and Bruce Barbecue Fest Saturday, May ninth. Details
and Real Radio dot FM slash.
Speaker 3 (01:26:09):
Events from the Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash called
Klosmanlaw Klosmanlaw dot com.
Speaker 9 (01:26:17):
Accident blocking two left lanes Greenway northbound at the Beachline.
Slow ride on IFO eastbound between five thirty six and
Darryl Carter Parkway. Also another crash blocking the left turn
lane seventeen ninety two northbound.
Speaker 3 (01:26:31):
At I four.
Speaker 9 (01:26:32):
And there is another accident reported four oh eight eastbound
at Golden Rod. See traffic troubles called the Vavelyn Insten
Oil Chains traffic tipline at eighty six six six seven
six eight four seven seven from the Traffic Center and
Katie Wilkins.
Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
This Record You is sponsored by Positive Coaching Alliance.
Speaker 20 (01:26:50):
Gut issues with youth or high school sports. Positive Coaching
Alliance Can Help. PCA, a national nonprofit, offers more than
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sports coaches, parents, students, and administ c H.
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
Rich.
Speaker 5 (01:27:04):
Enter it now on our website at real Radio dot fm,
and don't forget to answer your phone.
Speaker 1 (01:27:09):
If you get the call, good luck.
Speaker 2 (01:27:12):
If you're listening to the Jim Colbert Show Unreal Radio
one four point one.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
Rich R I C H. That is your five o'clock keyword.
Get over to Real Radio dot FM and send that
off for your chance at one thousand dollars. Guys, rich
is the word. Go get that money and make yourself
a little rich. You can do that for sure. Welcome
back on Jim. There's deb hello, and Jack is here
as well. Yeah, that was a fun hour got them.
(01:27:41):
That was great. I love those guys. I'm telling you,
man that they made an immediate impression on me. Scott
not so much. But it has a permanent impression on you,
a permanent I love that guy. I mean, who does it?
Speaker 7 (01:27:54):
Man?
Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
I want you meet Maxwell. I don't care. I don't
care how you lean politically or whatever. I know a
lot of people like well, you know, crazy liberal ran
or whatever. You meet this guy, you will definitely fall
in love with him. He's an awesome conversation, a great guy.
Speaker 5 (01:28:07):
That's why when people come at him on the texting
service to me that says everything I need to know
about you and nothing about him.
Speaker 1 (01:28:14):
Yeah, Scott is one of those guys that if you
come in him, we know you're a bad dude. Yeah yeah,
all right. By the way, yeah, rich is your fivay
clock keyword. So let me ask you guys a question.
Have you all been shopping lately for grocery for groceries? Yeah,
a little bit? Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, you guys don't
really you guys don't really grocery shop a whole lot day.
(01:28:35):
Yeah no, no, no, wet grocery shop a lot of
our place. We love the grocery shop, and uh, you know,
mostly I do the grocery shopping at my house.
Speaker 3 (01:28:43):
But I've heard of can of green beans is going
for like almost two bucks a can now, which.
Speaker 1 (01:28:47):
Is like, let me hit let me hit you this. Yes,
we bought we bought ground beef this weekend. Oh why
we hit a lot of So we bought grand ground
beef this weekend. Two packs of ground beef. One was
one pound and one point seventy three and the other
one was one point three or something. We were going
for a full like no, no, it's two and a
(01:29:08):
half pounds so they were both about about a pound
and a third. How much do you think I paid
for that? So it would be two and a half
pounds of beef thirty five dollars, thirty dollars ground sirloing
thirty dollars ninety ten. It was fifteen dollars for one
pack and fourteen something for the other thirty dollars. And
when they told me the total the total price of
(01:29:29):
my bag, my bags, and it wasn't that much. It
was only three bags. I coud carry himut it was
like seventy eight dollars. I was AGAs. But I read
something on Yahoo today. Do you know that a family
can have a difference in their grocery bill and there's
one thing that can change that. Yeah, go to aldi No, okay,
all for sure, no question, go to Aldie. But even
(01:29:49):
which is just shopping, there's one thing that happens in
every household that if this is the case, you're spending
more on your groceries. And it has nothing to do
with the groceries. Uh, going hungry like shopping hungry? No,
that's a great or shopping high that's another good one.
Speaker 3 (01:30:05):
Uh bringing the kids to the grocery store.
Speaker 5 (01:30:08):
Oh, Yeah, bravo, you're close bringing your husband. Letting your
husband shop, letting husband's shop increases your bill by twenty percent. Really,
when the men do the grocery shopping in a household,
your grocery bill goes up by about twenty percent. Isn't
that interesting? Why do you think that is? This is
(01:30:28):
a great This, by the way, is a Yahoo Life story.
If you guys read this today, what do you think
it is? What do you think when males go to
shop for groceries for the family, the family actually winds
up paying more money for the groceries. No list, Well,
that's part of it. Yeah, but it were reassuming that
is the male also cooking. It doesn't say that. It
doesn't say anything.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
It just says, when the mail does the grocery shopping,
your grocery bill is about twenty percent more for the household.
Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
So it doesn't go without a list.
Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
Overbuys over buys you ready, I bet doesn't look for bogos.
You guys are actually doing that very very well with you.
No coupons brands, that's another one. Name brands, No coupons,
no lists, no list. Want to get in and out
in hurry?
Speaker 3 (01:31:14):
I was going to say they're frustrated. They just they
just want to just grab it and go home.
Speaker 1 (01:31:17):
Women. When women shop, women are the normal shoppers of
the family. Also, most women and most relationships are the
manager of the household. You know men as men have
had that whole breadwinner thing for so long that's kind
of ingrained into most households in America. So when the
woman goes out, she understands, I've got a shop for this,
I got a shop for that. They're not trying to
(01:31:39):
make anybody happy. They're just trying to get the groceries
for a good price so that the household can move
forward and save money. When guys go, it's snacks for
the kids, it's all I bet she'll love this, you know,
pine ice cream here, a bag of candy there, bags
of chips that the mom would never buy because they're
not good for the family and they're too expensive. But
the dads. It showed the dads simply wanted to be
(01:32:01):
liked when they came home with the grocery and moms
don't care about it. Dad. When Dad walks in and
the kids know that Dad went shopping there, like hell, yeah,
let's run over to a dad got and dad's getting
like candies and fun stuff to eat. He's shopping in
the middle. He's not buying discount beef. He's buying name
brand everything. And moms are not about that life.
Speaker 3 (01:32:22):
Make mom look like the heavy, Yeah, making mom look.
Speaker 5 (01:32:25):
Like the heavy one hundred percent texter, says a single dad.
Over fifteen years, I saved and I've saved money and
shopping because I had to learn.
Speaker 1 (01:32:35):
And that's exactly what this says. It says moms are
pre programmed to go in there and do what's best
for the household. Dads go in there and they want
to do what's best for the house. Yeah, for the family.
They want to make the kids happy. They want the
kids to jump up and down when they see that
dad got Reese's cups or got you know, their favorite
flavored popcorn or chips or maybe sodas or something like that.
(01:32:57):
Moms don't care about that. Moms don't care if you
like them or not.
Speaker 3 (01:33:00):
As they know when the dental appointment is and the
hearing about and knowing about that next cavity.
Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
So yeah, it says. A recent working paper about a
National Bureau of Economic Research started out reviewing the impact
of working from home on shopping habits no surprise, of course,
the more you shop online, the more you shop from home,
you're paying a little bit more. Oh yeah, and it
said it also found an instam diidbit that people work
from home or spending ten percent more on their groceries.
But then when you added in the parent, the dad
doing the shopping, it's even more about twenty percent more
(01:33:29):
than when mom chops are groceries. And I wonder how
applicable that is our audience, Like, I wonder how many
people do you think that most people in our audience
the woman shops the female in the relationship shots for
the groceries, or does the male. In my house, it's
me most of the time. My wife does go occasionally,
but it mostly me.
Speaker 3 (01:33:45):
It's the same in our house, it's mostly Chris.
Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
Is it? It's it?
Speaker 3 (01:33:48):
And I don't find that he overspends on things like
he he'll only he's not brand loyal When it comes
to coffee. It's whatever's on sale.
Speaker 5 (01:33:55):
Right right, right, Well, you're not buying food, No, My
wife does the cookie and she does the shopping. She
enjoys the shopping, cooker too, like she'll go several times
a week instead of doing the one shop for the week.
Speaker 3 (01:34:10):
Oh that's so English. Yeah, that's what they do.
Speaker 1 (01:34:12):
Yeah, it just you know, it's a right yeah. Yeah.
And a lot of the will shop for the day sometimes.
Speaker 5 (01:34:17):
Yeah, although I maintain if I was doing the shopping
it would be twenty percent less careful.
Speaker 3 (01:34:25):
You might end up with a new job.
Speaker 1 (01:34:27):
I'll take it. Let's go. You don't, I mean, you
have the opportunities, you can't do it?
Speaker 5 (01:34:32):
No, I Uh. During the pandemic we did the it
was at the time it was Kroger. I know they
kind of fled the area. Uh, but I like that,
like being able to do that online, finding the deal
and having it all delivered. It was great. But there
you miss something about just being in the store right
(01:34:52):
and seeing something. And sometimes when you are like in
the store, you have ideas for other things to buy.
But I'm also guilty of the impulse buy as well
when I go.
Speaker 1 (01:35:03):
You said it yesterday, you said I love going to
Costco and just walking around or let me tell you something. Yeah.
Costco loves hearing that more than anybody because they know
the longer you're in the store, the more apt it
is that you're gonna spend money that you didn't come
there to spend. And my wife hates being in the
grocery store. She hates it. This is what she does.
She just did this with all of me the other day.
She calls up, has the order pulled, and I guess
you go around the back and they'll just walk your
(01:35:24):
order out to you. She has no interest in going
to the grocery store at all. Not a fan me.
I walk straight into the soda machine, pour myself, mister pib,
and off I go. I skip around the store. I
cannot wait, and I'll forget something. I must traverse the
store eighteen times.
Speaker 3 (01:35:40):
You know you're gonna make someone a fine wife someday.
Speaker 1 (01:35:44):
But I love grocery shopping, like I could spend hours
in their grocery shopping. It is the absolute best. But
and I'm look, it's the worst. I'll walk over there.
I'm like, I wonder what the tuna looks like. And
I'll go over and I look at the two O.
