Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Ripped news.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
You don't have.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Come running as you can show Shooter's gonna help coming.
Speaker 4 (00:19):
Man Dix is the Troubleshooter Show. No tell Martine. Welcome, Welcome,
my friends to the only show of its kind. We
are here to solve problems, answer questions, take complaints. It's
a beautiful Thursday in Denver, Colorado, by the way, Joining
me today, doctor Joel and doctor Joel Chertack with Denver
(00:42):
Region dot com. If you listen to the show, you
know I've been on the weight loss uh GLP one side.
I was almost gonna call it a supplement, but on
the actual drug for I'm looking ato date seven months
now eight months, No, seven months, it'll be seven months
basically yesterday, and Doc, I've lost about forty five pounds. Man,
(01:03):
it's crazy.
Speaker 5 (01:04):
That's fantastic, and that's not unusual for patients.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
Which is amazing to me. First of all, I am
going to get to the lines, but I do get
some lines open, so Debrah, I promise I'll get to you.
She's got an update, I guess on an eviction. We'll
dig into that in a minute. But three oh three
seven one three A two five five you've been ripped off.
You've been taken advantage of. You want to talk to
the doctor about anything. Uh, today's a great day. He's
(01:29):
in studio with us three oh three Martino. You can
call that number right now, three zero three Martino, or
you can always email us a help at troubleshooter dot
count Hey Doc. I had a guy called me yesterday.
He called because he wanted to know if it was
okay for his employer to fire him over a medical issue.
(01:51):
And what the medical issue was. He has sleep apnea
and he's getting it treated now, but at the time
he wasn't treated, so he'd barely get it. And you
sleep and he was falling asleep on the job. So
I basically told him, now, I mean, if you're falling
asleep on the job, of course they can fire you.
And then he worried about getting unemployment and I said, well,
(02:12):
unemployment should be no issue whatsoever, but where it ties
into you. After hearing him for a minute, I started thinking, geez,
what's going on with this guy? Sleep apnea? I said,
are you overweight? He goes yeah. I said, well, you know,
give me the real skinny man. Are you a fat
what's going on here? And he was over five hundred
pounds and thirty five years old.
Speaker 6 (02:34):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (02:34):
Yeah, So I started getting on him. I'm not exactly.
I don't really hold back on that stuff, but I
wanted to really educate him. Thirty five years old, five
hundred pounds, I mean, I said, you got to get
on the job, brother, I said, I got on it.
I was two hundred and thirty, which, like I wasn't obese,
but I was almost there, like another four or five
pounds literally, I'm obese. And I said, I've dropped forty
(02:57):
five My god, you'd probably drop one hundred and fifty
pounds in the first year without blinking.
Speaker 5 (03:03):
Yeah, probably, yeah, maybe even more, yeah exactly.
Speaker 4 (03:06):
And then I started going, then you need to look
into a lap belt, you need to look into seeing
a shrink. I said, you got to look into a
lot of stuff. But it really started making me think
of the obesity issues in this country and a lot
of people. I don't want to get political, but they
don't like Kennedy. They want to be able to get
their mountain dew using their snap good dang it, no
(03:27):
matter what. And you know what, all the power to them.
The problem is the rest of us pay for it
at some point, and the kids pay for it before anybody.
They don't know. You know, when I was a kid,
I love candy. I'd come home and I'd want to
eat every bit of Halloween candy. I got all at
once if it was possible, and my parents would let
me have some and then stash it away. But I mean,
(03:49):
kids don't know, and kids drinking all this sugary mountain
dew and all this crap and all the junk they eat.
And then when people started to talking about the additives
like in fruit loops or whatever cereals they were, I
had no idea that other countries outlaw a lot of
these things, and we're just starting to get there. I
(04:11):
didn't know, like red number whatever is actually derived from petroleum. Yes,
did you know that prior to all the hubbloo?
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Well I did. Because of my background in health and wellness.
You know, we learn about a lot of these things.
Speaker 4 (04:25):
It's amazing to me that we would allow in this
country people to add oil to our foods. Yeah, it
almost makes an addictive quality to it. I think that's
why they do it. I think it's almost like nicotine
in a way, not quite as addictive as that, but
it does something. They don't throw it. Why would they
(04:47):
throw it in there? Maybe it's just that bright, beautiful
color it creates. I think that's what price.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
I think that's what it is. And you know the
key is if they added it to foods and it
had no effects, no negative effect on people, then it
wouldn't really be a big deal. But these products have
been shown to be carcinogenic, and that evidence has been suppressed,
and that evidence has been pushed to the size you.
Speaker 4 (05:10):
Know why, well lobbyist, yes, exactly. Can you imagine Kellogg's
has some prick running around trying to, you know, talk
people in and line in their pockets with money to
allow petroleum and they're cereal. It's evil. It is evil.
It is evil, man. And I heard you talking to
Suzanne when I was coming in about sugar in general.
(05:32):
She said sugar is evil and I was going to
say something, but then you jumped in and said something,
there is a point for carbs and sugar, in fact,
sugar itself. I start to feel like Tom here because
I've heard this rant so long, and there was a
period in my life it was hard to believe. But
sugar is sugar is sugar, and apple has sugar. Everything
(05:54):
has sugar, and apple might have more vitamins and nutrition
than pure cane sugar, but it breaks down like any
carbon too, sugar and there is a purpose in sugar,
and it's energy. I mean, if you want to get
an army ready to go out and fight, or you
want to do something along those terms, we have to
have carbs, we have to have sugar, or else we're
not going to have the energy, agreed.
Speaker 5 (06:15):
Right, Well, Complex carbohydrates is something that your body needs
for fuel, absolutely, and when you have it in the
form of a whole fruit, your body breaks that down
pretty well. The problem is, you know, and I'm like you, it.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
Breaks it down quicker.
Speaker 5 (06:29):
It breaks it down quicker, and it breaks it down
in a more readily usable.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Got it form?
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Now more is better absorber compared to like high fruit toase,
corn syrup or something, right, they're not the.
Speaker 7 (06:40):
Same, right Well.
Speaker 5 (06:41):
The key is this, Like you know, when you take
sugar out of a whole food, like even when you
make orange juice or apple juice, you're concentrating all of
that sugar, so you're having an unnatural high dose of sugar.
Same thing with high fruit TOAs corn syrup. Corn is
not really bad for you. I mean, it's not the
most easily digestible vegetable, but it's not by itself bad
for you. But when you take and extract the sugar
(07:02):
out of it and concentrate it, that's not what your
body cords here. That's not what your body's naturally built
to digest. The same thing with large amounts of fruit juice,
like we weren't built. We weren't. We didn't you know,
go out into the wild and pick a bunch of
fruit and then juice all of it. You know, you
ate the fruit, and so that's where the problems come in.
And then you know, I grew up around around the
(07:23):
same time you did.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
I mean, but it's but going back real quick talking
about sugar though, if you look at the junk food,
like real junk food, like I don't know, like hot Cheetos, Doritos,
all this crap out there with all kinds of stuff
on it, it's not just the sugar of the cars.
It's these chemicals we're talking about too that I mean,
I don't even know what purpose they have in there
(07:44):
besides the pretty.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
Colors, Probably not much at all. I mean, I don't
know that they're particularly addictive per se, but they you know,
it's the bright colors.
Speaker 4 (07:53):
That I've read so many things, for example, diet cokes addicting.
And I bet you anybody out there that has four
or five a day. Suzanne, it took her. How long
did it take you to get off diet coke?
Speaker 2 (08:03):
It took me a while, But I've been sober and
clean from diet coke for like fourteen years.
Speaker 4 (08:07):
She used to drink five or six a day, and
when she went to stop it, starting to read about
saccharin or whatever the sugar was fourteen years ago in diet.
Speaker 5 (08:16):
Coke, the aspartame or whatever they put in it.
Speaker 4 (08:18):
Whatever, And all of a sudden you start reading bad
things about it when it comes to digestion and different
things like that. But then the bottom line was, like
when she went to get off of it, she was
Jones in it. Man.
Speaker 5 (08:28):
Yeah, Well, the sugar in the caffeine, I mean those
there is no sugar in it. It's the APEC sugar,
the fake sugar, even the even real sugar in caffeine.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
I mean very addictive. Yeah, all that.
Speaker 5 (08:38):
Stuff is addictive, But the chemicals that you're talking about
the dyes and the food colorings and the things like that.
I don't think they're necessarily addictive. They're just there for sales, perpo.
Speaker 4 (08:47):
I'm so fascinated by this. Her and I watched this
show and it's called one thousand Pound Roommates and it's
two gals. One of them started out around seven hundred pounds,
the other was five hundred and we and it's a
reality show. And you can tell, I mean, you can
say it might be a little stage, but the reality
is they're huge, they're gigantic. And one of them is
(09:09):
trying to get to a lap belt where she can
have surgery without dying, to get a lap belt to
lose weight. So she's on the stick, so she's got
the GLP one coming in and she starts losing weight.
And what's funny is the other one's not on it,
and the other one's like always trying to like sabotage,
sabotage what's going on. That's perfect Susanne. And it makes
(09:32):
me think of like the psychological aspect of losing weight
when you're that overweight, like the guy that called yesterday
five hundred pounds, there's all kinds of mental issues going
on to I don't care what anybody says, but Suzanne
pointed something out that was absolutely amazing. When we're on
like episode five or six, whatever, we're still watching it. Anytime,
(09:58):
this is prior to the one gallon GLP one. The
other gal still does it. Anytime they pull up to
a drive through. And by the way, it's crazy. They
have like a little Toyota or something, or it's a
smaller vehicle and one's got to sit in the back
with the passenger seat all the way to the front
just to fit in, and then the other one, of
course is in the front driving. But anytime they get
(10:21):
near food like Dunkin Donuts, Pullip bliss Mark, it's like
a crackhead, yeah, waving crack. They smile, they start dancing
and they're jubilistic. It's absolutely nuts. And then when they
see the food and it's in their hand and the
cameras right in their face and they're shoving this big
(10:43):
quadruple dripping.
Speaker 7 (10:46):
Or something as I can only imagine, you know, like,
oh my god.
Speaker 4 (10:49):
It is the most amazing thing I've ever seen. In fact,
they look happier when they're in a drive through eating.
Then they do the other hour of the show. It
is absolutely crazy, and I'm like, how do you break
that cycle? How in the GLP ones is one of
the ways, because it is working for the gal that's
(11:10):
on it, she's dropped over one hundred plus pounds. But
one of the things people don't realize it does is
it cuts out the food noise. I talk about this
in the commercials. You don't think of the food. She
Now when she's there, she's not eating that crap. Her
friend is still jubilistic. I don't even know if that's
a word, but I think so the mark word.
Speaker 5 (11:30):
I think we understand.
Speaker 4 (11:31):
But now she is like she's there, she's not She's
not freaking out like it's crack man, it's nuts. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
That and that's what happens. You know, people like you said,
the food noise is gone, they feel full faster, way
faster and uh and lose weight as a result of that.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
Okay, I got to take a break. Three oh three, Martino,
we got I'm gonna go to Deborah first. Three oh
three seven one three eight two five five. You have
a contractor out there that took your money and ran.
You need help with a for you got a bad landlord.
I don't care a bad dentist. Speaking of witch, Kelly,
did you enjoy your dental cleaning yesterday? I'll see if
(12:10):
she talks now. For people that don't know, Kelly is terrified,
and I was looking for a better word of the dentist.
It's incredible.
Speaker 8 (12:23):
It's a dental phobiac thing.
Speaker 4 (12:25):
Yeah, but it's worse than ever. So doc. Literally her
husband will set the appointment and she will have to
be sedated, and he won't tell her the appointment's coming
up because she won't even be able to do anything.
So literally, last night is when he broke the news
to her.
Speaker 7 (12:44):
Right, No, Tuesday night?
Speaker 4 (12:45):
Tuesday? Oh yeah, because you were out yesterday for the appointment. Yeah,
so tuesday night, if you don't mind sharing, how does
that look in your household? Seriously?
Speaker 8 (12:54):
So we were I had a very good day here
at work, and we finished dinner and I was doing
the dishes and it was about eight o'clock and he
came in handed me four valume and I was like, uh, oh.
Speaker 4 (13:11):
She knows what that means. Did you actually have an
anesthesiologist this time or you didn't need one this time?
Speaker 8 (13:18):
They do something called pill sedation where it's like really
heavy pills.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
So they drug you up, but you can still open
your mouth basically.
Speaker 7 (13:28):
Uh no, I actually have to have.
Speaker 8 (13:31):
I have a splitter that they put in both sides
because I have like a.
Speaker 7 (13:36):
Really small mouth.
Speaker 4 (13:37):
I got it. It's hard to just keep it open. Yeah,
and then you basically they knock you out through pills.
Speaker 7 (13:42):
They knocked me out through pills.
