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July 15, 2025 • 38 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We didn't know what some of the symptoms. I notice
I don't use final anymore when I thought I was
seeing some of the final symptoms, like okay, after they
almost blew his head off, maybe they'll calm down. Those
are the final symptoms after to Light thirteenth and Butler
of last year. No, no, no, they're still still fueling
it up, aren't they. You know, if Trump administration's enforcing

(00:24):
immigration law, it's it's fascism. They just they don't have it.
Guys are out of ideas. They don't have any other playbook.
They have nothing else to go to other than all right,
it's over. You won, You're we'll give you a chance,
go ahead. They this outrage. We have Governor B. L.
Zibob here in California. He said, uh, he's going after

(00:49):
Trump over the the raids that happened at the weed
grow farm out there that I guess the owner donated
to nuisance campaign as well. But yeah, that looked like
a full law Uh Saigon kind of you could throw
you know, some Jimmy Hendricks behind it and you know,
kind of sepiad out a little bit. Yeah, really had
kind of a battle thing overhead. Some of those helicopter

(01:10):
shots and was that tear gas or was that all
that smoke that was being stirred up there. Here's what
Newsom said, California prosecutes child explorers, exploiters, and traffickers. Trump
teargases children rent them from their parents and to ports
farm workers. Trump calls me new scumb but he's the

(01:31):
real scum. Woo Zinger there. Gav California represented Jimmy Gomez said,
how many MS thirteen gang members are waking up at
three am? Topict strawberries? Yeah? Zero. They weren't strawberry pickers,
mister Gomez. The miners at the marijuana facility, the kids

(01:52):
at the marijuana facility, I don't know. Were they some
of the three hundred thousand that were lost by Joe
Biden a Democrat votes or open borders? Huh? Newsome, If
you're doing such a great job, why are kids even
in our country working at a weed farm? Why are

(02:13):
these children working at a marijuana facility. Back in the day,
it didn't matter if you were a Democratic Republican, that
would be a headlined and everybody together would be saying
that's wrong. Not now. Notice how they just blurred right
over that telling you they're not good people. Man, not

(02:38):
because if you got kids, I think eight, what two
out of the ten? I got it somewhere in here.
I'll find it for sure. But we're there was nobody
accompanying them. Yeah, there was no family. So does that
mean I don't know. Let's play a tech now, let's

(03:00):
get our red string out. Let's connect the dots on
the screen. Huh unaccounted for kids, drug business. Mexican car
tells human trafficking, open border Democrat policies. Okay, we're getting
somewhere here, aren't we. Guys they say they at the

(03:24):
Office of They do say all the ag workers out there,
about half are illegal because you know, e Verify is
not required. It's a big magnet here, of course. And
all they say is who's going to pick the crops
without illegals. It's the same question that Democrats, as I
said in the eighteen fifties and eighteen sixties, ask about

(03:45):
continent and slaves. Is there some kind of I'm not
even going to use the word fair because it doesn't
have to be fair. Is there a system that would
benefit the United States of America and would allow some
to stay? I guess what we need to do is
have our United States Department of AG sit down with who,

(04:09):
you know, whatever the government does that we pay them
to do all this smart stuff, and say how many
do we need here? How many Americans would work in
this industry, this industry, this industry, and we find out
how many we need, and then we announce you got
to come forward. You're going to be deported or come
forward and we're going to interview you. We're going to
finally vet you. Sorry, we did it the wrong way.

(04:31):
I know many of you felt encouraged by former administrations,
going back to George w any jobs Americans don't want
to do, come on, you know, we had the Gang
of Eight twenty fourteen, the Rubios, the mccains, they were like,
let's go with what the left to say. We'll never
get voters if we stay this way. Both parties have

(04:51):
been doing this, but as of late it's been the
Democrats really showing off because the outsider Trump in twenty
six made it a focal point at the campaign. They
couldn't go, yeah, we agree with that guy, as you know,
as he was really churning up support across the country.
They had to be the opposite let's stand up for
the victims of his hate and call him hitler and