The tune looks good today, let's get some tuna. That's
twenty one dollars. I didn't even plan to have to,
but now I'm want tuna. And my wife would never
do that. Be like, I don't care about the tuna.
(01:36:05):
I'm here to get these five things. She looks at
going to the Girths store like I look at going
to the mall. Yeah, like I'm in and out.
Speaker 5 (01:36:11):
To misquote football coach Bill Parcells, if you're going to
be the one preparing the meals, you should be doing
the one who's doing the shopping really as well. But
he was talking about being a general manager and a coach.
If you're going to coach the players, you should be
the guy who's picking the players out. But if you're
cooking meals, I think it's smarterren that should be the
one who's actually looking at the items.
Speaker 1 (01:36:35):
I don't know not you know, we do the Hello
Fresh thing, but we'll also do like we'll do it
for like two or three weeks, and then we'll get
tired of doing it because some of the orders are
like kind of the same, and the processes and flavors
are kind of the same because they use some of
the same stuff. So you get burned out of about
two or three weeks. And what we'll do is we'll
just kind of pause it for a couple of weeks
and go to the store and get stuff and then
wind up cooking yourselves. But even then, man, it's just
(01:36:56):
like one of those things where you go in there
you get exactly what you want to get out, not
me though, I'm in there and I'm like, what was
on Bogo?
Speaker 15 (01:37:03):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:37:03):
What's on Bogo?
Speaker 3 (01:37:04):
They're gonna start pulling credit reports before the radio in
the front door of publics.
Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
It's like Chili lime pistachios. I don't even like him,
but they're Bogo ten ninety nine for two. I'm in
all right four oh seven nine six four one. Text
us at seven seven zero three one. Don't forget your
five o'clock keyword is rich our Ich. Go to Real
Radio dot FM and send that off for your chance
at one thousand bucks back in one second.
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
Real Radio is the newest choky.
Speaker 20 (01:37:28):
A man is in trouble for making sexual contact with
his dog.
Speaker 1 (01:37:32):
Edward Dare, thirty five year old Shiti picked truths.
Speaker 2 (01:37:36):
Chokey weekdays, it'll eleven on Real Radio one oh four
point one.
Speaker 9 (01:37:41):
Some emergency road construction going on one one two westbound
at Orange Blossom Trail.
Speaker 1 (01:37:47):
Also slow ride this afternoon.
Speaker 9 (01:37:50):
There's an accident on four seventeen northbound at the beachline
that has two left lanes blocked. Then on the Greenway
southbound side before the beachline left lane they're is blocked
as well. See traffic troubles called the Vavelin Insten Oil
Change Traffic tip line at eight six seven six eight
four seven seven from the Traffic Center. I'm Katie Wilkins.
Speaker 1 (01:38:10):
This report is sponsored by Mothers Against Drunk Driving for
victims of drunk and drug driving. Our grief is unique,
but you are not alone. You owe it.
Speaker 2 (01:38:22):
Still to come. We find out what's in the good
sauce with Ross Paget today at six on the Jim Colbert.
Speaker 19 (01:38:28):
Show, Culver Crew.
Speaker 8 (01:38:34):
That was weak, You know if if a back and
rock ledge in a daily raise of beer to American
Healthcare SYS. So not all but some of it kind
of sucks. Well, I'll tell you what. It is easy
as pie to get your medical marionalysis to get you
(01:38:55):
very very high.
Speaker 1 (01:38:57):
Just got mine have good mone hurs.
Speaker 8 (01:39:00):
Also very huge congratulations.
Speaker 1 (01:39:03):
To you, missus.
Speaker 8 (01:39:03):
Dev don't remember the last name off the top of
my head.
Speaker 1 (01:39:08):
That goes back to the earlier in many years.
Speaker 8 (01:39:10):
Of blissful happiness and the occasional flight because it's not
marriage without one beautiful truth.
Speaker 1 (01:39:20):
All right, Rich is your five o'clock keyword? Or ich
go to real radio dot FM ands and then I'll
bring your chance in one thousand bucks. Rich is the word, guys,
Go get it, get them. Welcome back. I'm Jim. There's dead. Hello,
Jack is here as well.
Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
Word.
Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
I got some terrible news that I kind of expected
to be the case. Jack just told me during the
break a second ago. DEB actually had it for your
to hear first, But I have an associated story with that,
so go ahead and drop this on us well.
Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
For those who don't know. The FBI has confirmed that
the body of a truck driver last sing in central
Florida has been found in Georgia. The driver, Alejandro Jacomino Gonzalez,
was last seing April seventeenth at the I ninety five
I South Bervard County Rest Area in Grant Valcaria. The
FBI said he went missing after picking up a shipment
(01:40:06):
of cars at the Port of Brunswick in Georgia for
delivery to Miami. The truck was located in Port Wentworth, Georgia,
was several missing cars.
Speaker 1 (01:40:16):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:40:16):
Details about what led to his death are unknown. So
the FBI Tampa and Atlanta divisions right now are leading
the investigation into Gonzalez's death. And this is from west
dot Com.
Speaker 1 (01:40:26):
Yeah, I wanted to ask Grant Valcarrio, what part of
Florida is that end?
Speaker 3 (01:40:29):
I think it's a county. Oh it Isvard.
Speaker 1 (01:40:32):
Yeah it is Bvard, so yeah it See. For some reason,
I thought that was on the west coast, so I
wanted to confirm that because if that was on the
west coast, that would be kind of odd that he
was delivering to Miami and was over there. But if
Grandvillcarria is on the east coast, it would make sense
that would just be a normal stop. My dad used
to drive trucks. He told me those truck stops were
some of the sketchiest places it was. Actually, he said.
(01:40:52):
The truck stops weren't bad, like your pilots and your
flying js and things like that. Right, those were fine
because there's they're well lit and there were known areas
where you could go and be safe. But the rest
stops that weren't well lit or whatever. He said, those
places were nightmares. Like it was like, he said, ghoulish
at times. Oh yeah, South Bervard County. Okay, very good.
Speaker 5 (01:41:12):
Yeah, yeah, it's just shout to Palm Bay right by
ninety five. So they have a truck stop there and
that's apparently you know where.
Speaker 1 (01:41:20):
This So maybe it was like the Crown happened carjacked
or something and then held a gunpoint and made to
drive back north with this load of cars, or they
drove him back north. It's like they went to where
he came from.
Speaker 5 (01:41:30):
Right, he came from Georgia, was on his way to Miami,
what maybe halfway.
Speaker 3 (01:41:33):
There, yeah, exactly, the halfway point.
Speaker 1 (01:41:35):
Yeah, and then like I said, if he stopped at that,
if he stopped at a rest stop or one of
those places, he could have been carjacked there, yeah, and
then held and then made to drive, you know, held
a gunpoint and made to drive all the way back.
And then once he got back to where they were going,
you know, they they did their thing and then stole
some cars.
Speaker 3 (01:41:50):
Crazy, man, it is very crazy. I remember my dad
talking about one of the things you had to worry
about was in your sleeper cab. You know, you'd have
your vents open, but you'd have to worry about people
bringing in like noxious you know, things that would make
you knock you out so they could get inside of
your truck.
Speaker 1 (01:42:07):
Well I never heard that one. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:42:08):
So he said, even you know, sleeping at rest stops
and he had to be real careful. It's like you
always had to keep your head on a swivel, even
when you aren't driving the rig.
Speaker 1 (01:42:16):
And it's not a truck stop, it was just a
rest area, exactly. And that's exactly my dad said that
there was one by Disney that is now actually not
there anymore. They shut it down because of the all
the illegal activity. Man, he used to tell me he
drove for Southland Corporation for many years, and that's a
those are the people who distribute to seven Eleven's right,
and I believe Crystal Burgers and other places as well,
but primarily seven eleven. And he drove as a team
(01:42:39):
because they would drive, you know, long distances. So he
had a guy that was with him and and he
told me that they would stop at some of these
rest stops and you would pull off and there would
be it would be poorly lit, and he said it
would it would be scary just to get out and
go to the restroom. You know what a tire knocker is, Yeah,
it was like it's a it's jack. Do you know
where that is? Now? So it's a dowl like a
(01:42:59):
piece of wo like a like a section of a broomstick.
But at the end of it, it's got about a
three or four inch sleeve of solid iron. Uh, and
it was it was attached to that. I guess you
would you would hit your tires to make sure they
were sealed up or whatever the case may be. They
called it a tire knocker, and he would only go
to the bathroom if he had that. He carried his
gun for a while. But you can't do that in Florida.
(01:43:20):
As a truck driver. You cannot arm yourself in your cab.
I don't believe it, really. I don't think you can. Buddy.
It may be a corporation thing, but I think I
would say that, Yeah, it seems odd that Florida would
restrict yeah, one hundred percent. But he you know, but
he knew it was against Southland's policies for sure. That
he could not seem like he had a little twenty
five automatic he actually carried behind his wallet because it
(01:43:42):
was a looked like a little it looked like a
little cap gun. It was a little semi automatic pistol,
but he would keep it behind his wallet, so when
we had to go in and take a shower or
get anything, he would make sure to have that thing
with him at all times. Because of all the sketchy
people that are around there the transience looking for rides.
You know, a lot lizards looking to do it, they do.
People looking to steal your load, you know, jack your
(01:44:04):
truck or whatever the case may be. And that was
back in like the the eighties, dude, I mean, it
was like the wild West back then.
Speaker 3 (01:44:09):
Well, I'd be very interested to see what kind of
cars he was hauling, because if he was going to Miami,
chances are as probably some expensive exotics. It could have
been some nice creamy maybe Tesla's or Lambos.
Speaker 1 (01:44:18):
May have been targeted, I mean, you know, may have
been targeted. Maybe that may have been a new kind
of way and they think, well, you know, instead of
stealing cars from car lots and taking enrolled in the
dice that way, we'll do it this way. Or do
you think it could have just been someone he passed
on the highway and there, you know, they look at
it and say, hey, there's an idea. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
who knows.
Speaker 5 (01:44:37):
Real quick, while we're talking about traveling, Jody the Uber
driver just sent in this update. Westbound I four starting
in Maitland. The express lanes are closed. Jody was driving
past them just a few minutes ago. All the signs
say express lane closed. That's westbound on I four completely stop,
bumper to bumper.