Speaker 4 (13:43):
It's just like bill cost And then when they.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
Find something like yesterday they found a cavity, and they
don't they know that they can't reschedule me for something because.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
You won't come back.
Speaker 8 (13:55):
I won't come back.
Speaker 4 (13:56):
So then they did it.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
So they woke me up, did another round of pills.
And I also have what do you call the nitrous Yeah,
the gas, so they upped the gas and that knocked
me out in about five minutes.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Unbelievable.
Speaker 8 (14:12):
And then so the whole thing, the whole ordeal was
about eight hours.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
We feel for you, Kelly, and I mean that. So
everybody hold tight. We got one line open. Three oh three, Martina.
We'll get to the phones after this. Any questions on
the weight loss. Today's a absolutely great day. And before
and while I'm touching on that subject hair restoration. These
guys do something that most clinics don't do. It's unbelievable.
(14:36):
And listen, I'm want to tell you something about Doc here.
He doesn't just you know, talk the talk, He walks
the walk. I called him yesterday and I was talking
to him about something else, advertising, And you know what
he was doing yesterday? He was climbing, hiking, running, jogging.
Whatever you do up of fourteen or what was it
(14:58):
Long's peak? How many fourteen ers have you done?
Speaker 5 (15:02):
I've done seven of them. I did two this summer?
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Is your goal to hit all of them in the
continentle No, you're not one of those.
Speaker 5 (15:08):
No, I might do a few more longs. It's been
on my list, on my bucket list for long since
I've moved to Colorado and see it every day.
Speaker 4 (15:15):
All right, cool, everybody, one line open, three oh three, Martino.
I promise we'll dive in right after this.
Speaker 9 (15:25):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel roofing
dot com.
Speaker 10 (15:29):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 9 (15:34):
Time for an insurance check up, free no obligation comparison
call Compass insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies.
Speaker 11 (15:42):
Find out now three oh three seven to seven to
one help.
Speaker 9 (15:45):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate Man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (15:56):
All right, three o three seven one three eight two
five five. By the way, this hour brought to you
by K and H Home Solutions. They have oupin windows,
absolutely gorgeous product line, custom crafted, super insulating, thermally efficient.
They do windows and doors. And then, of course you
have a company like K and H Home Solutions, it's
been around since nineteen fifty six, standing behind all their products.
(16:20):
If you're looking for windows, doors, sidings, K and H
has what you're looking for. Three oh three four two
one seventy one hundred. Simple as that three oh three
four two one seventy one hundred or Khwindows dot com.
What a great company. All right, let's do this. Deborah,
what is going on with you? It says it's a
follow up, but I don't know what's happening. Go ahead, Hi,
(16:43):
this is hi Debrah.
Speaker 12 (16:46):
Hi, Yeah, my husband buy today last see.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
I'm sorry side, I'm sorry, Deborah, you're kind of coming
in and out. Did you just say your husband died
of cancer last Wednesday?
Speaker 13 (17:00):
Took hands?
Speaker 12 (17:00):
I'm sorry, I'm in a very old poeme.
Speaker 4 (17:03):
Go ahead.
Speaker 12 (17:05):
He's not good. You know, he was in host.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
On the chair, and when did he pass? Okay, boy,
I'm really sorry to hear that week.
Speaker 7 (17:18):
We're sorry about that.
Speaker 4 (17:19):
I mean, that's so that's so soon, but it's not
sudden because you said hospice. But how can we help you, Deborah?
Speaker 12 (17:29):
My stepson has rewritten his will.
Speaker 4 (17:36):
Deborah, I'm sorry. I got to put you on hold. Listen.
I really want to help her. I can't hear a
damn word. She's saying something about her steps on Kelly,
She's got to go outside. If it's a cell.
Speaker 7 (17:46):
Phone, it kind of sounds like she might be on speaker.
Speaker 4 (17:49):
I'm not sure. I have no idea, but let's see
what we can do. I want to help her out.
I have no idea what her steps on her husband
dying last week, and the steps on changing a will altogether.
I don't know what this means for Deborah. David, what
is going on with you? David?
Speaker 14 (18:08):
Hey, they're my friend? Hey man, Well, what's going on
with me is I have have a problem with I,
meaning well known as car shield.
Speaker 4 (18:19):
What's going on with it?
Speaker 14 (18:22):
I put my I live in Colorado Springs, by the way,
and I put my vehicle in the shop at Mike
Maroni South, which is a cheval Let Traverse for a
transmission issue on June thirtieth. I drive for Uber during
(18:42):
the summer when I don't drive school buses during the
school year for Falcon District forty nine, and essentially I
got told that Carshield has a deductible of two hundred
and fifty dollars on my contract, and then I just
got all the paperwork back and I ended up being
(19:06):
charged five and twenty nine dollars for some parts and
my deductible. And then when I picked my car up,
I get told that Carshield won't pay for the programming
of the new transmission. It's not part of something that
they do. And I ended up having to show out
(19:26):
another four hundred and forty five dollars.
Speaker 4 (19:31):
I say, I would say that's incredible that they didn't
pay that, But what's truly incredible is that they paid
virtually anything. So if you didn't have to come out
of pocket, around one thousand bucks. How much would it
have been total? How much did Carshield pay.
Speaker 14 (19:49):
I'm not exactly sure how much car Shield paid.
Speaker 4 (19:52):
What did you have done to the vehicle? You had
a new transmission or a rebuild or what did they do?
Speaker 14 (19:58):
Oh, they wouldn't even pay for a rebuild transmission. They
paid for a transmission that was wrecked. So the first
transmission that they got to to.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Maroon, well, I don't need to go into that too much,
but so they put a used transmission in, right, But
there was two of them, so the first one was
no good.
Speaker 14 (20:20):
Right, and then they had to wait three more weeks
for another one to come in. Yeah, and then the
debacle just kept going on and on and on. And
I've asked twice over the last weeks for a supervisor
and they tell me, well, it's going to take two
days for the supervisor to call you back.
Speaker 4 (20:38):
Well that's fine, have them supervisor, have them call you back.
But look, man, a lot of this. There's two things
with Carshield. I'm going to get into this. I got
to take a break. I'll come right back to you.
We might be able to do something, but I'll tell
you right now Carshield. In fact, I think they just
settled a ten million dollar case with the FTC, the
Federal Trade Commission of all people for deceptive advertising. Think
(21:01):
about it. These are the commercials we see where these
stars come out and they basically say like, oh, pay
us one hundred bucks a month, and if anything ever
happens to your car, all covered repairs are covered. Think
about that. All covered repairs are covered. Well, they're not
telling you what's covered or not. It is deceptive. Okay,
that's great. If it's a covered repair, it's covered. How
(21:22):
about all the repairs that aren't covered like this, guys,
we'll talk more about that in a second.
Speaker 9 (21:32):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com.
Speaker 10 (21:36):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 9 (21:41):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much You're coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three all three, seven
to seven to one help. You'll think you're his only
customer When you choose Frank durand the real estate Man
dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (22:06):
All right, three three seven, one, three eight two five five. Look,
we were talking about just not just and I mean
this not just Carshield, but these aftermarket warranties, they're just
not what they say. Now where Carshield got into a
lot of trouble, I'm going to bring David up. Was
there deceptive advertising practices? If you actually looked, David at
(22:28):
that contract, I would assume somewhere in that warranty or
that service plan you purchased, it says we don't pay
for programming. It's probably under the exceptions. Have you looked
in the actual policy.
Speaker 14 (22:42):
I have not looked into the policy itself, and I've
had them for about a year or so.
Speaker 4 (22:48):
Yeah, I would assume it's whether that.
Speaker 15 (22:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (22:52):
So if you look in your policy, where you want
to go to is the exceptions things they don't pay for,
what's not covered. Go look can see what's not covered.
Now if nowhere in there it talks about programming. And
it's so stupid because we all know on most cars
made after even twenty fifteen, if not earlier than that,
(23:12):
when you replace a lot of components, you got to
program them to the car. It's just the way they work.
Now everything's computerized. They got to be matched up. So,
I mean, I find it ridiculous, but it's one of
those exceptions that they're not going to cover. I'm almost
sure it's in there. As far as the other amount
of money, the other four hundred what was that for.
Speaker 14 (23:34):
I believe that was for that programming that they just
I spoke with Maroney and after I picked my car
up yesterday, they called me later that evening and told me, hey,
by the way, they undercut us a boy four hundred
and forty five dollars. But even Maroney couldn't tell me
what the other full forty five was for.
Speaker 4 (23:55):
Well, no, I'll tell you exactly what it's for. This
is another thing with these service plans. But you know
this is lived by the sword, die by the sword.
Here's what I'm talking about, labor rates. I don't care
if it's shared an auto tech or Jeff Vic or
the dealership, Moroni or anybody. They have a labor price,
you might agree with it, you might not. Let's say
(24:17):
it's two hundred bucks an hour. I'm just gonna throw
that out there. That's probably close to the going rate.
These companies like Carshield will only pay, say one hundred
and fifty an hour or whatever it is. The shop
can charge you the difference, or you can feel free
to bring it somewhere else, or you can argue with Carshield.
(24:37):
There is not one shop around that'll do it for
the labor rate you're willing to pay. Be like, Hey,
I'm not in Cheyenne, I'm in the Denver metro area.
There isn't one place around that only gets one hundred
bucks an hour. And if you could have argued with
them up front, they might have upped the rate. But
highly doubtful. I mean, these companies are out there to
(24:58):
make money. I get it's so mad thinking. The advertisements
of that that they do, they are very deceptive. They
make it sound like if you have a car that's
a piece of junk, long as it's within fifteen years
manufactured and long as it's under one hundred and twenty
thousand miles or whatever the parameters are if anything breaks
(25:19):
are going to fix and it's simply not the case.
It's simply not the case. But if they put in
a used transmission, what other work did they do under warranty?
Speaker 14 (25:27):
David, That I don't know, I know that they had.
They covered some hub bearings because.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
Of excellent mission jerking.
Speaker 14 (25:38):
Yeah, they did cover that, but they I don't know
what they didn't.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
If you're only if you're eight hundred I hate to
say this, but if you're eight hundred to one thousand
out of pocket for the new hubs, the new hub bearings,
and on top of that a used transmission that's actually
working I assume the second one, then actually you're kind
of ahead of the game. There's a lot of people
that have nothing. I mean, there's a lot of people
that just simply, for whatever reason, maybe they put on
(26:06):
an after market door handle and it voided the entire warranty.
I mean, I have heard and seeing so many things
it's crazy. So you didn't do too bad with Carshield,
but honestly, I'd get rid of them. How much do
you pay for that?
Speaker 14 (26:22):
Ninety bucks a month?
Speaker 4 (26:23):
Yeah, ninety bucks a month, and you thought everything would
be covered, didn't you. How many years have you been
paying for it?
Speaker 14 (26:31):
About eighteen months?
Speaker 4 (26:32):
And how many times have you used it just as
one time twice? How much was the first time dollar wise?
Or what was the problem?
Speaker 14 (26:41):
It was the power steering system and I only paid
the two fifty that time, So two fifty for the
power steering.
Speaker 4 (26:48):
What kind of vehicle is it?
Speaker 14 (26:50):
It's a shady traverse? What year sixteen?
Speaker 4 (26:55):
So a sixteen traverse. I mean that could have been.
I don't know if it's a power steering pump it
went out, or if it's got a rack. I don't
know about that. But I bet you that is one thousand,
two thousand dollars that used transmission in those bearings. If
you didn't do anything else, probably would have paid the
sixteen hundred bucks that you've already paid them. I mean,
(27:17):
a used transmission to a dealership installed is probably going
to be three thousand. You only paid eight hundred. Let's
say one thousand. That's two thousand, probably another thousand for
the power steering. I mean, right now you're to the
good about fourteen hundred if I'm crunching numbers, right, So
you're one of the few ones out there.
Speaker 14 (27:35):
Man, Oh that's always good.
Speaker 4 (27:39):
Yeah, it is.
Speaker 10 (27:40):
Well.
Speaker 4 (27:40):
I appreciate your call. There's just nothing we're going to
be able to do on that. I mean, there's no
purpose in calling the dealer. The dealer should have had
these conversations with you at first, they should have called
you up and said, you know, we need authorization for
this because they're not paying it. But I'm assuming they did.
You just left that out of the conversation.
Speaker 14 (28:01):
Yeah, that I didn't know though.
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Well, oh, they didn't tell you till you went and
picked it up. Correct, Well, that's bs. They're not supposed
to do that at all. When well, what did you
sign when you were there? Did you agree to pay
for everything that they didn't pay for, meaning the warranty company?
Speaker 14 (28:20):
I agreed to pay for the fluid in my and
am I deductible? I did agree to the fluid and
in the labor for that flut.
Speaker 4 (28:29):
But wait, but then when you showed up, they hit
you with the additional amount. Correct, Well, this is a
Maroni issue. Let's put let's put Deputy Bow on this.