(05:13):
fascist and all that. But Newsom's very upset that not
that we got kids being trafficked in the the hot
July sun out there farming weed. The Newsom's upset that
look at these federal agents scared them when they federal

(05:33):
agents arrived to stop criminal activity. Imagine that. Let me see,
I want to get this hang on there. It is
ten juveniles were found at this facility, all legal, eight
of the eight of them unaccompanied. That's eighty percent, not
twenty percent. I had it the wrong way around, I

(05:54):
said a couple of my thoughts. I didn't have the
parents or anybody with them. So they're under investigation for
child labor, viole relations. And guys, this is a Democrat
news from California. Sure enough. Is you know who we
got going though, don't you? Tom Homan? Tom the borders
are Homan. He said, they've recently located ten thousand of

(06:14):
the approximate three hundred thousand that went missing. We put
it on milk cartons, we hanging on the wall at Walmart.
We you know, have you know, Amber alerts missing. But
yet I guess to the left in Democrats and well
to a lot of Republicans. You don't hear a whole
lot of talking about it because they're not Americans. I
guess they're throw away kids and they get involved with

(06:36):
doing a little weed farming. Come on, they're used to
that back in their home country. That's how they did it.
Let's go listen to Tom the hammer Homan, and he
has a heckler in the audience.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
We left thousands of empty ice beads, one hundred and
twenty seven dollars in empty, thousands of them. They released
them to Ango. It's at five hundred bucks night. Why
did they do that? Because they knew or an icy
take a good of hearing within forty days ninety percent
loser case they get sent home. That is not what
they wanted. They're playing the long game. Let's release them
in the community. Wait, wait, three or five years.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Pardon me?

Speaker 1 (07:14):
Are you an NS thirteen member?

Speaker 2 (07:17):
I'm sorry, Hey, hey, that's okay, that's okay. I got
I got it. I got a question. No, no, no,
I got a question for you. Why don't you come
up here and hand me that picture? Bring bringer Bringer?
You will say, you will say.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Ladies, and gentlemen. That was Tom Holman. Borders are, Oh,
he's got more here and open Mike Night. Go ahead,
mister Tom Holman, back there.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
I'm core.

Speaker 1 (07:59):
I'm cool.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
They've got morens like this all the country. This guy,
this guy would norse we like the surface nation. This
guy ain't got the balls to be a nice officer.
Do you ever got the ball to be a ball chorger?

Speaker 4 (08:15):
This guy lives in his mother's basement.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
The only thing that surprises me. You don't have purple
hair and a nose ring. Get out of here, you loser.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
And very and you're.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Such a badass being me off stage in thirteen minutes
of fifty second wa right now, I guarantee you he
sits down the peak.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Guarantee I'll have another rubbing coke. That's funny. This guy's
great booking next weekend. Hank. Well, yeah, it's not a
funny subject what's going on. But we do have some
personality in this administration. You can't say it's dull.

Speaker 4 (09:09):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
In other news, one of the illegals arrested at the
California kid slave weed farm one almost a child predator.
I get that those people out there getting all getting
all up in them over arresting criminals. President Trump said,

(09:30):
you throw you made those rocks, bricks like that, you
get out, You use whatever force is necessary to arrest them.
I don't know if you saw some of the videos
out in those dirt roads where the fat agent cars
were turning right and these guys just come up with
big like cinder blocks, throwing them at the windows that
can bust through. You never know what could happen. You

(09:51):
never know when they're stopping and getting out of the car,
Pam hitting the head. One guy had a gun, they
had him highlighted, he fired, nobody got. Now what a
common job of a headline I'm going to focus on.
NEXTROMBC thirty dot com. Here's the headline, Matura County, California,

(10:11):
Immigration rates Haimi Garcia, man critically injured during Camillo raids,
has died. Family says, Now, if you just glance at that,
I'll look at the Feds out there. They rated that
we thing and an illegal alien got killed. They'll probably
say got killed, not died. But hold on. I feel

(10:36):
bad that the guide died. I feel bad for his family.
But the headline should have read illegal alien flees ice
via rooftop falls to his death, because that's what happened.
He was the farm worker out there. The raid happened
at the weed farm, and when the raids started, he