Speaker 1 (01:44:56):
Yeah, yeah, that things that gotsend. By the way, when
we left here Friday to go down to uh go
down to the Rosen four hour tasting events. Yeah, like
I told them, I said, look, I'm probably gonna get
there around seven thirty or so. My wife got in
that express lane. Do we were there at seven twenty
one and down there dog, Yeah, that's like the Sea
World exit. We hauled ass all right, four oh seven
nine one six one four One. The reason I bring
(01:45:17):
up the missing guy that they found unfortunately the rest
his soul is what states do you believe have the
most missing people? States where people go missing the most?
Where do you think that is? Now? Here's the thing.
They give you an answer. Per population, there are one, two, three,
four five states right now that that they are more
people are missing. But when you do it per capita,
(01:45:37):
there are other states that come in. But what do
you think the five out outside of the per capita
thing are I thought to California. California is one.
Speaker 3 (01:45:46):
Yeah, I'm thinking more like Native American reservations where they
have so Nevada, Nevada.
Speaker 1 (01:45:53):
But you're on the right you're on the right track
with that thought process. Yeah, that's that's not Nevada, but
you're on the right track.
Speaker 3 (01:45:58):
That's a big scourge is what's happening Native reservations than
the amount of women.
Speaker 1 (01:46:02):
So where else would that be? Then?
Speaker 3 (01:46:04):
South Dakota, Arizona, Arizona.
Speaker 1 (01:46:06):
Arizona is one of them, and of course that's where
Nancy Guthrie went missing in Arizona, Texas, Florida, Florida. Yeah, Alaska,
those are the five Alaska, Yeah, those are the five
states where people go missing the most. And it says
when you account for population measuring the rate of people,
it's Alaska, Hawaii, Oklahoma, Arizona, and Tennessee where people go
(01:46:26):
missing the most. And you know, it gets crazy because
like why is why are those states specific to that?
I mean, I know that the three states who read
are the most populous states in America Florida, California, and
Texas I believe are one, two and three when it
comes to population.
Speaker 3 (01:46:40):
Human trafficking, they're easier to ship over the border.
Speaker 1 (01:46:44):
How many people do you think are missing in the
US right now? Or no? Okay, last year? Hold on,
I say last year? How many people do you think
we're reported missing? Wild wild stab.
Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
Two hundred thousand, two hundred and fifty thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:47:03):
You win, five hundred thousand? What five hundred thousand people?
And it says the National Missing Person's Database, which is
operated by the DOJ, says there are twenty six four
hundred three open missing person's cases. Said investigations can expand
for months or even years. I mean, you just talked
about it earlier. They found that dude in the Philippines
after how long?
Speaker 3 (01:47:22):
Yeah, thirty seven years?
Speaker 1 (01:47:23):
Thirty seven years. He wasn't necessarily missing per se, like
he was on the lamp, like he walked out and
haul the ass. And this is on the cusp of
the scientist thing. Did you hear any of that stuff
while you're out?
Speaker 3 (01:47:32):
Oh yeah, the ten scientists.
Speaker 1 (01:47:34):
Yeah, Now the FEDS are on it yet Now it
started out as like a conspiracy theory, and now they're
like the Feds are on trying to figure out what's
going on because a couple of these people, this one
guy specifically worked at the propulsion lab. I believe this
dude walked out of his house with a handgun and
that's it. His boots, his hiking boots and a handgun
and no wallet, no money, no cell phone, no nothing.
(01:47:56):
And the FEDS are on it. And the FEDS are
all of these And if you look at where the
red dots are, where they are oddly a lot in
New Mexico, and you know what happens there. Yeah, cash
hotel isn't gonna find him unless they're working as bar tangers.
Speaker 3 (01:48:11):
Well maybe it'll help of you just point which direction
to look.
Speaker 1 (01:48:14):
Yeah yeah, and uh a, by the way, a little
update on my thing is uh yeah, I downloaded the
paperwork to fill that out so I can I can
try to get some information about my cousin who's been
missing now for a year. We don't know where he is.
We did get some information. I don't know if you
have to hear this yet. No, we know for a
fact that he was discharged from an Orlando hospital in
mid March of last year. We don't but that's where
(01:48:36):
they stop and let me tell you something.
Speaker 3 (01:48:37):
Man, there was some sketchy stuff said about what he
did after that apparently did not happen.
Speaker 1 (01:48:42):
Yeah, we don't know about any of them because you know,
there's other stories we're getting from other family members that
aren't really adding up. So once he was discharged, Now
the hospital did tell us this. They said that they
would not discharge him unless he was in like good hands.
In other words, if if they wouldn't because of his situation,
he's disabled. For people who don't know, when a're hearing
this for the first time, you know, they wouldn't just
discharge him and say good luck. You know, we wish
(01:49:04):
the best. Like when you get out of prison, they
give you ten dollars and put you outside of the
fence and that's it's on you, right right. It's not
like that. They have to make sure that when you're
discharge you are going to a safe spot. And I
asked the guy, I said, well, can you give us
Can you give me an indication of where that may be?
He goes no clue. I said, how many facilities do
you guys work with in the state of Florida where
(01:49:24):
if a situation like I was explaining to him, where
would it go from there? And he says, man, there's
tons of places. I mean, it could be it could
be twenty different places where that we work with all
throughout the state where if we have somebody that's kind
of indigent, that doesn't have anywhere to go and they
can't take care of themselves, that that's where they go.
But he's not on a list of any of those
people in the state of Florida.
Speaker 3 (01:49:43):
Have you considered hiring a private investigator?
Speaker 1 (01:49:45):
So we're going to do it this way first, and
that's what we're doing next. So I've filling out this
paperwork and I'm hoping that because of you know, what
I do here and my connection with him at the
from the family, that they will give us some information
so I can find out what's going on. How frustrating
it is, because here's the thing, it is unbelievably frustrating.
I mean, your brother, Gary, your brother has adults that
(01:50:07):
can't take care of themselves. Yes, imagine if one of
those guys went missing. I mean, you know, outside now
he's their caretaker. But but my cousin had no caretaker.
He was a grown he's a grown man. He's a
fifty three year old man. He's just disabled, and he
has the mentality probably a thirteen or fourteen year old kid,
you know, and he's completely aware. Last time I saw him,
he was completely aware. I saw him as his father's
funeral a couple of years ago, and he was completely
(01:50:29):
able to talk and communicate, no problem whatsoever. He was
married at one point, right, and he had a good
place to live in the whole nine yards, and then
his wife left him and he had to go stay
with his brother, and his brother's kind of sketch and
then that's where the fund started. So hopefully I can
fill his paperwork out and get some information. I don't know, though, Man,
they were so tight lipped. I mean, it's good that
(01:50:50):
they're like that, but yeah, because yeah, you don't want
the general public getting info like that. But man, when
it's somebody you know is looking to help and care,
that's really frustrating.
Speaker 3 (01:50:58):
Oh yeah, because it's like, I'm asking you these questions
not because I want to delve into his personal information,
but because I'm trying to find where he is.
Speaker 1 (01:51:05):
You're not going to tell you something else too. To
his credit, he was a really nice guy named Kevin
who helped me out. Thanks keV, if you're listening, I
appreciate that. But and you could hear the frustration in
his voice, like he wanted to give me information so
that I could he could help me out, which leads
me to believe that he has some So once we
find out where he was discharged to, we'll go from there.
And you know, he's on disability. You can't even find
(01:51:25):
out if his disability checks are being spent or where
they're being sent to because I don't have privy to that.
Crazy dude.
Speaker 3 (01:51:31):
Crazy power of attorney is so important and don't know
until you need it, and you don't have it, but
you never saw the need for it.
Speaker 1 (01:51:38):
And you know, and you know, going back to Jack's mom,
when his mother passed got rest her soul. You know,
one of the big important things with Jack and his
family was that they got that power of attorney so
they were able to kind of handle those things at
the end of her life and didn't have to worry
about any of those legal hurdles.
Speaker 3 (01:51:51):
It was crazy, But now I was going to say,
that's that's something that I didn't realize that my brother
and former sister in law needed to have with their kids.
It's because once my nephews turn eighteen, their parents normally
would not be allowed to go into doctor's appointments with them.
But without their parents going into those appointments, you know. So,
(01:52:11):
But you never think as a parent that you would
have to get power of attorney. Right once someone turns
of legal age, you don't legally have a right to
any of their personal information anymore, even if they're not
able to take care of themselves.
Speaker 1 (01:52:24):
And it's not automatic or assumed, even if they're severely
disabled and it's completely obvious that they can't take care
of themselves, once they're eighteen years old, the state does
not look at them like that.
Speaker 16 (01:52:34):
They do.
Speaker 1 (01:52:35):
You still have to go through the legal process of
doing that so that you can take care of them
and their needs, you know, just for life in general.
How else could you do it? So crazy man? All right?
Four oh seven? Nine, God, dog man, this off thing
is still kind of lingering a little bit, and I
want to talk a lot. It kind of comes back
real quick. Sorry about that, guys.
Speaker 3 (01:52:52):
Oh no, you're going to be here Tomorrow's still going
to be here Friday text us and seven.
Speaker 1 (01:52:59):
That's right, Rich, is your five o'clock key, or you
got a few minutes to get over to real radio
out of him and send it on for your chance
in a thousand bucks back with trivia lit him up.
Speaker 2 (01:53:06):
It's time Robotstone overshare. We do perhaps a little too often.
Real Radio one oh four point one guaranteed human.
Speaker 1 (01:53:16):
This is Doug Gottlieb. Here's what's trending from the iHeart Sports.
Speaker 9 (01:53:19):
Network presented by Iheartadvertising dot Com.
Speaker 1 (01:53:22):
No Magic'll trying to close off their playoff series tonight
in Detroit. Ornando Forward Bronze Wagner may not play it
though he's got a gas straight Jimmy. When I was young,
my dad taught me a really valuable lesson in the
(01:53:42):
grocery store. Mom sent us out to go buy groceries.
We got everything wrong, ever got asked to go buy groceries. Ever, again,
a valuable lesson. Runner. That's funny. Pot's always got it, brother.
That study has fallen on every once in a while.
Speaker 12 (01:53:59):
My wife say you stop and get something for dinner
on the way home, and I will, and I'll grab
the most beautiful of rivis, the most beautiful lobster. Of course,
gotta go buy ace, get my favorite lump charco for
the egg. Yeah, it's about Thomas all sending down my
one meal. It's probably what she spends for the rest
of the week on it.
Speaker 1 (01:54:19):
Hey, Jev, welcome back and congratulations. You have the glow
of a wonderful, beautiful woman. How about that very sweet
of them?