Speaker 7 (28:39):
Yeah, he's taking cases for us today.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
Mark, Deputy Bow, I want you to call over hold on.
Let me put you on hold David. Make sure we
get all the info from David. So you're not allowed
to do that in Colorado. I don't know exactly what
he signed, so bo I want you to get a
copy of his receipt and his estimate when he first
went in, but they they can't tell you, Hey, it's
(29:01):
going to be two hundred and fifty dollars deductible, and
it's going to be one hundred bucks for fluid or
two hundred whatever it is. Then all of a sudden,
when you pick the vehicle up, they go, oh, by
the way, you owe us another four hundred and fifty
dollars for blah blah blah. They're supposed to call and
get that authorized to begin with. So that's a no,
no thank goodness in the state of Colorado. So let's
(29:24):
get his info. Three oh three seven one three eight
two five five. Hopefully Deborah she is Mark. We can
hear her now. Yep, we're going to find out what's
going on with her. Her husband just passed away on
July thirtieth. He was in hospice, and I guess she's
in the house. The sun is now involved and will's
been changed. Sounds like a mess.
Speaker 9 (29:49):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best Roofer Excel Roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're contenth
time for anture and check up free, no obligation. In comparison,
call Compass insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies.
Speaker 11 (30:07):
Find out now three oh three seven seven to one help.
Speaker 9 (30:10):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate man dot Com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (30:22):
All right three o three seven one three eight two
five five three oh three Martina, don't forget you have
any questions for the doc, please give us a called. Hey, Debra,
I brought you back up. Hopefully we can get started here.
So your husband passed away, and what go from there?
Speaker 12 (30:41):
I actually make it short.
Speaker 6 (30:43):
My husband.
Speaker 12 (30:44):
I have his will in front of me, got it
through our lawyer, and it says that has no contest clause.
And my stepson completely rewritten, rewritten, has rewritten the will
when my husband was under hospice an unsound mind, and
my lawyer, his lawyer has said, look at section ten
(31:07):
point seven, no contest clause.
Speaker 16 (31:11):
He can't he couldn't have written it.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
Well, what does your attorney say at that point?
Speaker 12 (31:19):
Regretfully, I don't have one. He wanted three thousand dollars
this sweep to retain me.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
What is in the will? Tell me about the assets
that were left. I assume the will that you have
with that clause and in no contest clause. Look, we're
going to get an attorney on to talk about it.
But just because the clause is there, I don't think
that means you can literally not contest the will. I mean,
that's kind of insane in anything, But I don't know.
(31:44):
I mean, we're going to talk to Dan mackenzie on that.
We're going to get you some legal advice on that.
But what tell me about the estate in general? What's
in there?
Speaker 12 (31:57):
It's our home that I've moved in. I was married
to my husband for fifteen years and this.
Speaker 7 (32:03):
Is my home.
Speaker 12 (32:04):
This is our home.
Speaker 4 (32:05):
So his son, I assume you're I assume you're not
the mother of the son.
Speaker 14 (32:12):
No, I am not.
Speaker 4 (32:13):
And what does the will say that he created and
had your husband or your deceased husband sign.
Speaker 14 (32:23):
I have?
Speaker 12 (32:24):
The funeral home has said I cannot see the will.
Speaker 4 (32:28):
Well, let me understand something. The will you have is
that original with his signature with that clause? Is that correct?
Speaker 16 (32:36):
Correct?
Speaker 4 (32:36):
Okay? And the other will who's taking care of everything
at the funeral home is the son?
Speaker 12 (32:44):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (32:46):
And in the will you have everything goes to you,
and the will he has everything goes to him.
Speaker 12 (32:53):
Probably I'm not supposed to I don't have I'm not
privy to it at this point. Yeah, my husband will
be buried on My husband will be buried tomorrow.
Speaker 4 (33:05):
My goodness. And let me just understand this. You've been
in that house for fifteen years with your husband he
passed away. What does your step son want to do?
If you even know? Right now, Let's say he does
end up with the house, is he looking to get
you out of the house or what's going on there?
And do you have like a contentious relationship with this person?
Speaker 12 (33:30):
I'm afraid so now, my husband regretfully in February fourteenth
to put my steps on on the deed, so i'll
it transferred to his son, which was not supposed to happen.
Speaker 4 (33:43):
Well, when he did that in February, that's going to
be a little different than the will, because if he
gave ownership to the house to this person in February,
he doesn't have the house to leave you in the
will he gave you. Does that make sense?
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (34:01):
How about the rest of the estate. Is there anything else?
Was there like money in the bank or cars or
anything else of any kind of value or significant value.
Speaker 12 (34:12):
No, regretfully, nothing's left.
Speaker 4 (34:15):
But how much is the houseworth?
Speaker 12 (34:20):
Probably rout hybrids alsian.
Speaker 4 (34:22):
And is it paid off or where is it at? There? Yes,
it is paid off? So and he quit claimed? Did
he quit claim it? Or how did he? How did
he dad it over?
Speaker 12 (34:34):
I'm not sure. I think I was out of the
house and.
Speaker 4 (34:38):
All right, hold on, I want to look at hold on,
hold on, I want you to give Kelly the address.
I want to look up who owns that house you're in.
I want to see how it was quit claimed. I
want to get Dan McKenzie on to talk about, you know,
not being able to amend a will. I I've got
all kinds of questions here. I just fear there's not
(35:00):
many places to go, but I'm going to try everything
i can. So Deborah, give Kelly that address. I'm gonna
have Suzanne look up some information. All right, folks, we
got lines open three oh three seven, one, three eight,
two five five. You have any questions, complaints anything, three
oh three Martino Cinemen.
Speaker 9 (35:30):
Go with a sure thing, Denver's Best Roofer, Excel roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're contenth
time for an insurance check up free, no obligation. In comparison,
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies.
Speaker 11 (35:48):
Find out now three oh three seven to seven to
one help.
Speaker 9 (35:50):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate Man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 2 (36:05):
Ripped off.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
News so you don't have them running just as fast
as we can, Shooter's gonna help.
Speaker 4 (36:18):
Come man, this is the Troubleshooter Show. No Tom Martine, Welcome,
Welcome to the only show. It's kind and we're here
to solve problems, answer questions, take your complaints. You've been
ripped off, you need a little help, we'd love to
hear from you. Three zero three Martino, we got some
lines open right now. I also have doctor Joel Chardak
(36:40):
with me in studio with Denver Regen. We're gonna be
talking to him about all kinds of stuff. But we
were talking to Deborah last hour, and Deborah, we're trying
to get on our attorney. So I want you to
hold tight. But to recap really quick. Deborah called up
and basically, your husband passed away on the thirtieth. He's
actually getting buried Tom and she has a will. In
(37:02):
the will, there's a clause that says no one can
basically write or create another will, which I've never heard of.
It sounds crazy. I mean, I've heard of irrevocable trust,
but I've never heard of language and a will to
where you can't change a will or the person can't
change a will. Who wrote the will, But we're going
(37:23):
to find out from Dan McKenzie. So, but the other
really where the issue comes down is her step son
basically says the house is his now and he does
not Deborah, He's going to kick you out of the house.
Is that kind of where this is leading? Have you
talked to him about staying or what?
Speaker 12 (37:44):
No, we really don't speaks, So I mean.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
What are you going to? What are you going to do?
If an attorney says no, this is kind of how
it is he has the house because it sounds like
he does. And let me tell you why, Suzanne, who
owns that house? When you went to the county h So.
Speaker 2 (38:02):
From what I can see, it's her deceased husband and
his son, her step son.
Speaker 4 (38:09):
So he simply added the kid onto the shape.
Speaker 7 (38:11):
Yeah, so he didn't remove himself. But that's all I
could see that they were the two owners.
Speaker 4 (38:16):
Yeah, so that information send to Dan as well. So
hold on, Deborah, we're going to try to get that info.
But if your will says, let's just say you have
a will and it says I'm going to leave my
two thousand twenty one camaro to Suzanne and I die,
but I already sold the camaro, there's nothing that's going
(38:37):
to be done. I mean, she's not going to get
the camaro because I already sold it. And it looks
like he sold the house or at least added his
son onto the deed back in Well, what's interesting is
we really do need Dan mackenzie on this because what's
interesting I wonder if that deed did they both own
(38:58):
it jointly? Is it tenants in common? We need to
figure that out too. Does it say what kind of
deed it is on there? Does it say tenants in common?
Speaker 7 (39:08):
It doesn't. It just says simply the two gentlemen's names.
That's it.
Speaker 4 (39:12):
So there's two ways to own a house generally, or
there's multiple ways. But one of the ways would be
Suzanne and I own the house one hundred percent of
it together. If something happens to her and she passes,
I own one hundred percent and vice versa, then there's
another way where you can actually have ownership in the house.
Fifty percent of the house is owned by Suzanne, fifty
(39:34):
percent is owned by me. I'd be curious what that
deed says, because if that was the case, then maybe
his fifty percent would go to Deborah. Now she's in
another quagmire that she owns fifty percent of a house
with someone that probably wants to sell it so he
can get his cash. But that would be a much
(39:54):
better scenario. But my gut is it's not that way.
But we're gonna hear from an attorney on that, doctor Joel. Oh,
by the way, let me do a little housekeeping here.
Frank durand the real estate man. I talk about Frank
all the time. He is a great guy. You want
the best realator out there, you call up Frank. Let
me tell you why he sells more homes, literally more
(40:14):
homes for more money in one month than most realtors
in the entire state. Of Colorado. You're ready for this
sell in a year, that's amazing, and a lot of
them it's more than a year. That's Frank Durant, He's great,
Doctor Joel. I want to talk about hair real quick.
We've talked about the diet drugs that the ones that
(40:37):
I'm on. I've lost a ton of weight. We've talked
about that last hour, forty five pounds and seven months.
The food noise is gone. It's great. But the hair
transplant stuff you guys did Martinos, probably it's been a while,
at least a couple.
Speaker 5 (40:52):
Of years, about two years old, say yeah, and.
Speaker 4 (40:54):
Then the issue with him, well, his hair grew back wonderfully.
I was absolutely a really good yeah, but daddy had
chemo and he lost hair. So, I mean it's kind
of a hard but not.
Speaker 7 (41:06):
All of it, that's for sure.
Speaker 4 (41:08):
No, not all of it. In fact, the bald spots
that he had basically are they're gone. I mean, he's
just got real thin hair, but it's grown back. I
don't know how much is chemo at this point, but
in general, why does your procedures stick out compared to
other procedures. Do you guys do a transplant? Do you
guys do stem cells do? You guys have different options.
(41:30):
I remember we talked about this, I don't know four
or five months ago, and one of the things you
guys offer is kind of a hybrid where you have
a transplant and then you actually go in with stem cells.
So what what are you guys doing.
Speaker 5 (41:43):
Well, here's what we do that's different from everybody else,
and that is that we use stem cell therapy and
we also use other regenerative products like exosomes to restore hair.
So for somebody who has thinning hair but doesn't necessarily
need a full hair transplant, we can use this procedure
to regrow the hair. And you know, just to summarize
(42:03):
what it does is it restores blood flow to the
hair follicles and the blood flow gets reduced by age
by testosterone.
Speaker 4 (42:12):
Why wouldn't someone do that compared to you just get
a hair transplant.
Speaker 5 (42:17):
So we also do hair transplants. So let's say you
have a big bald spot, a big area. Restoring that
with stem cell therapy isn't going to be enough. So
what we do, again, what that is different from other
hair transplant facilities is will do the hair transplant and
then in addition to that, will also apply stem cell
therapy so that we're restoring blood floats to the scalps
(42:38):
so the hair transplant will stick. So sometimes people get
a hair transplant and they'll get new hair in an area,
but the hair around it continues to fall out. So
then you have this new hair and then you have
hair around it that's creating more bald spots. So what
the stem cell does is it it activates the new
transplanted hair and also restores the rest of the scalps
so that you're not continuing to lose hair a full
(43:00):
hair transplant, and also that it's going to maintain and
stay for a long period of time.
Speaker 4 (43:04):
That's incredible. Let me ask you why you wouldn't do
this though, And you know, I say this somewhat in jest,
but I'm I just saw an advertisement on CNN or
Fox whichever TV that is here, and it said force
Factor Hair Growth Accelerator with Lustriva, and it says it
(43:26):
supports it's a listen to this. It promotes thicker, fuller,
stronger hair. Sixty soft juice tastes like candy. It's like
they look like starburst and apparently they taste like starburst.
Have you ever heard of this? Is it possible? Something
(43:48):
you know? Sold on Amazon for thirty five dollars can
restore your hair. And it's kind of funny because it
doesn't say restore. What it says is it promotes thicker
and fuller hair. Well, I assume if you brush your
hair and clean it or shampoo it occasionally, technically you're
(44:11):
probably promoting thicker and fuller hair. Then it says supports
new hair growth. Well, I would guess if it's got
any vitamins in it that might support hair growth. It
does that, and then it nourishes. And I mean, for
my goodness, a conditioner or a shampoo can make your
hair healthier. I mean, really, it's not saying it restores,
(44:35):
but it says hair growth accelerator.