(11:02):
wasn't even being chased by them, but he climbed up
on the roof of a greenhouse and fell thirty feet through.
Border patrol immediately called the META back to the scene.
They got him care as quickly as possible. And I'm
sure he was probably one of the good ones. They
said he was working at the farm to send money
home to his wife and daughter in Mexico. Again, I

(11:25):
will assume, good hearted man. He had nothing to do
with his headline. And believe me, he heard because we
had all those Democrats raise their hands free health care.
You had a Joe Biden, the President of the United States,
saying surge, surge to the border. Guys, that's an opening

(11:46):
of the front door. And hey, come on in, we
got chocolate cookies. Take the shoes off. Relax. So my
heart all the time does not blame those those that
involved with exploitation of people, with sexual afficking, drug trafficking,
all of that. I'll tell you if I were if
God had set my soul to Venezuela, and I had

(12:08):
heard there was opportunity. My brother called me because he
was in Fresno. I got a job, I got health care,
I got a driver's license, and if Ice comes out,
I'll move to LA and they'll give me cash cards.
This is the place, man, get out of there. I
would hide up a burrow's rear end to get in here,

(12:33):
as many of us would. But if I got caught,
I don't think I would blame the United States and
call you a bad name and racist. I wouldn't know
what I was doing, just like if I broke into China,
if China suddenly said we've overbuilt search Homeland Secretary Christy

(12:53):
Noman ouce three hundred and nineteen people were arrested over
in Ventura County. Well, it's not like they weren't warned.
Homan warned over and over and over warned about it.
I'm gonna come back here on the show, and we
know how the open border has allowed a lot of
fat and a lot of opioid's, a lot of math,

(13:15):
a lot of coke, a lot of heroin across the border.
And he's a gentleman, been fighting it on the front
lines here and he's been on the show numerous times.
Flynn Anderson, Parents and Addicts in Need. They have a
building right next to us here on Shaw and he's
going to introduce us to a special guest with a
special way to fight in the recovery process. And I see,

(13:36):
and they'll explain here later on in the hour. But
so many ways this technology they're going to talk about
will be used. We're going to talk with Flynn Anderson
and Dinola mila Otis, mealli Otis, Mealy meli Otis, he's
with Opie Aid and Flynn Anderson has a great story.
So this goes right along with the open border. You know,

(14:00):
we've kind of lost some of the headlines of all
the overdose and deaths. And I know the narcana and
everything being out there has has helped that as well.
But now they've got so many different levels of the increase.
So we'll talk to him next.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
At the voice you heard right there was Dino Millie Otis.
He is with OPIAID and Flynn Anderson, Parents and Addicts
and Need. Flint called me and said, man, this is
a story that's breaking out really across the country and
it's happening right here Flint. Welcome in man, Thanks Trevor,
appreciate it. Thank you for bringing your buddy Dino and
Dino welcome, Hey, thank you. Where are you from from?

Speaker 3 (14:42):
I'm originally from Chicago, but I am in Wilmington, North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Do you ever listen to B ninety six George McFly?
Do you remember that name?

Speaker 2 (14:51):
That?

Speaker 3 (14:51):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, B ninety six. Yeah, grew up with that.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Yeah. That was quite a time, there wasn't it.

Speaker 3 (14:57):
That was awesome?

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Yeah, couldn't winning World Series, but it was a time.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
All right, don't kid personal.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
I want you guys, Flett. You told your story numerous times.
Give us a recap of your rise and fall and
where you are today. Man.

Speaker 5 (15:13):
Yeah, I had a twenty three year addiction to opiates
for a bunch of reasons, you know, and and of
course everything that goes along with that, the heartache and
the chaos and the everything else that I that I
brought to my family and friends, but got clean in
two thousand and one after many attempts, and then I
started the Paying Organization in two thousand and nine. Waited

(15:35):
about eight years, you know, before I started it because
I didn't want any of this on my resume.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
And and Moses went to the desert for a long time.

Speaker 3 (15:43):
Yeah he did, Yeah he did.