Speaker 3 (01:54:31):
Aw, that's really just the glow of a hot flash.
Speaker 1 (01:54:34):
Yeah, I appreciate it all right, Welcome back to the
Jim Colberg Show. Real Radio one four point one. Got
about ten minutes for the keyword rich shar I se
h got a real radio dot at them and send
that away for your chance at one thousand bucks. I'm back,
I'm Jim. There's dead Hello. Jack is here as well,
and he has the Jackie sack? What is in it?
My friend? Did you reminder what she has to say?
Speaker 12 (01:54:56):
Here?
Speaker 1 (01:54:56):
M Yeah, that was a nightmare. Oh really telling you
what watching people get told to say chug a chugga
and they don't have any reason.
Speaker 5 (01:55:04):
Or because of course we're not doing it off the air,
We're doing it in the.
Speaker 1 (01:55:07):
Moment exactly because we always forget, always forget all aboard.
Shot at hugga to two cl clickety clatch. We honest
rehearse the show.
Speaker 6 (01:55:17):
All right, here we go. We have a couple of prizes.
The winner gets to choose.
Speaker 5 (01:55:22):
It might be a pair of tickets to the Orlando
Pride versus the Washington Spirit at Terncos Stadium, May second.
Speaker 1 (01:55:28):
That's this Saturday.
Speaker 5 (01:55:29):
If you've never been to a Pride match, it's so
much fun and then it's it's a great time. I
highly recommend also in the Jackie Sack a pair of
tickets to the Dave Matthews Band at the Mid Florida
Credit Union Amphitheater May twenty six. Those are the two
choices in the Jackie Sack today. So back to you
at Knickity Connect.
Speaker 1 (01:55:50):
Thank you a young lady. Oh, I want to do three,
four or five? Well let's go three. Three is good.
That's Tony, Tony, how you doing. I'm doing great. Congratulations
dead by the way, sorry getting it out of mine.
Thank you, thank you.
Speaker 3 (01:56:05):
I appreciate that.
Speaker 1 (01:56:05):
I welcome to do that. Tony want to play a little
game with his buddy, Yes, sir, let's do it show
all right, Tony, this is a real easy game. Bo
I's got a question heare for? You have four answers.
One of these answers is not true. What but if
you can find that one, I'll send you over to
c Jack and maybe some Dave Matthews tickets. That sounds fun.
You ready to go, buddy? Yes, herey go, buddy. On
(01:56:28):
this day in nineteen thirty three, country music icon part
of the Outlaws of Country music, Marijua marijuana advocate. There
you go.
Speaker 3 (01:56:38):
I want to smoke out with him so bad.
Speaker 1 (01:56:40):
Once famously the irs how much money?
Speaker 3 (01:56:43):
Two million dollars?
Speaker 1 (01:56:44):
Oh, yeah, it was a lot. I want you. I
want you to think about this number and think about
the year that he was hit with this. I'll go
ten million, thirty two million dollars. Wow. In the eighties. Ooh, yikes, alive.
I don't know they I don't know what they adjusted
for that, but that is a bun. He actually made
an album called help Me Pay Off My Taxes? Yeah, yeah,
all right, but we're talking about here goes. Here are
(01:57:05):
three fun facts about Willy and one redheaded stranger of
a lie. Buddy, we're talking about Willy Nelson, which one
of these is not true. Number One. Before his country
music startdom, he used to sell bibles door to door.
Number two, his biggest hit, on the Road Again was
written on an airplane barf bag. Number three he was
raised by his aunt and uncle because his parents abandoned
him and his sister when they were kids. Or lastly,
(01:57:28):
he holds a second degree black belt in taekwondo. Which
of those is a lie? I'm gonna see those are
all funny, but say number four, please, no, that's absolutely true.
He does hold a second degree about black belt in taekwondo.
Here's a crazy thing. He actually holds a multi level
(01:57:49):
black belt in a in a kung fu that I
can't even I can't even like say, but he's been
doing this since a kid. Wow about Willie Nelson. I
never knew he was a martial arts guys, but he's
been doing it for years, which is crazy. All right? One?
Two four or five four? Four sounds good to me.
Let's go with William William. How you doing, buddy?
Speaker 3 (01:58:10):
How William?
Speaker 17 (01:58:12):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:58:12):
Better to hear your voice? All right? Very good, buddy?
All right, we're talking about Willie Nelson. Which one of
these isn't true? Number one. Before his country music started him,
he used to sell bibles door to door. Number two,
his biggest hit, on the Road Again, was written on
an airplane barf bag.
Speaker 18 (01:58:27):
Or.
Speaker 1 (01:58:27):
Lastly, he was raised by his aunt and uncle because
his parents abandoned him and his sister when they were kids.
Mother and father always being such great, huge Willie fans.
That's gonna be the Bible. No, that's absolutely true. He's
not only did he sell bibles door to door, he
actually made saddles at one point, and he sold something else.
(01:58:48):
I can't remember what it is, but yeah, he went through.
He was a DJ at one point. He's just like
a radio DJ for one point, yeah, all right, one,
two or five.
Speaker 3 (01:58:56):
His life is a country song.
Speaker 1 (01:58:58):
Let's go to it sounds good to me. Let's go
with ja Jake. How you doing, buddy? Hey, how's it
going today? Good brother? You got a fifty to fifty
shot here we're talking about the legend Willie Nelson. Which
one of these is not true. His biggest hit on
the road again was written on an airplane. Barf bag.
Or he was raised by his aunt and uncle because
his parents abandoned him and his sister when they were kids.
Oh fifty fifty, let's go number two. You're a winnerbody.
(01:59:21):
That's the way. It was his grandparents that raised him,
but his parents did abandon him and his sister. They
could not afford to raise them in Texas. They got
caught up in that whole thing back in the day
and could not afford them, so they literally abandoned them.
So their grandparents raised both of them. Oh, wow, you're
a win. Everybody want to put you on the whole
Thanks for playing. I appreciate that. There he is, Jake
(01:59:43):
is your winner. He did write his biggest hit on
the road again on a paper airplane or on a
on an airplane barf bag. And it's actually kind of
a cool story. It seems fitting. Yeah, it does. Yeh,
being on the road again. He was on an airplane,
was Sidney Pollock, oh, and another person, and they were
actually headed to a movie set. Because he was a
he was part of this movie. They asked him to
(02:00:05):
write a song that would appear in a movie. He said, well,
what's the movie. He goes, well, the movie's about touring
a tory musician. He goes, okay, pulls out the bar bag,
pulls out a pen and says, on the road again,
just can't wait to get on the road again. And
there you go. He wrote one of the biggest country
music hits of all time while riding an airplane on
an instant request from a legendary Hollywood director. Ah wow.
(02:00:27):
Here's some other things you may not know about Willy
before we get to the top of the hour, Ross
Paget calling it at six o'clock lesson what's happening with
good Sauce tonight? The famous D twenty nine Martin guitar
that he's played for years is named Trigger after Roy
Rogers Horse. Willy's first band was a what kind of band?
And it was not country music you could roll? Oh, gospel?
(02:00:49):
Think as far away as what you could think he
would ever do rap? Polka? Oh, his first band was
a polka band called Bohemian Polka. There you go, oh,
out the barrel. He wrote the song Crazy for Patsy Klein. Really,
that's his song, the song that made her famous, absolutely
(02:01:10):
made her entire career, and one of those same songs
of all time. Still he wrote that for her. He
wrote his first song at seven years old. Oh wow.
He and he learned how to play guitar. He played
amazing grace in front of his church, I believe at
ten years old.
Speaker 3 (02:01:22):
Does those are the stories that make you wonder? Do
the parents ever show back up again?
Speaker 1 (02:01:26):
No, he doesn't say that they ever did. I did
a little bit of research today.
Speaker 3 (02:01:29):
Like, hey honey, we really missed you.
Speaker 1 (02:01:31):
I think they were kind of a strange for a while.
And then last year, what do you think his middle
name is? And again bo Jangle said, well, I was
gonna go Bartholomew. Think of maybe biblical, proper English, maybe
a little bit.
Speaker 3 (02:01:45):
So that would make him James William William.
Speaker 1 (02:01:51):
No William, all right, it's no, No, it's a His
first name is really Willie, It's Willie Hugh Nelson. His
middle name is Hugh Hugh.
Speaker 7 (02:02:02):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (02:02:03):
That crazy. Still one of the most interesting guys in music,
and uh on his birthday today, if you want to
go and do a little research, just go to uh
ai and type in you know, tell me, tell me
about Willie Nelson and it'll spit out a really neat
little paragraph for you. And I got to tell you,
this guy's had a really interesting life.
Speaker 3 (02:02:18):
Still one of my favorite cameos ever and half Baked.
Speaker 1 (02:02:21):
I gotta tell you, I think maybe I was trying
to think today who would have more impact, Whose death
would have more impact, Willy's or Dolly's Dolly Dolly. Do
you think Dolly for sure? Because Willie's kind of a
cult guy. But I got to tell you, I think
that his passing is going to be a gigantic moment
in country. Oh yeah, without a doubt. But she's just
(02:02:41):
she's an America's favorite person. You know, she's an America's favorite person.
We talked about that when you were ountd Oh yeah, yeah,
she was. Were you really yeah? I can't remember so
long that time. You're here with seventy one. Her name
is dab all right, four oh seven nine one six
four one. Get a fresh keyword for you right now,
Ross Paget. On the other side of this, you.
Speaker 2 (02:02:59):
Choose to win a great and in your hand is
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Speaker 3 (02:03:04):
Mills Air from the Klosman Law Traffic Center. Car crash
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Speaker 9 (02:03:11):
Still lots of traffic problems out there this afternoon. Accident
Oscio of Parkway. You's found at Orange Avenue.
Speaker 5 (02:03:17):
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Speaker 1 (02:03:29):
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Speaker 2 (02:03:33):
We now returned to the Jim Colbert Show Show.
Speaker 1 (02:03:46):
Welcome back to the Jim Coper Show. Roll Radio one
oh four point one cash. By the way, cash is
your six o'clock keyword. That's C A s H. Go
to real Radio dot FM and send that away for
your chance at one thousand dollars cash. Guys, that's the word.
Go it. Welcome back. I'm Jim, there's Deb. Hello, Jack
is here as well. You openly in every single Wednesday
(02:04:06):
around this time when you invite this gentleman to come
in and tell us what's happening on a show tonight.