Speaker 10 (44:38):
Is the name of it.
Speaker 4 (44:38):
What do you think of a supplement like.
Speaker 5 (44:40):
That, Well, most of those supplements just contain a high
amount of biotin, which is also in those shampoos that
kind of that people rub on their head, right, But
it doesn't necessarily it promotes fuller hair.
Speaker 4 (44:52):
You already does that mean thicker because you can put
a conditioner on your hair that makes it feel thicker.
Speaker 5 (44:56):
It's the same thing, just taking orally instead of applied
to your hair.
Speaker 4 (45:00):
Oh so it literally like saturates your hair from the
follicle up right.
Speaker 5 (45:05):
But that's not going to restore hair growth. That's just
going to make your hair thicker, you know, less brittle
if you will.
Speaker 4 (45:10):
Okay, less brittles. They're all are like a conditioner though, correct, Okay.
Speaker 5 (45:15):
If you're just taking it orally instead of applying it topically,
that's the only difference. There are some products out there
that use what they claim are natural like uh supplements
that block the HT.
Speaker 4 (45:26):
But but something like this, someone that's got a bald spot,
they're not going to start growing now, no, no, no
hair from this thirty five dollars starboards.
Speaker 5 (45:36):
It's really misleading advertising.
Speaker 9 (45:38):
It is.
Speaker 4 (45:38):
It's very misleading looking at it because it's it's called
hair growth. But then when you look at the claims
on it, the claims don't even talk about growth. It
talks about thicker hair. Well, it says supports new hair growth,
but once again, what doesn't support new hair growth? The
capple technically might support.
Speaker 5 (45:58):
Health vitamins multivitamin but exactly. But you know, the key
in understanding hair loss is that all hair loss comes
down to loss of blood flow to the hair follicle
and that happens with age. It happens with a byproduct
of testosterone metabolism, and it happens to certain men based
on genetics as they get older.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
Can PRP help hair growth?
Speaker 5 (46:19):
PRP is one of the things that we use in
our process. And then there's another product that we use
when I said other regenerative products, there's a products called
microvascular tissue. And what microvascular tissue is. It was approved
by the FDA for use in wound hair in wound healing,
and it promotes blood vessel growth that literally makes your
body grow more bloodvests.
Speaker 4 (46:38):
We've talked about that with neuropathy, right, we use the
same thing with hair. And it was incredible when we
were talking about that. What's absolutely amazing about what is
it called.
Speaker 5 (46:48):
It's called MVT microvascular tissue and the FDA approved it. Yeah,
they approved it for the purposes of growing new blood vessels,
particularly in wound healing.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
But process and people out there that suffer from it,
this is another thing you guys do. So you kind
of sidetracked me, But it's very interesting because when we
talked about that drug. People could have neuropathy in their
foot because basically they have no blood flow at all
or very little blood flow, and it tangles and then
(47:19):
it gets to the point where it hurts, and living
with it, the neuropathis horrible. And you've had people that
have come in and basically within a month, more than
neuropathy's gone, the blood vessels have completely grown back and
blood's flowing to them. I mean, that's insane, right.
Speaker 5 (47:35):
It's the MVT and the exosomes in that process.
Speaker 4 (47:38):
So how let's go back to the hair growth. It
does the same thing. It brings a blood flow which
wackx the follicle into growing hair.
Speaker 5 (47:46):
That's the key in both conditions. Both situations. In neuropathy
you have lack of blood flow to a nerve that's
causing the dysfunction and hair loss, you're having lack of
blood flow to the hairflow.
Speaker 4 (47:54):
If they ever use that internally, like on organs, if
someone's having a problem with their kidneys, or someone's having
a problem with anything, as far as I know, they used.
Speaker 5 (48:04):
It in wound care specifically, that's what it's That's.
Speaker 4 (48:07):
What's like in a triage situation.
Speaker 5 (48:10):
Let's say you had a really bad burn, and you
might be diabetic and the or or you had a
bad wound in your diabetic and the wounds is just
not healing. They'll apply this microvascular tissue product to that
and it'll grow new blood vessels and really accelerate the
wound healing and wounds that aren't healing properly for people. Now,
we use it in the application of restoring blood flow
to nerves, restoring blood flow to hair follicles, even report
(48:33):
storing blood flow to joints. When we do our standard
stem cell procedure with joints, we also use microvascular tissue
as well. It just really promotes healing and blood.
Speaker 4 (48:41):
Well, you guys got a great name for your I
mean really, you do exactly what your name says. Denver Regen.
Pretty simple it is. It's really simple Denver Regen dot com.
Everybody hold tight. Any questions for the doc, any complaints,
any issues with anything.
Speaker 9 (48:55):
Three zero three Martino, go with a sure thing Denver's
Best roofer Excel Roofing dot com. You don't pay a
cent until you're content. Time for an insurance checkup free,
no obligation. In comparison, call Compass insurance, pay too much
(49:16):
your coverage at dozens of insurance companies.
Speaker 11 (49:18):
Find out now three oh three seven to seven to
one help.
Speaker 9 (49:21):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (49:38):
Oh sorry, I didn't hit the odd button. I'm still
learning how to do this. Three zero three seven one
three eight two five five three oh three Martino, you've
been ripped off or taking advantage of. We've been talking
to doctor Joel Scherdak on all kinds of things. Hey,
real quick, we are talking about supplements that one that
helps promote hair growth. How about vitamins in general? I
(49:58):
read a lot of stuff that basically says vitamins they
just don't absorb their crap. I mean, is that true?
Speaker 5 (50:06):
That depends what form they comment.
Speaker 4 (50:08):
Well, give me an idea of one. Like you go
to Costco and you buy a big thing of multi
vitamins for people over fifty. Does it do anything?
Speaker 5 (50:17):
Generally, anything that is something carbonate, something mixed with carbonate
doesn't really absorb very well in your body. So, for example,
I often recommend to people that they take magnesium to
help with muscle recovery. But magnesium comes in different forms.
So magnesium glystinine a magnesium chloride are the two types
that you can take that actually work. Magnesium in any
(50:38):
other form is not going to be absorbed by your body. Generally,
higher cost vitamins are going to be the vitamins that
are formulated properly. But if you get them through a
wellness or healthcare provider, you're gonna get the right vitamins
that are gonna absorb properly.
Speaker 4 (50:55):
How about these test people take? Were you going to
say something, Susanne.
Speaker 7 (50:58):
It's gonna say, we just spot magne. We just bought
magnesium mark and it's the glystonate.
Speaker 5 (51:04):
So that will absorb.
Speaker 4 (51:06):
That's the proper Could you over absorb and that's a
bad thing right well?
Speaker 5 (51:09):
With magnesium, all that will do is give you like
bouts of diarrhea if you take too much of it.
Speaker 4 (51:14):
I wonderful.
Speaker 5 (51:14):
It's not going to kill you, but it's just gonna
be comfortable.
Speaker 4 (51:17):
How about like vitamin C. Like if you take a
typical vitamin.
Speaker 5 (51:20):
C, Vitamin C is kind of interesting because vitamin C
is also used in oncology in very high doses to
treat cancer. But what I've found in the research is
that you really don't get that anti tumor effect with
it unless you're doing dosages that are you can only
get the dosage IV. That's the only way to get
(51:41):
that high body Well.
Speaker 4 (51:41):
I'm going back to pills you'd buy a costco? Is
there any form of vitamin C you're going to buy
a Costco that has any real effect on you? I mean,
I understand it doesn't absorb great, but does it absorb
at all or does it just pass through you and
it's gone.
Speaker 5 (51:55):
Well, it's water soluble, so it passes through you, but
you will absorb some of it. It just depends at
the quality of the supplement that you're buying.
Speaker 4 (52:02):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (52:03):
And generally the more expensive they are, the higher quality
that they are.
Speaker 4 (52:06):
Yeah, but I don't know how true that is. I mean,
I get it in general. You're probably right. But what's
to stop someone say on Amazon charge you know, three
hundred dollars for vitamin C that's just the same stuff
you buy at Costco, just to make them think it's
better because it costs more. That's true, and it's a
hell of a marketing and people do it all the
(52:27):
time in different lines of everything.
Speaker 5 (52:30):
Well, there's a couple of companies that are reputable, like
give me one. Metagenics makes great supplements.
Speaker 4 (52:36):
Are they liquid? Are they pills or all the above?
Speaker 5 (52:40):
Probably all the above with them. So you know, from
when I buy my supplements, I buy them from specific
companies that also sell them to provide to healthcare providers
as well. But I think you can also buy them
over the counter at Amazon or things like that. So
the companies. Da Vinci is another company I've heard of.
Then she makes excellent, excellent supplements. I think a company
(53:03):
called Innovative Solutions is another one. Do you guys Etogenics
is my favorite?
Speaker 4 (53:07):
Do you guys do those blood tests? I know Tom
does them? Well, he used to. I forget what was
the guy's name, doctor uh.
Speaker 7 (53:17):
Oh, Mark Grossman.
Speaker 4 (53:18):
Well, so he would do these blood tests on Tom
every three months whatever, I'm just kind of I'm forgetting
how often, and they would come back with say one
hundred different levels of one hundred different things, and then
he would take supplements to get the ones that are
down up and the ones that are up down or
whatever he needs to be done. Do you guys do
(53:39):
that same kind of thing every gen.
Speaker 5 (53:41):
That's not part of one of the services that we provide,
I mean that is concierge medicine.
Speaker 4 (53:45):
Do you believe in that?
Speaker 5 (53:46):
Absolutely? I mean, you know, just to take an example
that doesn't seem kind of off the wall, myself, I
had a recent blood test done and it showed significantly
lowered iron. So I take an iron supplement to replenish
my iron.
Speaker 4 (53:59):
And how you had the new blood test?
Speaker 5 (54:00):
I have and I've raised it about halfway to where
it needs to be.
Speaker 4 (54:03):
And why do you have an iron deficiency?
Speaker 5 (54:06):
I think because of all the training that I was
doing for the climbing. Yeah, you know, training five days
a week intensively just depleted my iron stores. But I
wouldn't have known that without taking a blood test. And
so that's just a simple example. But any you know,
primary care physician could do the same thing. But when
you have you get a comprehensive panel like what you're
talking about. Some of these can fine tune you know, anything,
(54:29):
the minutia of where your your levels of certain vitamins
and minerals, and you know where where where what would
be optimal and where what you need to take to
get to optimal. Is just a matter of testing for
these things.
Speaker 4 (54:42):
You know something I find amazing since I've been wearing
a whoop you know what that is. So it's basically
like a smart watch, but there's no watch to it.
All it does is talk to the app on my phone.
It monitors. It even monitors my blood pressure, which is
really interesting. It it looks at HRV, It looks at
(55:03):
how long you slept, what zone you were in when
you slept, your heart rate zones like when you work
out one, two, three, four, five, where you were at,
and it actually has a journal involved like did you
drink today? Did you have sex today? Did you do
this today?
Speaker 7 (55:17):
If you can even add like do you what supplements?
Like say you started a new supplement and you.
Speaker 2 (55:22):
Wanted to see how it tracked or how it contributes
to your recovery the next day, it'll it'll tell you
over time.
Speaker 4 (55:30):
What's amazing to me. Are you familiar with HRV?
Speaker 5 (55:34):
What does that stand for?
Speaker 7 (55:35):
So?
Speaker 4 (55:35):
I don't know what it stands for, but it's basically
the time in between a heartbeat, So.
Speaker 7 (55:41):
It's your heart rate variability DOT control.
Speaker 4 (55:43):
Okay, yeah, so your heart beats, and then that time
in between the beats. The longer the better for health reasons,
and the longer the better you'll have for recovery that day.
What's amazing to me looking at that on the HRV
is if you drink alcohol. Let's say you drink on
a Friday night and you wake up in the morning,
(56:04):
and it only measures HRV when you're sleeping. It's the
only time, so it takes your resting heart rate and
then basically the time in between your resting heart rate,
So it's.
Speaker 5 (56:14):
Heart rate variability. That's what's age hervy is.
Speaker 2 (56:16):
It says the variation in time between heartbeat reflecting the
body's ability to adapt to stress and maintain balance.
Speaker 4 (56:23):
So what's interesting is just even a couple beers, wells,
say two to three beers on a Friday, You wake
up Saturday, and you look at your HRV, and your
HRV for example, mine might be at twenty five, okay,
and that's not good. If I don't have anything to
drink at all. The next morning, my HRV could be
fifty or sixty. And it's just mind blowing to me.
(56:45):
What a little bit of alcohol and I track it
all the time. I have not had this off for
oh my god, six hundred and ninety days.