Speaker 5 (15:45):
And so again over the last sixteen years, just you know,
sticking with the opioid crisis, telling everybody the real truth
about the opioid crisis and what's happening with it. And
for this this many of these last years, and even
prior to that, we have doing the same stuff over
and over. And I met Dino about three and a
half years ago, and him and I have become great friends.

(16:08):
And he has a product now that we endorse that
I endorse that. I've actually been looking for my entire
professional and non professional life, and it's here, and it's
here to stay, and we're promoting it and we just
want to we want other people to gain from it.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
I always use you as my guide on the street.
You know more about it than some bloods and crip guys.
I know, it seems like the headlines have kind of
stopped with the overdoses. Is that because of the narcan
and all the treatment, or we just kind of numbed
ourselves out to it.

Speaker 5 (16:39):
I think it's a combination of both. I think narcan,
by the way, is a good thing, right we distribute it.
But on the other hand, narkhan is not a is
not a treatment tool. It's a life saving tool. And
so what happens. It doesn't fix your addiction. In fact,
it brings you more into your addiction once you take it,
because it snaps you out of your potential overdose and

(17:01):
now it throws you into withdrawal symptoms again. So we
still have the addiction problem that has never gone away.
It's not going away anytime soon. But you know, again,
it doesn't matter how many times you stop so much
ventanyl coming over the border, by the way, that's a
good thing as well. But whether you stop it or not,

(17:21):
we still have the addiction issue. And today's society wants
some answers. They want some at least some type of
solution to this problem. And we've got it for once.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
That's Flynn Anderson, parents and attics in need. They got
their offices right next to us here on Shaw Dino
milli Otis Dino. You just drank vitamin D milk and
we're a schoolboy your entire life, aren't you.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
Yeah, that's what they tell me. No, No, I mean,
you know, here's the thing. So years ago, in the
mid nineties in Chicago, I invented a product called bug band,
which is that insect repelling wristband that.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Would have a few people in our music station if
they remembered it from the nineties.

Speaker 3 (18:02):
They did, Yeah, you know what I mean, they still
have it. They well, there's probably like twenty thirty knockoffs.
But I was the guy who started it, believe it
or not. And so I'm like, breaking.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
Thirty, So are you kind of a science is kind
of guy.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
No, actually not at all. It was at the right place,
at the right time, and just asked the right question.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
So that I make you a wealthy man.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
It made me a very wealthy man. And overnight, which
sounds better than it actually turned out. But so I'll
tell you the story. So you know, I'm breaking thirty
years old and this enormous success overnight, rags to riches,
and all of a sudden, the media wanted, you know,
to interview me. I've never done media interviews before, so

(18:45):
I was nervous. And that's when I started, you know,
looking for bravery in a bottle or a pill or whatever.
And so what should have been a pretty good story
walking off in the sunset. That was the beginning of
my addiction to drug an alcohol.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
So in your teenage years, you were kind of not
involved in it.

Speaker 3 (19:04):
No, No, I was.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
You were the vitamin D milk guy kind of more.

Speaker 3 (19:08):
Was it really the vitamin D? I mean everybody parties occasionally,
you know, you go to clubs and stuff, like everybody
every team.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Now were you when you realize, wait, I think my
life took a bad turn here.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
I knew it probably three years into it.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
Okay, Now, Flints told me many times you had a
period there where you were functioning, where you think you
have it under control. Did you have that same feeling
like for a time period you thought, I was I
got the money, I got it under control.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
I was. You know what the sad part is, I
was highly functioning for the next twenty five years. Wow,
highly functioning. So I was like, I don't have a problem.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
What was your choice?