The show is called Good Sauce with Ross and Joel,
and that, my friends, is mister Ross Pageant.
Speaker 19 (02:04:14):
Yeah, first ball, let's call.
Speaker 7 (02:04:19):
Let's just straight talk about Dev's wedding real fast. We
were all there. By the way, Deb definitely definitely left
the card at the house, So I just want to
clear things up. The gift is coming, okay, all right,
I just I don't want any rumors starting. I want
more wedding invites.
Speaker 1 (02:04:38):
I'm dropping.
Speaker 7 (02:04:38):
I'm down to drop some cash on weddings. But it
was one of those you got it right. I thought
you had it, and then we showed up to your
wedding empty handed, and I am uncomfortable in my own skin.
Speaker 3 (02:04:49):
You did not show up empty empty handed, because you
both came and celebrated with us. So that's the gift
and real fast Jim.
Speaker 7 (02:04:57):
We were in that church and I was trying to
sing the hymns.
Speaker 1 (02:05:02):
Oh, I totally forgot about that.
Speaker 7 (02:05:06):
Listen at thirty five. I thought hymns was a male supplement,
and now here I am at Dev's wedding, figuring out
and finding out all at the same time that when
you sing a hymn, you jumping all over the page.
Speaker 1 (02:05:21):
Yeah. Yeah, it took me years to figure that. And
I grew up at a church. How the hymn goes
from You know, it's like it's got the words, all
the stanzas, but you actually go one and you go down,
then you go down and then you come back up.
You go second, second, second, third, third, third, four, four fourth.
But if you don't know that, and you're you think
they just started a song and then went to another song.
Speaker 7 (02:05:40):
Dude, the amount of dev I'm sorry, but if you
heard me at the start of each song, go and
dowsh Okay, we're moving on. That's okay. Because I wanted
to be part of it. I was like, I want
to sing some hymns, but I didn't know that there
was an actual like language within the book. So amazing,
(02:06:03):
So happy you look glowing. You are definitely married. I
can tell because that smile, baby girl's raw.
Speaker 1 (02:06:09):
So much fun. Dude, we had a blast, did we not.
I mean we were at the table with the Glenn
and Penny and uh and Darryl from Paul Affection, uh,
Ross and Olivia, myself and my wife uh and it
was a blast. We had a really good time.
Speaker 7 (02:06:22):
Loved it. Just love weddings. And anybody who's like, oh
I hate weddings, I'm like, that's such a bad look
for you, all right, Yeah, there are there are people
who will die on that hill, like I can't stand weddings,
And I'm like, I don't think you will ever find
a partner with that sentence falling out of your face.
(02:06:43):
You know.
Speaker 1 (02:06:44):
My favorite thing about weddings is a little selfishly, what
I love dressing up, Like what am my? I love
wearing nice clothes and I rarely get an opportunity to
wear like a suit or something nice, and I love
dressing up. Went shopping that morning to find something cool
to wear. Love And by the way, you guys look great, Ross,
you and Olivia looked.
Speaker 3 (02:07:02):
At me, Mas you guys. Did all of you guys
feel like?
Speaker 7 (02:07:06):
I feel like a refurbished kitchen every time I show
up to a wedding because like, I can dress up
pretty well. You know, I got the slender Man body frame.
That's like, oh, that's you look sharp.
Speaker 1 (02:07:19):
And by the way, didn't we kind of come to
an agreement that we we shouldn't wear purple because we
kind of heard through the grape vine that purple was
gonna be at least one of the colors in the
wedding party. And that was a giant no no. And
then at my table, literally everybody except myself in glenn
Or wearing purple. Yeah, my wife was rock and purple.
Speaker 7 (02:07:38):
It looks outfit not the movie, I.
Speaker 1 (02:07:41):
Mean, simply amazing, but purple, dress, jacket, purple. Naomi's hair
is purple, her outfit was purple. Everybody was purple.
Speaker 3 (02:07:48):
It turns out I show up in a blue dress.
About every color in the rainbow.
Speaker 1 (02:07:51):
All right, h Ross hosts good joelts night at eight
o'clock and he calls to tell us what's happening on
the show. So, what's going on? Is this even nobody?
Speaker 7 (02:07:59):
Well, oh, you know, I always love telling you guys
whenever I have to call Jack to make sure that
the episode is a cream light jo Goo, I called
Jack And it is really good because I almost it
almost feels like we got the scoop. We have a
(02:08:19):
very special guest, the one, the only, Sabrina Ambro's awesome.
Uh So she is, you know, semi at least for
an hour tonight back on the station and she is
with us on good Sauce and boy if if you
just want to be reminded of why some people got,
you know, in their feelings when saying goodbye to Sabrina
(02:08:41):
and being there full time and all of that. Tonight,
it's a great episode. She's so funny. She makes it
look so easy. It's effortless for her. She has a great,
just unique personality that you will never hear the same
take from another person anybody I'll ever meet.
Speaker 1 (02:08:57):
I can't agree more when she when she sits in
with is out and she's able to do that. It
is one of the easiest co hosts I have to
transition to because she understands the gig. And I gotta
tell you something else. When she produces the show, like
when Jack is out and Deb can vouch for this.
Literally for the first hour, every break, she'll come in,
even after doing it all those years, even after us
(02:09:18):
doing it all these years, she will come in during
the breaks, Hey, am I doing everything right? Like everything
we're doing? Is there anything else I can do for you?
She is like so accommodating to the product. It really
is an amazing thing. She's great and you know what
going through.
Speaker 7 (02:09:34):
You know, we now have that unfortunately in common, having
that event. And but I will say this, she's way
funnier at this event than I am. The fact, the
fact that she was this funny on tonight's episode because
we do talk about it, but we also talk about
the craziest I don't know episode of America, the hit
(02:09:56):
series that has dropped in a wild gym. I'm sure
you talked a little bit about the latest and I am.
It's insane to say latest assassination attempt.
Speaker 1 (02:10:07):
Yeah, yeah, and I am.
Speaker 7 (02:10:10):
Here we talk at lengths about the Kahonings, the the Testes,
the balls of the man who just still sat at
the same table and finished his salad as the entire thing.
Speaker 1 (02:10:23):
Was happening, or the reporters grabbing bottles of wine, or how.
Speaker 7 (02:10:29):
About the fact that there was a literal magic trick happening.
Speaker 1 (02:10:34):
Yeah, yeah, the guy is it, Oz Pearlman. He's entertaining
the very famous mentalist was actually doing a trick with
Trump right there when the entire thing happened. And the
other thing too. It's kind of funny, and that's getting
a lot of a lot of heat right now, is
when they whisked RFK away, his wife was way behind,
like they didn't even think, they didn't even like consider her.
(02:10:54):
She was just kind of trying to catch up to
them whisking RFK away. It was pretty funny because.
Speaker 7 (02:10:59):
It's absolutely worth talking about and it feels and I'm
not trying to make light of it. I'm just pointing
out how it is and was one of the most
insane pages in American history. I think you're ever gonna
come across in a chapter if this was a book
you have, and you could tell I didn't even know
his name was Oz, Dude. I smoked so much I
thought his name was ounce so. But if you look
(02:11:24):
at the clip of when he's doing the trick and
all of a sudden, a bang happens, I can tell
that mentalist is a total professional because he immediately knows
something is wrong. And if you look into the glimmer
of that mentalist eye, you can tell.
Speaker 1 (02:11:40):
But wait, the trick yeah so hard.
Speaker 7 (02:11:45):
He still was like, oh no, I'm not Oh God,
what's happening. But you could tell the performer going I'm
not gonna finish. There's there's so many other things. Yeah,
the wine stealing just it was so insane and it's
definitely worth talking about. And also, Jim, I got to
hold you accountable. You got a bad look on you.
Speaker 1 (02:12:04):
Oh what happened?
Speaker 7 (02:12:09):
There is no way you can still not like Lebron
James right now?
Speaker 1 (02:12:16):
Why what happened? I didn't hear anything about Lebron. I'm
not a big Lebron fan.
Speaker 7 (02:12:20):
It's time to at least put your Lebron hater jersey
away for the next month.
Speaker 1 (02:12:27):
Okay, what do he do just to deserve my respect?
Speaker 7 (02:12:31):
First of all, he's playing playoff basketball at the young
age of sixty seven.
Speaker 1 (02:12:35):
Yeah, he's like forty one or something, right, he's forty one.
Speaker 7 (02:12:38):
He's playing with his son. This is as Disney movie
pick sar as it gets. His son is on the
same team. He just threw it to Adau, to his son,
and it really needs It's one of those things where
you're like, man, we wish we would have given flowers
when they were still around. There has never been a
more opportune time than to give Lebron James playing playoff basketball,
(02:13:04):
leading a team about to beat the Kevin Durant laed
Houston Rockets. I've never seen humans do this before, not
at that age, not with that career. Where I'm going
with this is science needs to step up. We need
Lebron and Tom Brady to have a kid. We need
to We needn't make this happen.
Speaker 1 (02:13:26):
I do.
Speaker 5 (02:13:27):
I don't know about the kid, but I think you
can get your wish. I think Jim would give Lebron
his flowers.
Speaker 1 (02:13:33):
Lebron James single greatest athlete of all time. There you go,
oh yeah, you go look at that.
Speaker 7 (02:13:41):
You look at that.
Speaker 1 (02:13:42):
And my all time team in the NBA probably be
my fourth pick baby, what oh yeah, Kareem Larry Bird,
Michael Jordan before I'm probably even Kobe before.
Speaker 7 (02:13:54):
But yeah, no, I mean this, this is not the
time to share that opinion. This is my least favorite
thing about you. This is the millennial b ball deity
and he's playing at forty one like this is the
last dance. This is the last dance of last dances.
Speaker 1 (02:14:13):
Yeah. I respect his ability in his talent, there's no question.
Just him as a person a little shaky for me.
That's all he just does. Ah, he just doesn't have
the grit of the dudes in the day that I
like watching mask But what do you love about Lebron's body?
I just love how it looks now. It makes me
feel different things that my wife would hate. For soul mates,
we're lovers trapped in different bodies. You know that whip
(02:14:34):
Cream Varsity of Blue scene, That's what I'm looking for.
I delivered that quite well. That that was a theater Thursday,
Was it not?
Speaker 18 (02:14:42):
Well?