Speaker 5 (56:54):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (56:55):
Literally it has tracked me for almost coming up on
three years. But when you have all that data that
you can look at and pull, it's very true. You
look at your journal, it says, Okay, I had three
beers that day, or you know, I went to Steve's
Rock and Roll Brewery and I had six beers that day.
And you can watch certain things like that HRV go
(57:18):
down and it's absolutely amazing.
Speaker 5 (57:20):
That's pretty cool.
Speaker 4 (57:21):
And resting heart beat is the same thing. How important
is that resting heart beat?
Speaker 5 (57:27):
I mean that's basically you know, related to your blood
pressure as well. Yeah, you know it's going to be
better obviously to have a lower right, Well.
Speaker 4 (57:33):
Like, what's your resting heart beats? Susanne, she's a runner,
Yeah right now.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
I mean I'm in My resting heart rate is in
the high sixties, somewhere in the sixties usually.
Speaker 7 (57:42):
Yeah, so not sleeping or well, I mean sleeping, I
can get a lot lower.
Speaker 4 (57:46):
Well, that's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 5 (57:47):
Sixty beats per minute.
Speaker 2 (57:48):
Yeah, that's for my average is like sixty sixty five sleep.
Speaker 5 (57:52):
I mean, once you know, it's a problem when you
start to get to like eighty and ninety.
Speaker 4 (57:56):
Yeah, sixty is good. I think Kurtz is in the
FI when you're sleeping.
Speaker 5 (58:01):
Yeah, obviously that's even better.
Speaker 4 (58:02):
Why is that better?
Speaker 7 (58:04):
Is it?
Speaker 6 (58:04):
I mean?
Speaker 4 (58:04):
Is it true? We only have so many heart beats
and if it's beaten quick, you're using them up faster.
Speaker 5 (58:09):
I wouldn't really look at it that way. I would
look at it more as another function of your blood pressure.
Speaker 4 (58:15):
Yeah, but you can have a high heart rate and
have good blood pressure.
Speaker 5 (58:20):
Generally you're gonna have higher blood pressure if you have
a high heart rate, or because you're.
Speaker 4 (58:23):
Just your if you lower your heart rate, even if
your blood pressure is one twenty over eighty or whatever
you're saying, it could even get better.
Speaker 5 (58:32):
If you lower your blood pressure, generally, your heart rate
is going to be lower.
Speaker 4 (58:36):
Okay, they're just going to follow one another.
Speaker 5 (58:39):
Right, because it's think of it, it's pressure pushing fluid
through a system. It needs a less right exactly.
Speaker 4 (58:45):
That's that's absolutely nuts man, all right? Three oh three
seven one three two five five. It's turned into the
Health and Wellness Show with doctor Joel cherdak.
Speaker 9 (58:58):
Go with a sure Thing's Best Roofer excel roofing dot com.
You don't pay a cent until you're contenth time for
an insurance check up free no obligation. Comparison call Compass
Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens of insurance
companies find out now three oh three, seven to seven
to one help. You'll think you're his only customer when
(59:20):
you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot com
to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (59:30):
Right three O three seven one three A two five
five three oh three Martino. We got Dan mackenzie. Uh,
he's on a referral list to referral list dot com.
He's in a an estate planner. I mean, this guy
knows everything about will's trust and everything in between. Dan,
I got a couple questions for you. We had a
lady named Deborah call up. In fact, I'll lock her
(59:50):
in in case if we have questions for But basically
her husband just passed away on the thirtieth of last month,
so I mean this is really fresh and her he's
getting buried actually tomorrow, and she has a will. Deborah,
tell them what the will that you have? Tell them
about the clause in the will.
Speaker 12 (01:00:13):
Okay, it says no contest clause. Is any beneficiary under
this will in any manner directly or indirectly contests or
attacks this will or any of its provisions. Any share
or interest in my estate given to that contesting beneficiary
under this will is revoked and shall be disposed of
(01:00:35):
as if that contesting beneficiary had predeceased me.
Speaker 4 (01:00:41):
So, Dan, let me ask you a question about a
no contest clause. Tell us about him, Educate us a
little bit how they work.
Speaker 16 (01:00:51):
Yeah, I mean, you know what she just read. There
is pretty standard language for people who want to try
to discourage people from challenging will. Courts don't necessarily take
those uh and just accept them, because they know if
somebody is trying to unduly influence you to give them
(01:01:11):
more than they would have been entitled to, uh, they're
going to also unduly influence you to including no contest
clause that the other beneficiaries can't complain about it. So
courts will sometimes investigate and say, well, what you know,
was this really the product of the of the person
wanting to do this, and if it really is an
unfair results, I don't know I mean, I just it's
(01:01:31):
something that sometimes we put in there. But I don't,
you know, I tell people, look, you can still challenge
the will, and especially the South, you're entitled to a
certain amount of that estates. Is there something I mean,
I understand stand that.
Speaker 4 (01:01:45):
Yes, what's really interesting about this it's multifaceted. But the
sun so this is probably it's not the first wife,
it's not the devor's not the mother of the child
we're talking about. She'shemen married to him or was married
to him for fifteen years. And in if I recall February,
(01:02:07):
he's been in hospice. How long, Debra, It's over six months.
So he's been in hospice over six months. But was
it February?
Speaker 16 (01:02:16):
Excuse me?
Speaker 12 (01:02:17):
But I was he was at our home. I took
care of him. I was his caregiver twenty four to seven, Debrah.
Speaker 4 (01:02:24):
I get it, But I mean, really he was in hospice, right.
Speaker 12 (01:02:28):
Well, the nurses came in twice a week.
Speaker 4 (01:02:31):
Yeah, perfect, Well you know what I'm saying. But let
me ask you this, when was the date on the
other will that we're talking about that the son had
his father's sign in? What month was that when was.
Speaker 12 (01:02:43):
It, Oh, February fourteenth of this year.
Speaker 4 (01:02:46):
On February fourteenth, Dan, there was a new and that
was a will right, a new will made and Debra's
not privy to it at all. No one will share
anything with her. So that's kind of where it stands.
But in the new will, even though she can't see it,
we're assuming that she doesn't get the house that she's
(01:03:08):
lived in for fifteen years and that was paid off.
In fact, it gets a little worse than that because
back in what month, Susan.
Speaker 7 (01:03:17):
It doesn't show when the deed transka.
Speaker 4 (01:03:21):
If we look sometime, we assume recently, but we don't
know looking at the county website. Dan at some point
he added the deceased added his son onto the deed,
which we have verified. So the deed reads in the
son's name and the father's name, and it looks like
Deborah has been aced out on the deed. And now
(01:03:44):
we have two wills, one with the no contest clause
that she has and one that Deborah's step son has
that she doesn't even have access to.
Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
So give me thoughts, so well, real quick, pardon me, Mark,
I want to interject and just clarifying K that makes
any difference at all.
Speaker 7 (01:04:02):
I am staring at the twenty twenty five tax bill.
Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
It says on the tax bill the owner's name is
the husband, but at the top it does show the
husband and the step son.
Speaker 7 (01:04:16):
It doesn't say owner, but on the bill it shows
both of them.
Speaker 4 (01:04:20):
So, Dan, it's multi question and what I mean by this?
And I promise I'll let you talk. But like I
could leave Susanna our house. Let's say the house is
in my name only, and I can leave her the house.
But if I sell the house, she's not going to
get the house. So to me, I mean if her
husband signed the deed over to her son and she
(01:04:43):
was never on the deed, which Deborah, I didn't ask you,
and I'll ask you in a second. I mean, he
doesn't even have a house to give Deborah in the will.
But Deborah, were you ever on the deed?
Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
No?
Speaker 12 (01:04:55):
But I in my will and his will says I
have life estate that I I can live here until
I'm no longer able to live.
Speaker 4 (01:05:04):
How old are you, by the way, all right, Dan,
go ahead, I'm going to shut up. A few years left,
You've got plenty of years left, Dan, would get me thoughts.
Speaker 16 (01:05:13):
Okay, Well, first of all, you know, once a person
has passed away, anybody in custody of a document purporting
to be a will, you don't get to decide whether
it really is a will or not, or whether it's
belly executed. If it's claims to be a will, you
are supposed to lodge it with the county court. Right, So,
you have a document in your possession there that is
(01:05:34):
the will, if it's the original, like, you need to
lodge that thing with the county court. And so does
your stepson if he's got a document claiming to be
a will, like, they don't get to say, no, you
don't get to see it.
Speaker 17 (01:05:46):
That's not a thing.
Speaker 16 (01:05:47):
It is supposed to be made available to the interested parties,
and we do that by lodging it with the court.
So you know, you could let him know that, you
could have a lawyer drafting a letter if he needs
to be threatened a little bit more than that. But
it is supposed to be launched within ten days of death.
Speaker 14 (01:06:03):
I mean that.
Speaker 16 (01:06:04):
I don't think ten days of actually passed yet, so
you know, maybe it's going to happen, but it's supposed
to happen, Dan, is that part?
Speaker 4 (01:06:11):
Is that part public record? I assume, so Suzanne or
somebody could actually go look, because we've done this on
other phone calls from out of state at least where
she can actually find a copy of the will to
county website.
Speaker 16 (01:06:24):
Yeah, they might ask you know what your interest is
in the estate, But no, I mean I think, well, yeah,
they often get sealed even in the probate process, from
parties that can't.
Speaker 6 (01:06:35):
Prove they have an interest.
Speaker 16 (01:06:36):
But both of you, both Deborah and the steps and
of course have a clear interest in the estate, so
you would deal to get it and then as far
as they hold on.
Speaker 4 (01:06:46):
Let's let me ask you this part. If you have
two wills and two people, like in this situation, both
go to the county and file them, is it purely
by date? We've talked about that a lot. I mean,
she has one that has an contests Let's say it
was dated five years ago or whenever. I have no idea.
And he's got one that his dad resigned while in
(01:07:07):
hospice this year before he passed away. So what do
you think about that?
Speaker 16 (01:07:15):
Yeah, I mean there's a pretty good chance most wills
and templates or whatever. I don't know how this willet's
put together. That a lot of wills, even really basic ones,
will start off with the clause saying I'm revoking any
previous executed wills. So the later one usually does supersede.
Speaker 6 (01:07:34):
Got it.
Speaker 16 (01:07:35):
But you know, as a spouse, it sounds like you're
married more than ten years, you are entitled to fifty
percent of the the state. The calculation is a little
bit more complicated than that.
Speaker 4 (01:07:48):
All right, hold on, Dan, this is getting so interesting.
Please we can either I got to put you both
on hold dragons throwing stuff at me, or Shannon, I
got to do this spot and I'll come back, but
I really want her to get this information. And Deborah,
it's sounding more and more as you do have something coming.
Everybody holds tight.
Speaker 9 (01:08:09):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Time for an insurance check up, free no obligation comparison
call Compass insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies.
Speaker 11 (01:08:27):
Find out now three oh three, seven seven to one help.
Speaker 9 (01:08:29):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
Right three three seven one three A two five five.
I want to get right back to Dan mackenzie. Dan,
you were saying, because she is a spouse, she should
be getting something is kind of what I heard. But
keep going, sir.
Speaker 16 (01:08:54):
Yeah, So when you're in the south of somebody, if
you've been left out their will or not left at
least a certain portion of their estates that is dependent
on how long you were married, you are allowed to
make what's called a spouseal election against the estate and
receive some portion of it. As I was saying, the
calculation that is a little bit more complicated than just
(01:09:17):
saying fifty percent.
Speaker 4 (01:09:18):
Of the estate.
Speaker 16 (01:09:20):
But yet you know, gifts like right before death are
sucked back into that calculation.
Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
So even if he quit claimed or somehow deeded his
son part of that house, that still wouldn't matter another word.
She might still be she might still get some of it.
Speaker 16 (01:09:37):
Correct, it would be part of what's called the augmented estate,
which is the basis for which that kid, which that
spouse election is calculated because they know that people will
who are in circumstances that they're you know, dire, and
they're looking, you know, feeling like, yeah, I'm going to
pass away soon and might start gifting away everything to
try and circumvent it.
Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
Jebraah, you have to you have to get you have
to reach out to Dan. I mean, I know you
said you talked to an attorney before and they wanted
a retainer of whatever, But you're going to end up
giving up My god, if the house is worth eight
hundred and it's fully paid off, you you're tripping over
(01:10:18):
pennies to not pick up a dollar or whatever the
hell is saying is Deborah?
Speaker 12 (01:10:26):
Okay, I understand that I just recently went to the
bank and I have my step son took all the money,
but two hundred and eighty eight dollars?
Speaker 4 (01:10:34):
How much was it there?
Speaker 12 (01:10:35):
My gosh, I get one thousand dollars for my Social
Security So whatever Dan or whatever I.
Speaker 4 (01:10:43):
Tried, Deborah, hold on, I want to go back to
your step son real quick. What account did he get
into and how did he get into an account? Did
your husband before death Adam onto the bank account? How
did that happen?