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Oh my god, the answer is yes, Okay, it started
out with vodka. But it was vodka, and you know whatever.
And then anybody who's in the situation knows what I'm
talking about. But it's a hole that you're trying to
fill that you'll never fill and and I was so
damn stubborn that you know, it took a long time
for me to realize. I mean, I have all this

(20:07):
and have nothing my whole life.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
Fellow grabbed you and said, Dino, smack smack, stop, it
was me.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
It was me. I didn't do it for anybody else,
you know, hear things. You know, I did it for
my wife, I did it for my children. I did
it for me. For once in my life, I wanted
to do something for me, and so I walked into
treatment with you know, swallowing my ego and my pride
and just you know, I didn't want to tell anybody
who I was, what I invented. I mean, all that,
leave it out the door. I came in there to

(20:35):
learn and to to get help, and I did. But
one of the things that I noticed right away is
it didn't matter you drug, a choice, or where you
came from, your background, whatever. For the most part, treatment
centers would treat you the same, almost like a one
size fits all kind of mentality. And I remembered that
then I'm like, you know, I'm going to get better.

(20:56):
This is the first and last time you guys are
going to see me in here, but I did remember.
I found that kind of strange that you know everybody
they say that everybody's recovery journey is different, but at
the same time a contradiction.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
It sees me. I for interrupting your Dino. You seem
a little flustered. Do you feel more like this smiley
face right here, or this smiley face that's halfway smiling
here or the halfway frowning face here. Just sen you
to your feelings and be honest with me.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
You sound you sound like my therapist.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Well, I've been watching your TV reports and I've heard
you talk about a smiley face.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
So you're talking about outpatient. I did my thirty days
in and then I go to outpatient. That's when the
fun started. So I'm getting all these anxieties and I'm
clean and sober, but I'm feeling anxious. I'm feeling depressed,
I'm feeling cravings, you name it. I was feeling it,
and I remember that. There's like, so describe how you feel.
I'm like, I don't know, Well, do you have any pain?

Speaker 2 (21:56):
No?

Speaker 3 (21:57):
Well, from a feelings chart, pick the smiley face or
the frowny face that best that.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Would try me right back to using that kind of stuff.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
That's exactly what I was thinking.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
I was just like, you know what this is hands
in the area exactly. Well, listen, that's what they guys
come up with, and that's what I want to come back.
I guess we call it new technology. Is that the
right word?

Speaker 3 (22:18):
Cutting? Okay?

Speaker 1 (22:20):
To fight against a tool in the process of your rehab,
it's a tool, right, And we're going to explain, or
they're going to explain why it's such an important tool.
We'll do it next.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley. He's
poured talk.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Just kicked in or whether you've been fighting it for
a while. Flynn Anderson with parents and addicts, and it
always gives out a cell phone that rings in his
pocket until he has to shut it off to go
to sleep at night. Or can they wake you up
at three? Of him?

Speaker 3 (22:48):
They can still wake me up at three trails?

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Well you're getting out that many times ago to the bathroom. Well,
they'll catch it's a part time job.

Speaker 5 (22:55):
It's a definitely a part time job at this point.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
Yeah. And sometimes I'm up and I'm like, can you
believe that I've already come in here three times and
it's not even last call yet. There's people still out
at this time of the of the night. Flynn Anderson
has introduced us to Dino milliotis opa new technology. They
say he's gonna help kick addiction. Dino, I'm gonna cut

(23:17):
to I've heard you say it will help with anxiety, depression,
and withdraw and it can measure levels. Describe your new
technology and how it accomplishes that.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
Yeah. So OPI eight is a data science company and
we're dedicated to making addiction recovery safer, smarter, and more effective.
And the way it really works is we have a
smart watch that we power with our technologies.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
That's the OPAT Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
And so it just looks like a regular classy watch,
but there's tons of sensors and proprietary stuff in there.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
Looks like something a NASCAR driver would wear right during
an interview after somebody wealthy.

Speaker 3 (23:58):
It looks pretty cool. It's a regular smart watch. But
what it does is it'll take your biometric readings every
five minutes. It'll send that information for.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Those like me that hate the smell of rubbing alcohol
and we don't know, we just biometric readings, explain what
that is.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
Your skin temperature, your movements, your heart rate, everything that
it can monitor, okay, from your wrist, and it'll send
that information to our database. We have the largest database
for behavioral health and substance use disorder in the world.
We apply AI to that information and then in real time,

(24:34):
we'll send it to a dashboard, one of our dashboards
in a treatment center that's working with us, that's licensed
to work with us, and what it's going to show
is individual analytics and insights on the patients in care.
So it is able to take those readings and distinguish

(24:56):
how you're feeling, like the way I was feeling with
the smiley faces and stuff. It bypasses all that noise
and it could distinguish the difference between anxiety, depression, and withdrawal.
And in fact, it can measure your level of withdrawal
the same way you can measure your blood sugar with
a glucometer.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Okay, how are they Okay, it's more than smiley faces today,
Like when you go to a doctor today and they
have to measure all of that, is that what it
would take at a recovery facility and they would have
to what how's that currently done.