Speaker 7 (02:14:43):
That was done very well? And another big topic other
than Sabrina and her eventful month, other than Lebron, other
than American history happening right in front of us as
a guy finishes a salad, as he tells the rest
of the world, it's because I got a bad back.
It's all so, jim, I saw a duck have sex.
(02:15:04):
Oh this last week in the wild.
Speaker 1 (02:15:07):
You need to prepare yourself for that. I wasn't were
they in were they in water?
Speaker 7 (02:15:14):
No pavement? Theme park pavement?
Speaker 1 (02:15:17):
Oh? Wow? Do you know what they do? Right? The
male duck jumps on top of the female duck and
uh with his beak, yeah, grabs the back of her
neck and shoves it into the ground. They're having sex
on water. It literally looks like he's trying to drown
her while he's doing it. Is that what you experienced?
Speaker 7 (02:15:35):
It was the This is also the worst time to
play this music because it was the most non romantic
thing I have ever seen out of the animal kingdom.
And I've seen myself in a mirror naked like this is.
I wasn't ready. I wasn't ready for ducks to I
thought we had to intervene. I thought we had to
save a duck for a second.
Speaker 1 (02:15:56):
It was so by when we owned ducks, we had
like three or four of them at one point when
I lived out in Genie even we owned them. My
wife when when that mail duck would be doing mail
duck stuff, my wife would kick his ass you would
slap him stop and like it's natural. I was like,
maybe they're doing this the way it's what the hell
they do it? And she's like yeah, but it's so violent.
I'm like, yeah, we should try.
Speaker 16 (02:16:17):
You know.
Speaker 7 (02:16:17):
What was also really weird, Jim, is that it wasn't
just two ducks. There was a third duck involved. What
was the third duck doing just sitting back watching it?
Was a cuck duck if we had a cup duck situation.
All so much more happening here at Good Sauce with
Ross and Joel with Sabrina Ambro. If you miss her, boy,
do I have an appetizer of an audio program for.
Speaker 1 (02:16:38):
You tonight eight o'clock right after Tom and Dan. You
can check that out and if you miss it tonight,
don't forget. You can grab it on the iHeartRadio app
or you can go to Rosscomedy dot com and check
it out there as well. What what what?
Speaker 7 (02:16:49):
No, My dog is losing it right now and I
think a mailman and I.
Speaker 1 (02:16:53):
Don't know hear it? All right, we'll see you tomorrow then,
Buddy nine four one text seven seven zero three one cash.
By the way, that is your six o'clock keyword c ash.
Go to Real Radio dot FM and send that away
for your chance at one thousand dollars. Back in a
second with more of the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 2 (02:17:13):
Coming up tonight on Reel Radio at seven, It's a
Corporate Time with Tom and Dan, brought to you by
my eternal Vitality dot Com in Modern Plumbing Industry. At
nine pm, It's Real Lesson with comedians James mcdell and
Ken and Real Music starts tonight at ten on Reel
Radio one oh four point one.
Speaker 1 (02:17:29):
From the ODU dot Com Traffic Center, ODU dot com
the only business software you'll need.
Speaker 9 (02:17:34):
We're still working on an accident walking the left lane
Aloma Avenue eastbound before Chapman Road, tapping the brigside for
westbound between one ninety two and twenty seven and some
road construction.
Speaker 21 (02:17:47):
Pull them for dal to the voice we love on
the afternoon Dial. She has now walked the aisle with
a permanent smile. From tiny miniatures on a little bitty
shelf to a heart for animals that could make you
melt as well. Here's the Chris, the one who lit
your floor with a brand new chapter. I do so
proclaim maybe your old fashioned, be cold and your blunt,
be sweet, and life with your husband a soulful retreat
(02:18:08):
to the queen of real radio, fierce and crue.
Speaker 2 (02:18:11):
Congrats Chris and Deb.
Speaker 1 (02:18:13):
We all love you, big tea out yo, sweet of
you buddy.
Speaker 21 (02:18:18):
Oh and also just wanted to say more. Not only
did that take me two and a half days to write, Jimmy,
this will make you feel better? That took me about
thirty six times to record that thing proper with you,
Oh my god, when you're.
Speaker 1 (02:18:29):
With your wife, even when you're with your wife. There
you go, buddy, Good job, big tea, Thank you, big
t Yeah, good dude, man, good dude. All right for
our seven nine four one text us seven seven zero
three one cash. By the way, is your six o'clock keyword?
That's c A s h. You got a real radio
Dota fim and send that away for your chance at
one thousand dollars. Spoking back on Jim, there's Deb hello
Tay as well.
Speaker 3 (02:18:49):
What are you yessing I can finally get back to
my miniatures.
Speaker 1 (02:18:53):
Now, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:18:55):
You know, I've got a couple of months before I
got to start planning SuDS, pups and plants.
Speaker 1 (02:18:59):
Four So oh, you mean with that without the wedding,
go back to your hobby exactly exactly. And then we
have our big event coming up in June that which
is the Chi Cruise, which we haven't really talked about
because you haven't been, we haven't been together or anything.
But we gotta we gotta work out some fun stuff
with that thing. It's gonna be a blast.
Speaker 5 (02:19:17):
We do because also remember and even for everyone going,
the request is seventies or early eighties at tie.
Speaker 1 (02:19:25):
That's right. Yeah, so you kind of want to fit
that theme and look, man, do it. I know a
lot of people out there are like, I'm not addressing up.
I don't remember what that's normally what I say that
normally man, I had it in my closet. I may
go as Huggie Bear. I don't know. I mean, look,
I told my wife said, we are stretching out this thing. Man,
We're gonna go crazy. Uh So we've already been like
(02:19:49):
looking for thrift store stuff, trying to find some really
good seventies like leisure suits and stuff like that. I
don't know what I'm gonna do yet. Have you have
you thought about it? Maybe I was gonna do eighties
with a leg warm and the neon colors.
Speaker 3 (02:20:01):
And shoes and shoulder pads.
Speaker 1 (02:20:03):
Where would you even buy that stuff?
Speaker 3 (02:20:05):
Don't know, that's the problem. Seventies and eighties. That gets
kind of expensive even at thrift stores.
Speaker 1 (02:20:09):
You're right, it does. And you know, Jack knows about
this place that was in the Ovido Mall for a while.
What was that place called Jacket Costume Shop.
Speaker 5 (02:20:17):
Penguin or Penguin Theater, But it was a costume shop
associated with the theater that they had growing on the right.
Speaker 1 (02:20:24):
So you could go in there and you could buy
old costumes from like theme parts even and they have
like for place and they would sell them this place,
and you'd go in and you'd find something. But it
was like retro stuff you could find or rent, I
think even at one point, uh for you know, for
events just like this.
Speaker 3 (02:20:38):
That's what I'll probably take a look at me getting
something to rent.
Speaker 1 (02:20:41):
I don't know if they're still open or not. And
and again, even when you go to thrift stores, finding
stuff from the eighties and seventies is really difficult because
not nobody buys that stuff, like I mean, it's it's
comical stuff. So what you really have to do. I'll
give your heads consignment chops or a place where you
can do that, because those guys will still carry a
bunch of retro stuff and they're not trying to sell
(02:21:02):
like Goodwill is trying to get stuff they can sell
and make money. So you know, goofy stuff from the eighties.
Anybody buying that except for stuff like we're doing right,
and that's not enough volume for them to justify stocking it.
But it's not easy to find. You have to go
on line.
Speaker 3 (02:21:15):
That's a good point.
Speaker 1 (02:21:16):
You may have to go online. There you go, there
are a number of places online and actually Tory can
give you some heads up on that because I think
she knows some of those. Okay, and uh and we'll
probably be visiting as well to kind of find something
that is a good idea, because that's been the one
part of this event I've been stressing out about it.
Speaker 3 (02:21:32):
Where to get the outfits that isn't going to cost
an arm in a lag Yeah, yeah, because seventies and
eighties stuff, you know that's pretty vintage. Now, Yeah, it's
hard of her.
Speaker 1 (02:21:40):
Look, man, let me tell you that hurt If you
go up to there's a place in off of carin
not far from red Light. Red Light. There's a little
strip center there and there's a couple of consignment shops
and you go in there and they've got, you know,
they have a bunch of different stuff, but they also
have some uh some clothing and whatnot. And you go
to that rack and you see some of those tea shirts,
(02:22:00):
those vintage T shirts. Right, let me tell you something,
if you want to have the gasp of your lifetime,
you go in there and you find like a I
think it was a Limp Biscuit T shirt from like
ninety eight or two or whatever. They broke whatever it was,
and that thing was like seventy five dollars. See like
Rolling Stones and classic bands like that, almost untouchable, and
(02:22:21):
they're like legit concert t shirts. So they look at
all of that. You try to go in and there
find a member's only jacket, like if you want to
stretch it out and do that eighties thing like that
Miami Vice like kind of members only feel Those members
only jackets, the legit ones. Those things were over one
hundred dollars and you're never gonna you're never gonna wear
it again. And if you're asking people to dress up. Yeah,
you have to have a prize, yeah, a prize for
the best dress, which we will yeah yeah, yeah, we
(02:22:43):
don't know what that is yet, but we will. We'll
also gonna have a bunch of cigars up there. We're
gonna do some some smoking and some drinking for sure.
Speaker 3 (02:22:49):
Live trivia, right, So, live Trivia, Live, yacht Rock, Live
stand Jack and his first mate.
Speaker 1 (02:22:54):
Actually it'll be the first well, it be the first
live audience you guys have for four Captain. Yes, yeah,
because we're gonna do a live recording of Captain Zog
on the boat as well.
Speaker 5 (02:23:03):
The only time I've done it outside the studio we
did it on the cruise ship a couple of weeks
ago on the Zyderdam. But that was us doing it
on the side of the ship, and you know, if
someone would walk by, we'd wait and then we'd ReCore.
Speaker 1 (02:23:17):
No, so this will be intentionally in front of people. Now,
have you guys thought about, like if you're gonna theme
it like from a show from that era or from
a band from that era, or are you just gonna
try to find anything you can from either the seventies
and eighties or where? What are you gonna do.
Speaker 3 (02:23:32):
Apparently you don't remember just how horrendous fashion was in
the seventies and eighties.
Speaker 1 (02:23:37):
That's why we're doing it.
Speaker 3 (02:23:38):
It's so terrible, and that's why I'm doing the eighties
and not the seventies.