Speaker 1 (01:10:56):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (01:10:56):
He did, Dan, this sounds an affair, Yes, at some point, Yeah,
it does.
Speaker 16 (01:11:06):
And I'm trying to think, I mean, if.
Speaker 15 (01:11:07):
There's some sort of like.
Speaker 16 (01:11:10):
Elder abuse situation or something like that, it does seem like,
you know, I don't know if that would be like
a joint ownership even so, Yeah, we'd have to see
the circumstances under which he was added and how that
title worked and all that kind of stuff. It's it's uh,
it's uh, it would it would need further investigation.
Speaker 4 (01:11:29):
But Dan, like what kind of retainer for you to
get started in all? I mean, I don't even know
how you work in a case like this because you
have no idea what you're up against. I get it,
But like, what's the starting point with Deborah? How much
does you know? Does she need to come up with
to figure out some of the basic questions.
Speaker 16 (01:11:48):
Yeah, I mean it's tricky because it's probably I mean,
it's it seems like it's headed towards being in contestant
situation where you're gonna ask some court hearings. We do
try and break it up and say look where you know,
we'll take a smaller retainer just to do the investigation part.
Because that's uh, you know, not necessarily going to involve
contested court hearings. All right, Once you get a contested
(01:12:09):
court hearings, it can get can get extensive.
Speaker 4 (01:12:12):
Oh I'm sure. I mean you're in front of a judge.
Hold on both of you, Dan, I don't mind calling
you off air some later. I appreciate all of everything
you said. I want all of Debrah's information, and I
want to talk to Dan and Deborah see if we
can figure a way out to make this happen and
kind of go from there. Please everybody hold tight.
Speaker 9 (01:12:34):
Thanks Dan, go with a sure thing Denver's best roofer
Excel Roofing dot com. You don't pay a cent until
you're content. Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation.
In comparison, call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage
at dozens of insurance companies find out now three O
(01:12:55):
three seven seven one help. You'll think you're his only
customer when you choose Frank around the real estate Man
dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance three
oh three nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 3 (01:13:12):
Ripped off.
Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
News. You don't have.
Speaker 3 (01:13:20):
Come running, just as as we can Shooter's gonna help.
Speaker 17 (01:13:25):
Come.
Speaker 4 (01:13:27):
This is the Troubleshooter Show. No Tom Martine, Welcome my
friends to the only show. It's Kain. We're here to
solve problems, answer questions, take complaints, help you fill up
some hours in the day. You have a problem ripped
off by anybody, a contractor, maybe you got a bad
landlord in your life. A dentist, I say, Dennis, because
(01:13:47):
Kelly had her dental exam and she hates going to
the dentist and that was a that was the thing yesterday.
But really, even a bad dentist or a bad chiropractor,
bad anything we get directly involved. If you need help,
please let everybody know the number three oh three Martino.
That is three zero three Martina. I'll tell you where
(01:14:07):
we left it off with Deborah. I'm gonna get some
basic information, Suzanne. You're going to chase down the date
of the deed.
Speaker 2 (01:14:15):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (01:14:16):
And we're going to get a copy of the will.
Speaker 7 (01:14:18):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (01:14:18):
And what else are we going to get?
Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
Oh, bank account account statements, just to see what that
looks like. Mark. She's just one that I just felt
like maybe if we can help, She's the one I
want to try to help.
Speaker 4 (01:14:30):
Yeah. I mean personally, this this step son of hers
is basically acon or out, or at least attempting days
or out. Dan Mackenzie, our attorney at referral list dot Com,
said no, no, no, no, It's not that simple with
the spouse. So I just want to make sure she
was married. I'm not calling her a liar, but my god,
over the years I have showed up to stuff that
(01:14:51):
I was convinced was the worst thing in the world.
Ye remember the one we went to. She was bitching
at the moving company. She had me so upse I
remember going with you and.
Speaker 7 (01:15:01):
I sat in the car. You came out just flabbergasted.
Speaker 4 (01:15:05):
So DOC listened to this man. Lady calls up, says
the moving company. I'm downsizing and I moved from a
house and I'm moving into a trailer. So she's moving
into a trailer. Why is that relevant. You'll know in
a minute. The moving company just put everything out back
(01:15:25):
and left everything out back, so and they want full price.
I paid them to move it from You know, if
you took the box from the bedroom, it goes to
the bedroom. They just left it outside and said to
pay us, And I was appalled. She did pay him.
Speaker 5 (01:15:41):
Oh man, I was.
Speaker 4 (01:15:42):
Appalled what moving company would leave and it rained, and
it rained. So we get over there, walked in the trailer.
There was one hallway. Boxes were stacked all the way
to the ceiling with one I mean, someone under two
hundred pounds could walk down to the end of the trailer.
(01:16:06):
Every room filled with boxes, furniture to the ceiling. There
was no more room. What was out back literally had
to be out back. She neglected to tell us she
took five thousand square feet a crap and tried to
shove it into a thousand square feet. She left that
out big time.
Speaker 7 (01:16:25):
She downsides the house, but not the stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:16:28):
You got the fifty percent of the story, not even
I got.
Speaker 4 (01:16:31):
I got twenty five percent of the story in her case,
and they did. They were like, well, what else are
we supposed to do? You literally couldn't put anything else inside.
So that's where I get a little skeptical on calls. Yep,
it just happened.
Speaker 2 (01:16:46):
Remember when we tried to help Doreen and I care
I think we were helping her move and it was
Daphne and Deputy Dan, you and me and maybe Daphne's
daughter would get over there. And ooh, there had been
from Montgomery wards that have never even been open for
thirty years, like the tags were still on them. She
hoarded the biggest pile of crap and it was all
(01:17:08):
brand new and a part in an apartment. Pardon me,
pleather purses, yeah to the ceiling, never open, never.
Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
Use, tags still on them from the eighties.
Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
And yeah, she was so overwhelmed. So we go to
help her and then she accuses you guys. She's like,
I'm going to turn you into the fence for going
through my mail. That's a federal offense.
Speaker 4 (01:17:28):
Yeah, so we were helping her move from one place
to the other. Then remember she said, daph and he
stole some of the pleather purses.
Speaker 7 (01:17:34):
Yes, yeah, it's just you know, doctor, it has nothing to.
Speaker 4 (01:17:39):
Do with what you guys do, but it kind of
does in the same way. The psyche part. Like you
have an overeater, someone that's obese, like we talked about
in the first hour, you guys can help them out
with the GLP ones in fact, for less than three
hundred bucks a month. But that's psyche of hoarding. Do
you know much about it? Like usually like this water bottle,
(01:18:02):
why would anybody in their right mind keep it, or
a newspaper from thirty years ago that has no relevance
in your life. It's not like, oh, this is the
obituary of my father or something. It's just a newspaper
from one hundred years ago, I mean, with no value.
Speaker 5 (01:18:20):
I think it's actually a diagnosis, a psychological diagnosis.
Speaker 4 (01:18:24):
Oh, I'm sure it is, But what, like does it hurt?
Do you think it hurts them to throw stuff away? Like,
oh my god, I'm parting with my son.
Speaker 5 (01:18:32):
The mentality, I would imagine, so.
Speaker 7 (01:18:35):
I would think it's more like an attachment disorder kind of.
They can't like let go of things. I don't know what.
I'm not a psychologist.
Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
I watched that show Hoarders in They're all nuts. I mean,
they're absolutely crazy.
Speaker 5 (01:18:45):
It's definitely a fear of not having something that you
think you need.
Speaker 4 (01:18:50):
Why would someone think they need some of those certain things.
I'd love to talk to a shrink on that and
understand it. I've been out to so many hoarding situations
and some of them like are just like that is
a truly a hoarding situation with the movers. No one
has that much crap. There's no reason to have that
much crap. I mean, and then the one you were
(01:19:11):
talking about Doreen, I mean she had a two bedroom apartment.
One bedroom literally was nothing but stuff she never used,
and it was cheap crap. I mean, like just the
cheapest crap you could possibly imagine from Sears or Montgomery Wards,
just like stuff on sale after Christmas from nineteen seventy
five and never used.
Speaker 5 (01:19:32):
I think we all know people or have been, you know,
have met people that have that disorder.
Speaker 4 (01:19:37):
Then there's the other kind, the other kind of hoarders,
and these are the worst ones. They're nasty. I mean
they have like they don't throw away trash. Yeah, and
I've been to them. You walk in there, I mean
you're talking like you're probably better off scrape in the
entire house and restarting from the foundation up.
Speaker 5 (01:19:59):
Like gutting it, cutting it.
Speaker 4 (01:20:00):
Literally. They are so bad.
Speaker 2 (01:20:03):
There's like animals living in their place. They don't even
realize there's like, you know, raccoons living in the Hattic
kind of thing.
Speaker 4 (01:20:10):
H We had Frank Durant one time, he was helping
us out and he went out we were trying to
do a short sale. It was someone getting ready to
lose their house. It was a really bad situation. And
before the bank took it and auctioned it, he was
going to try to work something out to a short sale.
He gets over there and he called me afterwards. He goes, Mark,
he was the worst thing I've ever seen in my life.
(01:20:32):
They hoarded animals out in their garage. They had just
cages and cages of vermits and birds and snakes and everything.
You can imagine cats everywhere everywhere, he said. When he
walked through the kitchen, a rat scurried on the floor.
Then the guy said put this on, and he hands
(01:20:53):
them a mask and he goes, you got to put
this on in order to go to the basement. And
he was like, I'm not going to go to the basement.
But I mean, think about that kind of hoarding situation.
It's crazy. Do you think people that have big eating disorders?
I mean, do you get people into the clinic that
are truly not just Obese is a funny word, because
(01:21:14):
what is it? Body mass over thirty percent?
Speaker 5 (01:21:17):
Right right, that's that's a little.
Speaker 4 (01:21:19):
Technically I'm obese that I think two hundred and thirty
five pounds.
Speaker 5 (01:21:23):
Morbidly obese is a different thing. Morbidly obese is significantly
more than that.
Speaker 4 (01:21:28):
Yeah, like what I mean, do you know body mass?
I mean you're talking.
Speaker 5 (01:21:31):
I don't know off the top of my head, but
I do know that's a different category.
Speaker 4 (01:21:36):
Is that people that come into your clinic? Are you
good with people like that? Or that's a little too
Is that out of the range? Is your kind of
average weight loss? Okay, let me start with this. Your
average weight loss person? Are they me Are they coming
in to lose that forty pounds or are they coming
in because they're looking to lose one hundred? Your average
I would say it's about half and half.
Speaker 14 (01:21:57):
It is half.
Speaker 5 (01:21:58):
We have a lot of people that are morbidly obese,
significantly overweight, like four or five hundred pounds, Like yeah,
like three fifty and over, got it, that's huge. And
then we also have a number of patients that are
in the same situation as you are, where you know,
maybe a little bit overweight, certainly not morbidly obese, but
want to be healthier, want to be more fit.
Speaker 4 (01:22:17):
And like me, I'll tell you where it's sad is.
I know how to lose weight, I know how to diet, right,
I know how to exercise. I know how to even
if I do a no carb diet for thirty sixty days,
I can drop thirty forty pounds. I've done it so
many times in so many different years. But what the
GLP one does, I just don't sit there. It's cheating
because anytime you're on a diet like that, and I
(01:22:40):
don't care what kind of diet it is. You know,
back in the day, people, I remember my mom being
on a grapefood diet, for God's sake, So you can
be on any kind of diet. All you do is think, God,
I can't wait till this diet's over, and I eat
ice cream, Mark, or have a pizza.
Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
But Mark, is it cheating or just less torture, you know,
because you're not tortured at all. Now it's almost annoying
to me. I'm like, let's go have some fun food.
Speaker 5 (01:23:04):
Yeah, let me explain something about what these GLP one
drugs are and why they're not. So when you say cheating,
I understand what the point is that you're making. When
you say you're cheating, I think that's a bad thing
to do and it's dangerous. If you're taking a drug
that's gonna have a bunch of side effects and it's
gonna have, you know, a lot of deleterious effects on
other aspects of your health.
Speaker 4 (01:23:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:23:25):
Of course, these drugs are peptides, and what a peptide is,
it's just a short chain of amino acids. You know,
a protein is a long chain of amino acids. Apeptide
is a short chain. And what it does is it
mimics a chemical mix a hormone that's the GLP one
that your body naturally produces. So we're not introducing a synthetic,
laboratory created drug into your body. Therefore, you're not going
(01:23:49):
to have these knock on effects of all these other
side effects that you can have. I mean, certainly you
can have some side effects, but they're not going to
be these major side effects that you get with pharmaceutical
created drug.
Speaker 4 (01:24:00):
So, in kidergarden language, basically, when you eat, your stomach
gets full and it signals your brain with a chemical
that says, hey, you're full, So you don't feel hungry
anymore and you're not thinking of food because you're full,
and that's what the drug mimics.