Speaker 3 (25:28):
So the way it's currently done is these analytics, these
these predictive readings that it shows on all the patients treated. Okay,
it does it in real time. So I'll give you
some examples.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
No, I'm in Okay, if you didn't have your watch
on and you were a patient and rehab, how often
are those kind of biometrics checked.

Speaker 5 (25:50):
Yeah, so again, if a patient is in all right,
and they're going through the detox process, they're monitored twenty
four to seven, so especially at night, to be checked
on about every hour to hour and a half. So
they're going to be giving a physical blood pressure.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
So this would be when you leave.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
No, no, no, it's not necessarily the readings. You're just
thinking readings for readings like I take your blood pressure.
This is readings that it will take and then it
will analyze them and using AI, it will predict and
allow the physician to personalize your care. It becomes you
uniquely you. So let me give you an example. You

(26:31):
can have a team of doctors checking somebody out, checking
their vitals and everything that they do every fifteen minutes
or like flint set every hour, and that's great, but
this is the difference between subjective data and objective data.
Objective data it has no feelings, it has no emotions,
it has no bad days, and it can predict so

(26:51):
fast that you're able to tailor make or adjust somebody's care.
A perfect example is somebody at a treatment center we
recently licensed. Patient came in early in recovery, I think
their second day. Our data was able to analyze and
show some heart abnormalities and their cravings off the charts.

(27:16):
Even though this person was saying, oh, I feel fine,
I don't have any cravings, our analytics were able to
show otherwise. Now what does that mean? It allowed the
care technician to go in immediately and adjust their treatment
right there, meaning the medication instead of waiting.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Well, wouldn't this work for heart patients or inby after surgery,
I mean inby that would need to be monitored.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
Well. The technology has infinite applications and uses, but the
addiction space is untapped. And if you think about it,
for the last forty years, fifty years, we've really been
following a model that I find our case. And I
could say that because I went through it smiley faces

(28:04):
and poking and prouding and asking me how you feel?
Take two pills call me in the.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Moment, right, So let me ask you. The smiley face
gets on their nerves. And I'm the patient, you're the doctor.
How do you feel, Trevor? And I'm like, yeah, I
feel all right, I feel fine. Well AI's telling us
you don't correct Okay, that's almost might make me as
mad as a smiley face.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
Well, you know, I would rather you be mad and
recover than be happy and misleading.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
Well so somebody like me that would be stubborn. If
you said we're going to adjust this based on this
and suddenly I felt better, I'd be like, wow, all right,
yeah you read me right there, Ai, I guess.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
Well that's the reason we call it O P eight
and not Opie solve. I mean, we're not going to
solve your problems. We're not going to cure addiction. But
what we're going to do is we're the latest, greatest,
cutting edge technology that's going to help so much in
getting tailor made personalized care, which is really think about it, guys,
it's never been done before. So people can recover better, safer,

(29:04):
and faster instead of this poking and prodding and guessing.
And let's follow up in a couple of weeks and
see how you feel. We know in real time how
you're feeling.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
All right, Dano, I need to role play here, so
make sure I understand this correctly. So Dino, you're you're
OP eight in Chicago. You're at the what'd you say,
the switchboard or the THEO board dashboard? Okay, you're you
got all the information coming in because I'm wearing your watch.
I'm in rehab. I've been sleeping three nights and it's
shown that at night I'm just so off the chart.