Speaker 1 (02:23:40):
So we're thinking about doing some threes Company stuff maybe,
Oh yeah, because Three's Company is right in that wheelhouse,
like we're a moo moo yay good you good?
Speaker 3 (02:23:49):
Come is missus Roper?
Speaker 1 (02:23:50):
That's right?
Speaker 3 (02:23:51):
Oh come on now you just made my night.
Speaker 1 (02:23:54):
And Chris could be mister Roper. Yeah, I'm serious. I'm serious, dude.
I mean, look, we're thinking about all of this stuff,
and you go back and you look at those shows
I mean good times. I mean like everything for like
different Strokes to back in the seventies, like Welcome Back Cotter,
like all those shows on Taxi Taxi, all those shows. Dude, dude,
(02:24:14):
I mean what that's a good idea. I'm gonna do
some Saturday night fever stuff.
Speaker 3 (02:24:18):
Oh no, that would be good.
Speaker 1 (02:24:20):
I mean skin tight and packed the drows. You know
what I'm saying. You know what I'm saying. You know
what I'm saying, right, Jack, I know what you're saying. Okay, Yeah, Wow,
it's like you read my news headline and then I
skin tight, really shiny shirt so that my belly like
really stresses the buttons a lot. Girl. Yeah, the buttons
don't even start until just below your boobs. That's the
(02:24:40):
first button.
Speaker 3 (02:24:41):
Oh yeah, that's the seventies.
Speaker 1 (02:24:43):
Sands about slacks, and I mean, just like, oh man,
I'm just packing all my ass into those things platform shoes.
I have to get a wig too, because I'm wearing
a wig some here going as Huggy Bear. You better
have it. No, I don't know think I'm going to
hug Bar. I can't do huggy Bear. You don't feel me.
I like this. I like this career. I'm not doing
(02:25:04):
as much as I want to tell a joke. I
don't want it to cost.
Speaker 3 (02:25:06):
Me everything exactly in this day, right.
Speaker 1 (02:25:09):
One Polari to that, you're done, Zo dog Jackie. Have
any ideas? Have you guys thought about it here to share? Nope?
Speaker 3 (02:25:16):
Come on, Oh I bet I know, I bet I
know you think it's.
Speaker 1 (02:25:19):
The seventies or the eightiesil it?
Speaker 3 (02:25:21):
Okay, I'm not going to spoil it.
Speaker 1 (02:25:24):
Has he mentioned it to you?
Speaker 3 (02:25:25):
And I mean no, I just figured this makes the
most sense, since they're going to be doing a live
yacht rock show.
Speaker 1 (02:25:30):
Oh no, she hasn't spoiled anything. Matter of fact, did
I give you that idea? No? Come on, I think
I did. I don't think it's no. Well, maybe it's
not the same people.
Speaker 3 (02:25:41):
Then well, I mean he can come as Captain stoubing
from and then Julie the Cruise.
Speaker 1 (02:25:48):
Dude, I could pull off sting because I've got the thing,
and the thing is I don't have the thing. Yes, dude,
Actually I'm pretty Is it Laura in T's or whatever
her name is, Julie the Cruiser? Yea Julie the Cruiser.
My girl could be a Julie the Cruiser.
Speaker 3 (02:26:06):
Now, way, we got one captain here. We gotta let
him pick his captain stuff first, the.
Speaker 1 (02:26:14):
Sword fight later. Are you feeling? I mean, not that
the kind of sword fight you know? Come on, dude,
what's wrong with you?
Speaker 3 (02:26:19):
Everything?
Speaker 1 (02:26:21):
You feel any different? Being married? You guys are together
for so long? Was it just like was it like
just going home? What is different?
Speaker 3 (02:26:28):
Uh? Nothing?
Speaker 1 (02:26:30):
Well again, whole ass now? And now it cost him anything?
That's good?
Speaker 3 (02:26:34):
Oh yeah, yeah, no, there's there's there's none of that.
That's why I gave that look to the church.
Speaker 1 (02:26:38):
So have you gone through I mean, obviously you're you're
going to keep your name used on the air.
Speaker 3 (02:26:43):
Right, Yes, I'm going to keep Roberts just because it's
been you know, thirty five years of brand building.
Speaker 1 (02:26:48):
But on your driver's license you have to go through
all that, all that My wife said that was the
biggest pain in the ass of all it.
Speaker 3 (02:26:54):
Is because for months you have to carry around that
certified copy of your marriage license. Because it's the smallest
things you don't think about. It's your voter registration cars.
Oh I've got to get with HR here at the company. Oh,
I've got to get new driver's license, new library card.
Speaker 1 (02:27:11):
Any don't you have to change your name on all
your insurance policies and stuff like that as well because
of me?
Speaker 3 (02:27:15):
So yeah, because it's a legal name change.
Speaker 1 (02:27:17):
Well you've got to be real careful. Yeah, and your
driver's license, like you said, legal name change, because that
would be a problem, you know, talking to Glenn all
these years and how insurance companies do anything they can
to wheezl a lot of paying you. I mean, yes,
I mean you got to do that. You got to
eat your name.
Speaker 3 (02:27:30):
Change I know, but first I have to wait for
that copy to come back from the from the county,
so up until then, so we're legally married when we
get that, when the county gets it and it registers
with the states. So for right now, we could be
living in sin oh yeah, yeah, making the most of it.
Speaker 1 (02:27:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (02:27:46):
People get the blinds open at the hotel, give the
guests something to see at the pool.
Speaker 1 (02:27:50):
So help me explain this. By the way, can I
talk about the nuance of why you know how long
it took or whatever? Can we talk about the Yeah, absolutely,
because we talked about this and I kind of don't understand.
And I was trying to explain it to my wife
while we were in the church and I couldn't because
she said, why did they date for so long before
they got married? And I said, and I thought it
was nine years. I didn't know it was twelve twelve.
I thought it was nine years. So with that said,
(02:28:12):
I said, well, there's something to do with them being
Catholic and her having a divorce before if I remember
right here, So explain that so I understand.
Speaker 3 (02:28:21):
Yeah, So what I was attempting to do and I
worked with the Lake County Advocate for the Diocese of Orlando.
Would be to get an annulment. So because an annulment
to the Catholic Church says that there was something missing
before you got married. Oh, I see, that would allow
your marriage to be null and void in the face
of the church if it never happened. Is if it never.
Speaker 1 (02:28:41):
Happened, you can't get married twice in the church.
Speaker 3 (02:28:43):
You cannot. So according to the Catholic Church, Yeah, they
don't recognize divorce.
Speaker 1 (02:28:49):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (02:28:49):
Yeah. So in order for me to have gotten married
in the Catholic Church, I would have had to have
gone through the annulment process. It can be very expensive,
very lengthy. I've heard people describe it as more in
depth in an FBI background check.
Speaker 1 (02:29:01):
And you told me that because your ex didn't he
wasn't American, right that, and he was like non communicative, right,
like there's nobody to even find out, like to you,
you couldn't even find.
Speaker 3 (02:29:11):
Or something, right, Yeah, No, I I got his address, yeah,
because everything that I would have had would have been
sent over to him. So it was a very lengthy process.
But we could not get anyone from the diocese in
Saint Augustine to communicate with us.
Speaker 1 (02:29:25):
All of my records were Wow.
Speaker 3 (02:29:26):
So at the end, it was like, you know, sometimes
there's a reason why you shouldn't fight so hard for
something that's not working out right, And it turned out
that getting married. And now I'm so disappointed to find
out that you guys, you and Tory didn't get married
at the Congregational Church of Mount Dora.
Speaker 1 (02:29:42):
No, no, no, we got married around the corner at
this other place. It's easy to make that mistake because
I think they're literally a block away from each other.
Speaker 3 (02:29:48):
But you know, we feel like we made the best choice,
and we loved Reverend Gary Marshall are efficient and that building.
Very honored that we're one of the last two weddings
he's going to do before he retired.
Speaker 1 (02:29:59):
Yeah, very cool, by the way, for people to know
they got married in the oldest building in all of
Mount Dora. And I didn't think there was anything older
than Lakeside. I thought that's kind of where they kind
of what they built mounta door off of was Lakeside end.
Speaker 3 (02:30:10):
Yeah. When you see the photos, when you see like
in the church, like the reception area or whatever, there's
a photo of Donnelly Street. That's nothing but sand.
Speaker 1 (02:30:18):
Oh wow in trees. Wow, it's incredible to see. You
can smell the age in it.
Speaker 3 (02:30:23):
Yeah, you can't.
Speaker 1 (02:30:24):
Like when you go in there and you know those
pews have been sitting there forever one hundred years. You know,
there's a certain aroma that buildings like that have. My
grandmother's church in Palatka, she helped build the first part
of that and it was an old wooden house they
turned into a church, and it had that certain thing too.
They had no ac in that thing either, so you'd
walk in and it would be like, you know, it
would just like smell like old, like an old wood shop,
(02:30:46):
right exactly. But it was the greatest you know.
Speaker 3 (02:30:47):
Yeah, the lectern they used, that's original the church built
in eighteen eighty.
Speaker 1 (02:30:52):
Five or something like that. Yeah, so it was a
beautiful spot to have. Yeah. Wow.
Speaker 3 (02:30:56):
Now when I drive by, I get a wheet bee.
Speaker 1 (02:30:58):
Oh starting around the corner from your stock you know,
sweet all right? Four oh seven nine six four one
text us at seven seven zero three one cash, By
the way, is your six o'clock key where you get
about ten minutes or so. Take it over two Real
Radio Dot FM and send that away for your chance
at one thousand dollars. Don't forget Tom and Dan. We'll
have a goup more for you as well, and they'll
fire them back up tomorrow morning at nine o'clock with
(02:31:20):
the monsters in the morning. Sayle break, we'll come back
and do you heard it here? First?
Speaker 3 (02:31:22):
Which is the Florida legislature about that new Republican favored map.
Will tell you what happened with that. A Polk County
Santa is arrested and then for the worst thing and
a large anomaly quote unquote leads to a pat down
bust at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport. I wondered what
it could be. We'll talk about that next during you
heard it here?
Speaker 1 (02:31:42):
All right? We'll do deb news and get the hell
out of here. On a Wednesday, Real Radio.
Speaker 2 (02:31:47):
Is on Facebook at Real Radio one oh four one,
sponsored by the law Offices of Anna Jar and Levine.
Accident attorneys called the Law Offices of Anna Jar and
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Speaker 3 (02:31:57):
That's one eight hundred and seven four seven seventy three.