Speaker 5 (01:24:14):
GOLP one stands for glucagon like protein, which is the
same protein.
Speaker 4 (01:24:18):
Spell that glucagon no.
Speaker 5 (01:24:22):
So glucagon like protein. Glucagon like protein. GOLP is literally
what your gut produces to signal to your brain that
you are full.
Speaker 4 (01:24:30):
Yeah, and it's amazing. And then the food noise I
guess is derived by that, because when you feel full,
you're not thinking of food.
Speaker 5 (01:24:38):
Correct.
Speaker 4 (01:24:39):
But the other thing the drug seems to do is
literally slow down your digestion. Right, Is that the same
chemical at work? Yes, it is, because your brain's going
you're full, I'm gonna slow it down now, correct? All right,
everybody hold tight in fact, John, I promise he's got
a weight loss question. I'll bring you up right after this.
Speaker 9 (01:24:55):
Hold on, John, go with a sure thing Denver's best
roofer Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 10 (01:25:05):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 9 (01:25:11):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three, seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:25:37):
All right, three O three seven one three A two
five five. We've got lines open, ripped off taking advantage
of any questions for doctor Chul, Doctor Chull, I just
combine my brain. Doc just combined your first name, Joel
Inturedac into your new name, doctor Chull. I have no
(01:25:57):
idea why my brain doesn't.
Speaker 5 (01:25:58):
One of the others find Doctor Jill was preferable. Doctor
Turdek is fine, but not Choll. I'd appreciate not doctor Choll.
Speaker 4 (01:26:05):
All right, Hey, John, what's your question for the doc?
Speaker 6 (01:26:09):
Hey, so, I started my GLP one shortly after you
started talking about it on the air. You know, I
went through the whole medical process. My assurance is actually
covering mine.
Speaker 14 (01:26:17):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (01:26:18):
They started me on two point five a zet bound
JLP one solution. I'm just curious if there's any other
branding or dosages or things that I should look at
as I continue on the use of this show.
Speaker 4 (01:26:29):
How long, real quick, John, how long you been on it?
Like six months?
Speaker 14 (01:26:35):
Like me?
Speaker 6 (01:26:35):
Basically I'm actually two and a half months on right now. Yeah,
I'm twenty two pounds down.
Speaker 4 (01:26:42):
So wow, that's nice man, And which one are you on.
I'm on zet Bound.
Speaker 6 (01:26:48):
It's a two point five once a week does.
Speaker 5 (01:26:50):
So zep bound. I believe that's through Zeppetite. I'm pretty sure.
I'm almost positive. In fact, I know that's through Reppetite.
So just to let you know, which will kind of
answer your question. So zipound comes. I believe in a
couple of different standard dosages. What we're able to do
in our clinic by using a compound pharmacy is we
can kind of custom tailor that dosage UH specifically for
(01:27:13):
patients needs. That's kind of what a compounding pharmacy does.
But it sounds to me like you're doing pretty well
with what you're on. Is there is there a reason
why you're looking for something different.
Speaker 6 (01:27:23):
I just I lost a bunch of weight in immerst
like month and a half, and then I kind of
plateaued out where I was about like about a pound
and a half a week almost and now it's I'm
not really seeing it. Every couple of weeks when I
weigh myself, I'm down, but it does seem to hit
a plateau, and that's just sure. I'm curious about it,
and that's let's talk to the doctor and up the
(01:27:44):
dosage because I got an appointment with my doctor in
two weeks, just a review and that'll be my three months.
Speaker 4 (01:27:49):
Hey John, do you like how much are you eating
a day? Like, honestly, do you take any do you
track how many carbs? Here are not carbs? I'm sorry,
calories you're eating at all.
Speaker 6 (01:28:02):
I did take a substantial cut because I used to
just eat whenever I work remotely, so I'll spring into
a fast food place and grab a bite. But sure,
I've tried to cut it to less than two thousand.
Most days, I'm around sixteen to eighteen hundred calories a day.
Speaker 4 (01:28:16):
So, Doc, the reason I asked him that, you know,
the reality is, like we talked about the GLP ones,
regardless really of the brand. They trick your brain into
thinking you're full, and they slow down your digestion because
of that. So if you still eat over two thousand
(01:28:38):
calories a day and you're not exercising your dieting, there's
no there's like no miracle thing out there that's burning
those calories off.
Speaker 5 (01:28:46):
Right, Like the goal would be to not intake that
many calories. It's a result of taking the drug. You
should need less correct or you should desire less.
Speaker 4 (01:28:55):
Yeah, so John, ultimately I would say, and then doc,
please chime in the doctor. But because I've been on
this drug so long, you still got to look at
that calorie input. For example, the first few months of it,
I love IPAs. My favorite beer in the world is
an ipa. I mean they have more calories than a
freaking Hamburger, some of them. So, I mean in the
(01:29:18):
GLP ones didn't seem to affect anything that has to
do with any kinds of liquids. For example, you can,
to me, you could drink soda, you could drink water,
you can drink coffee, you can drink anything. I don't
feel any difference with that. It's just like the harder foods,
or not even hard foods, any kind of foods. So
if you're still taking in calories in a different way
(01:29:41):
and you don't feel hungry, you're still taking in the calories,
is what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (01:29:45):
That's absolutely true.
Speaker 4 (01:29:46):
Yes, So I mean, John, that might be a big
part of yours, and I had to do that, but
I did plat to is there water weight at the
beginning to John's point, that first month, that first two months,
I drop twenty pounds so fast it was mind blowing.
Speaker 5 (01:30:02):
Well, it goes back to what you're talking about. You know,
you drop the weight because you're taking in less calories overall,
but at a certain point of weight loss, the calories
that you are taking in are going to maintain that
level of weight and it's going to be harder to
take off those extra pounds because you're you know, let's
say you're taking let's say you're eating twenty five hundred
calories worth of food a day and taking the GLP ones.
(01:30:22):
Maybe you're down to two thousand or less, so you
lose that weight differential to where the two thousand is
keeping you at that level and you need to take
less to lose more weight, but that requires either more
drugs or exercise and looking at the foods that you're eating.
It brings me to a point one of the things.
So we've had this issue come up with our patients recently.
(01:30:44):
You know, in the course of performing the service that
we need to inform them on how to exercise and
need properly, and so we've partnered with a facility that
does personalized weight training and nutrition counseling and they've offered
to any of our patients that we were for to
them a free consultation on nutrition and on exercise. So yeah,
those two things are key. You know that first twenty
(01:31:07):
percent of weight is going to be the easiest to lose.
Speaker 4 (01:31:10):
What you just made it make perfect sense, because John,
how much did if you don't, I mean, no one
knows who you are on the air, But what what
did you start at? Weight wise?
Speaker 6 (01:31:19):
So I started just under three hundred and thirty pounds,
so right now I'm probably at like two ninety five.
Speaker 4 (01:31:27):
Yeah, it's awesome.
Speaker 6 (01:31:28):
I'm about thirty pounds down.
Speaker 4 (01:31:29):
So basically, here's what I'm hearing from you, and it
makes perfect sense. So you start, let's just take a
round number at three hundred. Someone that's three hundred pounds
most likely is eating maybe four thousand calories a day.
I'm just throwing something out there. They're eating double what
two thousand calories do. So you get on this drug.
It brings you down to two thousand calories a day,
(01:31:53):
but that's so drastic from four thousand. You're losing weight
like crazy. Right once you get to a certain point,
you're still in taking two thousand, and that certain point
can be me. It could be anybody at any weight.
You get to a certain point that you're not burning
any more weight, but the drugs helping you maintain not
(01:32:13):
eating more than that two thousand calories correct, And then
there's two options. One more drugs which will make you
less hungry and you'll intake less calories, right, or of
course the better option at some point is the diet,
the exercise for the maintaining.
Speaker 5 (01:32:29):
Yes, or sometimes a combination, or definitely a combination. But
the nutrition in the exercise counseling really helps a lot
of our patients, Yeah, to either maintain or to continue
to lose.
Speaker 11 (01:32:44):
The way do you.
Speaker 6 (01:32:45):
Exercise, John, Yeah, I try to get to the gym
twice a week and I walk my dog every night,
so I think that kind of helps play a role
in it.
Speaker 1 (01:32:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:32:54):
And then I've definitely I got a coaching app through
my place of employment that just help me with plans
and threats. So going out and eating fast foods now
a treat. It's not like a Thursday night dinner anymore.
So I have been trying to maintain a healthier calorie intake,
so it's not just going to be you know, oh
I eat less food. I go to McDonald's and I'll
get a small instead of a large. You know, I'm
trying to be better about the healthier foods as well
(01:33:17):
as the exercise.
Speaker 2 (01:33:18):
You know.
Speaker 4 (01:33:18):
You know what's interesting, you said, walk to your dog.
Susan and I have well two people in our lives.
Well one of them's passed, but her uncle Tommy passed
away this year. So I've known him as long as
I've known Susanne, so over thirty years. And he's always
been a pretty heavy dude.
Speaker 17 (01:33:36):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:33:36):
He's probably about three hundred pounds. We went and saw
him a year or two ago and the guy was
down to like two hundred pounds. He dropped easily over
one hundred pounds. I'm like, what the hell you know?
All he did doc no drugs, know nothing. He walked
eight miles a day in a circle in his house.
Now to me, that sounds like torture, but that's what
he do. He'd walk around the kitchen and the family room,
(01:33:58):
in the living room in a bit circle. And then
We've got a good friend here in Colorado, Dave, and
he did the same thing, but he walked outside like
a normal person. And he dropped over one hundred pounds.
Nothing but walking right.
Speaker 5 (01:34:10):
So you know that that brings up another point. It's
real easy to tell people, you know, just exercise and
change your diet and that's going to help it. Let
me ask you this, John, does having lost the weight
make it easier for you to exercise?
Speaker 14 (01:34:25):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (01:34:25):
Absolutely? I used to get winded going up long slides
of fairs, or you know, if I went on a
walk that was more than fifteen minutes, I come back
and I was panting more than my dog was. So
now when I go take my dog out, I can
go a mile and a half to two miles before
I'm at that same level of man, I'm nearly feel
I'm tired. So having that weight loss and well, none
of my pants fit anymore. I got to wear a
belt and singe it tight just to keep myself, you know,
(01:34:47):
from having my pants.
Speaker 4 (01:34:48):
Don't you love that part of it? Job? I mean,
like literally, don't you love that?
Speaker 7 (01:34:51):
Though?
Speaker 6 (01:34:53):
It's a great mental boost as well, but just being
more active it definitely helps. Like when I go to
the gym and I on an olympical or some treadmill,
I'm not helping and puffing. After a minute or two,
I'm able to go longer before I start feeling that
that tired feeling that I did before, just kind of
going up wide the stairs.
Speaker 4 (01:35:10):
So there's something with exercise, and maybe you can give
us a little insight into the stock there's me. So
this week I'll just use this week. Literally, I have
gone and done a C two yoga, which is hi.
It's not. I just I don't know, explain it. You
don't just sit there and go hmm. People don't understand yoga.
(01:35:32):
I mean we're moving. My heart rate is one forty
plus for over for over an hour. I mean, and
I'm doing this every day, and I do it because
I want to lose weight and get healthy. I can't
stand doing it. I get there once I'm doing it,
the hour goes quick and it's over, and I'm so
(01:35:53):
happy I did it. But looking forward to it, I
just don't. I look forward to other things. I don't
look forward to going to workout now, racquetball. When I
used to play racquetball a lot and there was people
in the building i'd play with, I look forward to that.
And that was great exercise for an hour plus. In fact,
that's probably the best cardio in the world. But then
(01:36:15):
there's people like Suzanne. She looks forward to going to exercise,
which is my numbing to me, I have no idea
like you, I'll take you. You look forward to climbing
up the side of a mountain fourteen hundred feet and
burn eight thousand calories in four hours, You had to
have looked forward.
Speaker 5 (01:36:35):
To it, or why the hell would you do it
fourteen thousand feet but fourteen hundred feet fourteen feet? Yeah, well,
I mean it's the same thing. Like you know, I
happen to enjoy doing that activity, and it forces me
to go to the gym and just do regular exercising,
which is a lot harder for me, you know than
if I'm doing it for a goal.
Speaker 4 (01:36:54):
Yeah, like what I did.
Speaker 5 (01:36:56):
But you know, we're talking sort of about a little
bit of a different thing. We have a lot of
patients who have been told to even the stem cell
patients with degenerate of new rothritis that's a result of
being overweight, they literally can't do it. They can't you
tell them, hey, you should go, you know, even walk,
you know, a mile or something, can't because it really
can't do it because of their weight. And so just
(01:37:17):
using the drug at the beginning, so that they can
get into a position where they can comfortably do the exercise. Yeah,
goes such a long way in encouraging them to continue
to do the exercise, because if you can't literally do it,
then you know it's it doesn't come off really well
telling somebody who can't do something that they should do something.