(29:35):
And when I got to go in during my counseling times,
everything is my blood pressures up and all. And I
sit down with Flint, who's my counselor there or doctor there,
and I go, yeah, man, I'm all right. He can
be like, come on, trev Man, it's really showing us
you're you're off the chart with your blood pressure. You're
you're fighting something. So it can maybe warn that I
might relapse because I'm freaking out on the inside.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Yes, So this isn't. This isn't you're thinking of it
more like a gotcha thing? Aha, you're lying, No, but
you know, believe me coming from somebody who is in
recovery somebody who was an addict. There's two types. The
first one is they're going to downplay their we always

(30:20):
their conditioned because of pride or ego or you know,
they don't want anybody knowing their business. Okay, I get that.
Then the second one is going to do the opposite.
They're going to play up their symptoms because they know
that there's a beautiful drug for withdrawal that they're waiting
for that by ironically, they got off of one drug
to get addicted to another. Okay. And we're not there

(30:42):
to say, hey, you're lying, we're there to to you know.
The whole goal is is to get people living their
best life in recovery, to start the life button again,
press it and start living again. Because until you wrap
your head around recovery and accept it and embrace it

(31:03):
and you get those training wheels off, you haven't started
living again, you know. So I think this.

Speaker 5 (31:08):
I think there's one important fact here, okay, and that
is this, all right, recovery rates are still extremely low.
Recovery rates are still around seven percent. That means that's
a ninety three percent unsuccessful rate. So with this new
technology that we have now it is giving not only
the client, but it's giving the staff that's giving them

(31:30):
that extra time or an even quicker time to get
them on that road to recovery without all the other
nonsense that's in between. Because we've been doing the same
thing for the last fifty years.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
I look at it. If I were a counselor or
a doctor, I wouldn't want to rely on the smiley
charts because people will just, you know, go like I've
been emotional in my car and ten minutes later walk
past the man to hallwait, work, how you doing? Hey
doing good man? How are you?

Speaker 5 (31:55):
You know?

Speaker 1 (31:55):
We all just keep that that front up. But if
you almost it's like almost like a detective that knows
a little bit more. You got information in your back
pocket that they're stressing out on the insight, so you
don't have to come out with hey, I ay. I
told me you could be like, right, Trevor, are you serious.
I'm gonna guess you've probably got a lot of anxiety
going on in you right now, and it might break
me down where I'm like, you're right, I do, man,

(32:17):
I was faking the funk, you know.

Speaker 5 (32:19):
Right, That's exactly That's it. That's exactly right. It just look,
it also takes what we call the human error factor
out of it. Okay, even though with with treatment centers
you have you have humans that are working there.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
You know.

Speaker 5 (32:33):
Again, the truth is somebody's gonna miss a VP. Somebody's
gonna miss something to VP a blood pressure Okay, they're
going to miss a number or or or the or
how do they really detect the anxiety level or the
depression level, and all of a sudden, now this thing
is just done for you. And again it's gonna be
able for us to change the medications in time, all right,

(32:55):
So we're not going through another six or eight week
process on getting the medications changed different.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
So that's a big selling it's point, huge selling point.
So even know in a day or two with the
AI analyzing how their body is responding to the medication
that it could project and suppose to having to wait
for that much time to give.

Speaker 5 (33:13):
That you you absolutely now, I mean, it's unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
Playing a doctor on the radio, aren't I. I'm figuring.
I'm figuring this out as we go along.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
You're doing great, you're doing great.

Speaker 1 (33:25):
Well, Listen, guys, I want to come back back. I
always do and give Flint uh and we'll close in
the Dno, but give Flynn a chance to throw out
the hotline.

Speaker 5 (33:34):
Absolutely, it's five five nine nine seven eight nine two
three nine.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
Say that again, real slow five five.

Speaker 5 (33:40):
Nine nine seven eight nine two three nine. Call me
anytime five five nine nine seven eight nine two three nine.
If you missed it, we'll give it to you next.

Speaker 4 (33:51):
This is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley's Cowards Off.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
Question, FDA approve what kind of clearance anything on this?