Speaker 1 (02:32:01):
This weather report is brought to you by Mills Air.
Speaker 13 (02:32:06):
Hey, they're Central Florida. Fox thirty five Storm Team meteorologist
Laurel Blanchard here with your Wednesday night forecast. Partly cloudy
sky's temperature is mild only dropping down into the.
Speaker 17 (02:32:15):
Upper Well, welcome back, miss Deb. We sure have mischief. Congratulations,
I'm becoming missus Carson.
Speaker 3 (02:32:29):
I think that's just wonderful.
Speaker 17 (02:32:31):
And I know you had a dicty boot time.
Speaker 20 (02:32:34):
Hell yeah, lovely girl, easy, Hey us, mister K from
around the way.
Speaker 21 (02:32:41):
And day dead.
Speaker 1 (02:32:46):
Ah dead, mis back.
Speaker 2 (02:32:48):
We're so glad you're back on one oh four point one. K.
Speaker 1 (02:32:58):
What the hell?
Speaker 3 (02:32:58):
That's awesome, dude, loving that.
Speaker 1 (02:33:01):
Hey, welcome back to the Jim Colbert Show. 'al readyo
one to four point one. I think cash is your
six o'lock key. We're going a few minutes to get
over there and use that. When one thousand dollars you
could do that. Maybe the real ready to out of
pim slash. Oh no, no, that's not it's just real
ready to. Yeah, so many things, what do you do?
(02:33:22):
So many things that.
Speaker 5 (02:33:23):
Don't work though, real ready tom slash. Yeah, yeah, they're
gon We'll stop that works.
Speaker 1 (02:33:28):
I'm Jim. There's Deb. Hello, Jack is here as well.
Golf fans out there. I don't know if you've heard
the news. It just broke a few minutes ago. Uh.
The uh sudi is a PFA fund or PIF fund
or whatever it is. Yeah, they have pulled their funding
for live golf. No. Wow, So I don't know when
that thing is going to come to a stop. But uh,
(02:33:49):
and I don't know when the funding is. The president
said that they were funded through the end of the
year or their season, So we'll see how that goes.
But it looks like maybe the end of live golf
is finally in the sight. That is great for the
game of golf because live golf sucked. The whole idea
of it sucked. Everything about it sucked. It made golf
professionally for the last three or four years like kind
(02:34:09):
of wild. It was a terrible idea.
Speaker 5 (02:34:12):
That Saudi Arabia just saying, I don't think this is
improving our image.
Speaker 1 (02:34:16):
Yeah no, Well here's what they did, right, So Saudi
Arabia never were They were never able to really secure
a great television deal. And if you don't know anything
about professional sports, you think, well, look at all those
people at the game. That doesn't mean anything. There could
be four people at the game, it would be nothing.
It's the TV rights that's where they make all the money, right,
and that's why you hear companies like the ESPN paying
billions of dollars for the rights to broadcast those games
(02:34:38):
for the NFL. Same thing with PGA toward golf. It's
the same thing, right. So they had no ratings, like
they got picked up by some hissant little broadcasts. I
forget where it even was, but they were like in
the CW or something. Yeah, they were getting like twenty
three twenty five thousand viewers. That's it, you know. I mean,
professional golf gets like a million and a half people
watching every week, maybe more. Sometimes, what do you think
(02:34:59):
is gonna happen?
Speaker 3 (02:35:00):
And to all those golfers who left them and thinking
about that, they nearly ruined their careers in less than
what two years later.
Speaker 1 (02:35:07):
Some of them totally did. And by the way, there's
only like four or five guys from that from that
league that really would be welcome back, like you know,
Cam Smith, maybe Dustin Johnson, John Rahm, Bryson, D Schambeau
and there's one other I can't remember. But those are
the only people that would be welcome back everybody else.
You know, Brooks is already back. Uh, he got welcomed back.
(02:35:27):
But man, there are some bitterness on the tour for
these people who left and took all that money and
now I want to come back because it ain't working
out for him. Well yeah, because what they Because a
lot of those dude didn't take that money exactly. There's
a lot of a lot of those guys on the
tour are like, look, they offered me one hundred billion
dollars and I said no, for my integrity. This guy
took it. Now he wants to come back and play
this tour. Now there's gonna be Look, there's drama everywhere
(02:35:47):
in Freshman. Yeah, but all that Tigers have going on too.
It's crazy.
Speaker 3 (02:35:51):
Golf is like here, we all just be boring anywhere.
Speaker 1 (02:35:53):
Fants. Finally it's interesting. All right, h let's do you
heard it here first?
Speaker 2 (02:36:00):
You heard it here first on the Jim Colbert Show.
Speaker 14 (02:36:03):
All right.
Speaker 3 (02:36:04):
The Florida Legislature is sending a new Republican favorite House
map to Governor Ron DeSantis for his signature. Currently, Florida
has a twenty to eight Republican edge in its congressional delegation,
but the new map would create a twenty four to
four GOP advantage. Democratic representatives question, how this map isn't
partisan jerrymandering.
Speaker 1 (02:36:25):
There's been no new census, there's been no court order,
there's been no legal requirement to do this. Again, this
isn't a correction, members, this is a choice. This is
messed up. Our priorities in this government are upside down.
Speaker 3 (02:36:39):
The new set of Republican favorite congressional lines were proposed
by DeSantis, and it comes as lawmakers look to fast
track the map ahead of the midterms. As the map
awaits the governor's signature, the congressional lines are likely to
be litigated by Democrats who have questioned the legality of
the maps.
Speaker 1 (02:36:55):
I'd be interested to see. I would be interested if
if he wasn't a lane duck, would he do this?
I wonder if this was his first year's governor, second
year's governor, would this be happening.
Speaker 3 (02:37:06):
That's a good question.
Speaker 1 (02:37:06):
Yeah, and it cost him. A stalwart representative. Dan Webster
quit today. And he quit and he was the one
who stood up and said, don't do this. And the
instant that they showed their do it, he retired. So,
I mean, it's not like they're not gonna be able
to get a guy that's a Republican in that seat,
but it did cost him a guy with a lot
of integrity and a lot of weight in the Republican
party in Central in Florida. So we'll see how that goes.
Speaker 3 (02:37:25):
It's going to be an interesting, interesting time, all right.
A man who played Santa at holiday events and parades
and Polk County is in custody after a child predators sting. Jeez,
that's the last one you want to hear get arrested,
right No, Joe Pult County Sheriff Grady Judd says sixty
eight year old Thomas Hicks faces several felony charges, including
human trafficking, and showed no remorse when arrested.
Speaker 1 (02:37:49):
The only thing he was concerned about was his reputation
as Santa Claus.
Speaker 3 (02:37:56):
Judd says Hicks told Marion County detectives he wanted to
have sex with a thirteen year old girl. Hicks was
one of nineteen men arrested last week during the sting
targeting suspected child predators. The good thing is is now
he will never ever be able to play Santa Claus again.
Speaker 1 (02:38:12):
Yeah, man, this guy is a creepy looking blanker too.
Speaker 3 (02:38:14):
Yeah he is who all right? And then finally talk
about an awkward pat down. A Delaware man was arrested
at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport after federal agents said
he arrived from Carta Hannah, Columbia, with cocaine hidden in
his groin area.
Speaker 1 (02:38:29):
Oha hana French toast right exactly.
Speaker 3 (02:38:35):
Customs officers reportedly noticed nervous behavior during inspection before a
pat down revealed what they described as quote a large
anomaly end quote. According to federal investigators, the package was
wrapped in pink cellophane and contained about one point seventy
five kilograms of cocaine. Officials identified the passenger as fifty
three year old Christopher Marco. That's Marco, not Narco, who
(02:38:58):
allegedly admitted the package contained cocaine when questioned. Authority say
records also link Marco to a prior twenty twenty four
arrest in Nicaragua involving more than seven kilograms of cocaine
under a former name. He now faces a federal charge
of possession with intent to distribute more than five hundred
grams of cocaine talk about not learning your lesson and
(02:39:20):
you heard it here first. I'm the Jim Colbert Chow.
Speaker 1 (02:39:23):
Thank you, love you got it. Who do we have
to think today?
Speaker 3 (02:39:25):
Well, we want to thank Central Florida Zoo COO Chief
Operating Officer Bob Schabbau for joining us for Animal Hosty.
Speaker 1 (02:39:32):
He was a really good today. Lene out what was
going on with our friendly sloughs.
Speaker 3 (02:39:37):
Arslaus And don't forget Central Florida Zoo dot org. They
have a button right there for you to help donations
to help them cover the cost.
Speaker 1 (02:39:43):
And if you're interested in that story, I would suggest
going back and listening to the podcast. It was a
fascinating interview and it really gave us some insight on
what they have to do and what is required to
kind of house these things.
Speaker 3 (02:39:52):
And it's expensive, it's very expensive. I also want to
thank Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell, Tim and Mike from
four Slash Distillery and Blending House, Ross Paget with good
Sauce with Ross and Joel if you miss the Central
Florida Zoo interview or good Sauce talking about what to
expect on tonight's podcast. Both of those podcasts have been
posted at The Jim Culbert Show. And then, last but
(02:40:14):
never least, Sam Bowen, Candice Rich and Alicia Bullwear for
running our YouTube chat.
Speaker 1 (02:40:19):
Absolutely Jack question today, do you think Donald Trump has
ever shot a gun man? It's probably fifty to fifty
fifty say yes, fifty percent say yes. Wow, there you go.
All right, Uh, let's get the hell out of here.
Big Chow coming up tomorrow for sure. On we have
a dev and Jack on Jim, we follow the new Huggie.
They follow the monsters in the morning after us, it's
Tom and Dan with the Corbet time, our friends from
(02:40:40):
good Sauce, our friends from real laughs. And of course
tomorrow morning or tomorrow morning, it's the months in the morning.
We'll see you at three o'clock tomorrow for more than
Jim Colbert Show. Until then, have yourself a fantastic Wednesday evening.
See you tomorrow by.
Speaker 12 (02:40:53):
A lot of Messy.
Speaker 2 (02:40:55):
If you missed any part of today, check out The
Jim Colbert Show on demand and highlighted feature segments. Listen
to The Jim Colbert Show The Goods. Both are available
for free on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 6 (02:41:07):
A Corporate Time with Tom and Dan is Coming up
next on Real Radio one oh four point one
Speaker 1 (02:41:14):
Four