Speaker 3 (33:58):
Well, we're we're a cup. We've been around since twenty eighteen.
We've gone through all the clinical trials. It's clinically approved,
clinically tested, and actually the exciting thing is we're going
to get an FDA breakthrough designation sometime in the near future.
And what that means for a client is that this
would be treated like a medical device and could possibly

(34:20):
get it covered on their insurance, which is awesome for
the client because that's who the real winner is with
all this technology.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
Yeah. Actually, and I know I'm not telling you anything
that you probably haven't sat in a vision countless nights
as you try and get your creative brain to go
to sleep. But all the uses that this could be.
Does a military have things like this? Do you know
when they send Navy seals.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
There's a lot of things that we're doing. Research and development,
especially in technology, never stops. But the same algorithm is
now being tested for Parkinson's pain management and get this
battle readiness for the military. So those are some exciting things.
I mean, this is gonna you know, just blow things away.

Speaker 1 (35:05):
But you know, I guess there'd be a day where
you know, the mark of the beast kind of time
period where could that be just put in your skin
possibly something like that that would monitor it where because
things you know, normally start on the outside move in.

Speaker 3 (35:21):
We're working on it. There's something I knew it.

Speaker 1 (35:23):
I knew it.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
There's something there's some secrets that we can't share here.
But but yeah, it's.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
One of the first things you said when they when
they come to a clip. No no, I I okay.
Let's talk about the privacy aspect of this as well,
because people, you know, it's all sure who you are.
The wife could be like tapping in and go, oh,
he's really stressed out. Who has access to all this?

Speaker 3 (35:45):
Just so you hear hip a lot being thrown around,
you know, and hip is important.

Speaker 1 (35:51):
Bouncers that Applebee's could ask you if you've been vaccinated. Yeah,
that went out the door a long time ago, exactly.

Speaker 3 (35:57):
But so just to let everybody know, I mean, we
have basically the same approved clearance as a federal bank.
I mean, we're up there. So this is only meant
for the treatment center's dashboard and basically the clinician. Here's
the thing. So this AI only works in my opinion,
in our opinion, and is only effective when you have

(36:20):
a health professional in the loop. Right, So we present
all these valuable insights to help the clinician make the
best decision for the for the client. And that's why
this works. It's not AI taking over the world, taken over,
you know, machines conquering people.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
Still human.

Speaker 3 (36:37):
Yeah, and that's the important part. Our true north is
the client, the one that's going to have a beautiful
life and recovery. And that's never going to change. So
I like how we have it set up, and it's
going to stay that way.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
Dino. You mentioned Parkinson's. My father has it. He's eighty.
He's doing well. He's still filling in and preaching and
still doing you know painting bedrooms. But I heard you
say that you know dance talking about this. Where can
people go on and look at what you're doing out
there in the world wide web world.

Speaker 3 (37:09):
Sure, so it's oh p eight dot A I is
our website. It's just an enormous amount of information.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
That's O p I p op A no, oh op I.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
Oh ok, I know.

Speaker 1 (37:24):
The name of your company. You're almost FDA approved. O
P I A I D dot A I correct O
p A just like it sounds, and milly otis just
like it's written. When I had to call, I had
to I had to give flinnal call and say Millio.
He said, yeap, you got it right. Dino from Chicago
that's now living in North Carolina has launched this. He

(37:47):
made a ton of money in the nineties with the
bug bracelet, the bug band. Did you ever run across
the girls? Gone wild guy? In the nineties?

Speaker 3 (37:56):
And no, thank god it all right. There would have
been another story.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
Flint.

Speaker 5 (38:00):
Please give out that phone number sure five five nine
nine seven eight nine two three nine that's directly to
me and mister Dino.

Speaker 3 (38:08):
Oh nine one zero wait you got okay?

Speaker 1 (38:10):
Hang on nine one oh.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
Seven seven, seven four nine one.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
Five seven seven, seven ninety three eleven was the song
from the time. Do you remember that?

Speaker 3 (38:22):
I do remember that. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
His is nine one oh seven seven seven forty nine
fifteen nine guys one.

Speaker 4 (38:30):
This is the Trevor Kerry Show. Mondo Valley's Power Dog
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