Speaker 4 (01:37:34):
Hey, John, I appreciate that call. I got a breakdough Man,
and I'm gonna There must be a place people talk
about a runner's high. You've heard of this?
Speaker 5 (01:37:44):
Yeah, I just had one.
Speaker 4 (01:37:45):
Yeah, And it's crazy. People run to the point where
they get high and they feel great about it. It's like,
I don't know how one crosses the line of saying, hey,
I'm exercising because I want to feel good and I
want to act size. I like the way it makes
me look, it makes me feel when I'm done, but
I hate doing it, like me, how do you cross
(01:38:06):
that line to where you look forward to it? And
I'm even going to ask Dragon about that, because Dragon
exercises every day and puts it up on his website
or up on his social media, and it's like, and
he's been doing it for I don't know years and years.
It's like at some point dragon, Just real quick, do
(01:38:28):
you still look forward to exercizing hate dance? Nope? I
put it off as long as I can. Isn't that
a bitch? I mean it's like, Okay, there's a GLP
one that makes it to where you don't feel like
you're starving and you don't have the hunger noise. And
I'm taking that. Like we've been talking about, they need
a shot that you want to go. Oh yeah, I
can't wait to get.
Speaker 15 (01:38:48):
To the gym.
Speaker 4 (01:38:50):
Get me to the gym. I want to do some
push ups. I've been looking to do some push ups
and run four miles all day. Hold on.
Speaker 9 (01:39:01):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com.
Speaker 10 (01:39:05):
You don't pay a cent until you're contenth.
Speaker 9 (01:39:11):
Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
to seven to one help. You'll think you're his only
customer when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man
dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance three
oh three nine two zero sixteen twenty two, three oh.
Speaker 4 (01:39:42):
Three, seven one three eight two five five three oh
three Martino, we're talking health today. It turned out to
be Elda with doctor Joel. Karen in fact has a question.
But I want to tell everybody out there about Genesis
Total Exteriors. This is the time of year if you've
been thinking of getting a gazebo or a deck, or
maybe a new fence, anything on the exterior, including siding
(01:40:02):
and roofing anything. These guys do it all. Mark's done
so much work for us. In fact, they just finished
up painting the interior of our house and Susanne it's
absolutely gorgeous. They helped with colors, which I loved.
Speaker 7 (01:40:15):
Yep, they sure did. It was a wonderful experience.
Speaker 4 (01:40:17):
It was she walked around to each room and blah blah,
let's do this color. So you get all that and
that's all part of it for free. And the exterior
the job they did that was five years ago. The
outside of our house still looks like brand new, like
they painted it yesterday. And if you need the new siding,
they can do it, new windows, they can do it.
Genesistotalexteriors dot com, call Mark Mark scrag I disagree.
Speaker 7 (01:40:42):
Hey, Mark.
Speaker 2 (01:40:42):
On a side note, with Genesis, you had me text
Mark Schamansky, the owner, about I guess did Cheyenne get
a bunch of hail?
Speaker 4 (01:40:49):
Cheyenne got nailed? I think three inch.
Speaker 2 (01:40:51):
Hell, So I guess if you're up in Cheyenne and
need need a hail damage person, Genesis would be the
one to call that it does have a to tell
you that he has a crew that will go up there.
Speaker 7 (01:41:01):
Yes, okay, so something to think about.
Speaker 4 (01:41:04):
Very interesting, all right? Three L three seven one three
A two five five. Hey, Karen, what's your question for doc?
Speaker 12 (01:41:12):
Hi there?
Speaker 17 (01:41:12):
Good morning?
Speaker 9 (01:41:13):
Hey.
Speaker 6 (01:41:13):
I want to know which way to go.
Speaker 17 (01:41:15):
With these injectables. I had been on to Zeppati the
compounded one a couple of years ago, and I lost
about twenty pounds. Then my PCP was saying, well those
don't work that well, and we decided to go with
a zep bound. In April, she started me on two
point five. I went then to five, and I finally
(01:41:41):
talked you into putting me up to seven point five.
It's it's okay.
Speaker 14 (01:41:46):
I still have the.
Speaker 17 (01:41:46):
Cravings and I still get hungry, and I'm thinking I'm
wondering if I'm a person who should be on the
gop ones instead.
Speaker 4 (01:41:56):
Hey, doc, what is that second problem?
Speaker 10 (01:41:58):
Karen?
Speaker 4 (01:41:59):
I'm sorry, but what that second? The drug that she's
on now, is that not a g LP one?
Speaker 5 (01:42:03):
It's epetite.
Speaker 4 (01:42:05):
Oh so it is a g LP one.
Speaker 17 (01:42:08):
But I'm on Zepp, the Zepp bound, the actual the.
Speaker 5 (01:42:11):
Brand name is bound.
Speaker 4 (01:42:13):
But it doesn't matter.
Speaker 5 (01:42:13):
It's not magnetide, it's epatite.
Speaker 4 (01:42:18):
Okay, I got it. I'm sorry, Karen.
Speaker 7 (01:42:22):
Yeah, okay.
Speaker 17 (01:42:23):
I'm not a diabetic and I'm thinking, well, part of
my problem is I spend a couple of months in
another state, so I don't know. My PCP is really
hard to contact. There's not a lot of follow up
when I call in to get a renewal on the prescription.
So there's been a couple of months.
Speaker 4 (01:42:42):
Where how much do you pay for it?
Speaker 15 (01:42:44):
Is it?
Speaker 4 (01:42:45):
Is it all covered? How much do you pay for it?
I'm curious, No.
Speaker 17 (01:42:49):
It's not all covered. I I'm on Medicare and I
went through the whole thing with Medicare and now I
think I've gotten to the.
Speaker 12 (01:42:58):
What do you call it the maximum?
Speaker 17 (01:42:59):
Maybe?
Speaker 4 (01:43:00):
Yeah? But how much do you pay now monthly?
Speaker 16 (01:43:04):
I think it's to zero now after.
Speaker 4 (01:43:07):
Oh, I see you maxed out wherever you were, right,
she maxed out for a year.
Speaker 17 (01:43:12):
Yeah, I guess, but I think it was paying you know,
three something. And just in general, I'm thinking I probably
need a new PCT, and I.
Speaker 12 (01:43:23):
Probably need one where I am now hey.
Speaker 6 (01:43:26):
But anyway, so I'm thinking.
Speaker 4 (01:43:28):
Karen, let me jump in real quick, doc. She brought
something up at the beginning that I find very curious
because when I'm on my GLP ones like I am now,
the food cravings are gone. It could be a dosage issue.
But she said she went two five to five. I mean,
she's she's up twice. Are there people that simply don't
react like other people do?
Speaker 5 (01:43:49):
Yes, you know, everybody's physiology is different. And sometimes we
have patients that we call refractory, where the drugs, no
matter what we do, they don't work it all.
Speaker 4 (01:43:57):
You can give them ten or whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:43:59):
And then we have patients that are in Karen situation
where it works but not as well as we was hoping.
You know, what we do in our clinic with patients
like that is we recommend adding another peptide to what
we're prescribing for them. So in example, uh, there's a
peptide that we use called lepo trim, and lipotrim seems
to accelerate the process of weight loss for patients that
(01:44:23):
are slightly refractorive, for patients that are in karen situation
and now, and that's a separate drug. That's a separate prescription.
You know, we can do that for patients that are
getting there JLP ones elsewhere. But there are other things there.
And that's not the only one. There's other ones as well.
Speaker 4 (01:44:39):
All right, hold on, I got to take this break, Karen.
I put you on hold. I promise I'll bring you
back up right after this.
Speaker 9 (01:44:50):
Go with a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're content
for an insurance check up free, no obligation. In comparison,
call Compass insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three O three seven
seven to one.
Speaker 11 (01:45:10):
Help.
Speaker 9 (01:45:10):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate Man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:45:26):
All right, Karen, listen, I promise you are coming up.
In fact, I'll bring you right now. Karen. What is
your question? And I'm sorry, Oh no, no, no, doctor Joel,
I'm sorry. Continue on, Karen, if you have any other
questions for the doc my bead.
Speaker 17 (01:45:41):
Okay, I have a couple quick ones. Maybe it's an
anomaly to me, but I'm not sure. It seems like,
first of all, the shot does help some, but not
at the level that I was hoping it would.
Speaker 12 (01:45:54):
But it seems like the first day take the shot, it.
Speaker 17 (01:45:57):
Makes me a little hungrier. I mean, I know that
sounds crazy, and then it seems to kick in the
next couple of days. I'm not very hungry during the day,
and I know I need to get that protein in there,
but I'm really hungry at night.
Speaker 4 (01:46:11):
All right, hold on, Karen, and I hate to do
it to you. I just ran late on the last one,
so I put her on hold. Doc don't respond. Respond
right after the break. I'll recap it, Karen, It's up
to you. Then Corey's got an issue with a boat purchase,
and Cheryl's got a problem with Verizon. We're going to
dig into a lot. Got another hour coming up right here.
I'm the Troubleshooter Network.
Speaker 9 (01:46:49):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com.
Speaker 10 (01:46:53):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 9 (01:46:58):
Time for an insurance check free no obligation comparison call
Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens of
insurance companies find out now three oh three seven seven
to one help. You'll think you're his only customer when
you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot com
to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 1 (01:47:24):
Ripped of news who you don't have the.
Speaker 3 (01:47:32):
Comuni as as we can, Shooter's gonna help come.
Speaker 4 (01:47:38):
Man Dix is the Troubleshooter Show. No Tom Martinez all
right three oh three seven one three eight two five
five three oh three Martino, we got a light cooking.
We gotta uh don't forget tomorrow's card day. We've got
uh who's coming in tomorrows uson us.
Speaker 2 (01:47:54):
So we have Kevin Coulkin with Sheridan Auto Tech, and
then Rod Greer and Bob Perry with JFR I love.
Speaker 4 (01:48:00):
Those guys, you know what. Rod Greer is such a
funny guy.
Speaker 7 (01:48:05):
He's great.
Speaker 14 (01:48:06):
He is.
Speaker 4 (01:48:06):
I really like him, and I'm starting to like Bob,
not that I didn't kind of starting to get to
know them.
Speaker 7 (01:48:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:48:13):
Yeah, so we're gonna have a great show tomorrow. Car questions,
anything else. I do want to tell you though, about
one Clear Choice Stores. These guys have places up and
down the front range where you can go and actually
look at new garage stores. Of course you have any problem.
They have twenty four to seven service and emergency service
for residential and then they're openers. Man, they can come out.
They've installed numerous openers for us over the years. If
(01:48:36):
you got those old belt driven ones or I'm sorry,
the old chain driven ones and the things still run,
and you should get a new one, call these guys up.
They got the best pricing and the belt ones you
don't hear. You're gonna absolutely love them. But it's one
Clear Choice Doors dot Com. I had two emails Shusana
on a fix It from yesterday. Yeah, so fix it God.
Speaker 1 (01:48:58):
I like her.
Speaker 7 (01:49:00):
Hannah's christ She is great.
Speaker 4 (01:49:01):
So doctor Joel. I don't know if you got to
hear the show yesterday. We had hand ind from fix
It and she's just such a smart business woman, but
they were doing a deal for nineteen dollars. And the
problem is I tried to tell her this it was
for yesterday only, but it still is for today. And
I'm talking to the people that emailed. But you can
still do it today. And the reason is a lot
(01:49:22):
of our listeners listen the next day on podcast, so
they don't hear the show live. They hear it the
next day. So if you heard it on podcasts, you
can still get that deal. It's the Denver metro area,
but they'll come out for nineteen bucks. They spend, you know,
up to two hours, at least one to two hours,
cleaning out your air conditioner, the condenser, getting all that
(01:49:44):
snow and all that crap from the winter out of there,
and just getting it clean. They rip it apart. You're
going to see it in pieces. Literally, you're going to
see it in pieces. They put it all back together.
They put a no breakdown guarantee. Whether it's the ac
or the furnace. You're not going to get a better
deal if you had not had a cleaning in the
last two years. It's only nineteen dollars. New customers, it's
(01:50:07):
nineteen dollars. But even if you are an existing customer,
because they do plumbing and electric and they do all
that stuff. If you are an existing customer and haven't
had it cleaned in two years, they're still gonna do
it for nineteen dollars. So go to fixmhome dot com,
Fix myhome dot com, tell them you heard it on
the show, and you'll get that deal. But it's gonna
(01:50:28):
be really just yesterday, today, maybe tomorrow, but that's it.
Then the deal's gone. It's usually like two hundred bucks.
Fixmhome dot com. Now we're gonna jump over. Oh, finish
up real quick, just real quick, Debra, and then Corey,
I'm gonna go right to you. But Deborah basically was
saying before the end of the break, she's on a
GPL one DOC or GLP ones and when she takes
(01:50:52):
a shot, she feels hungry that night. I don't even
know what she means by that, because I don't. I mean,
I know what she means, but I can't relate to
that at all. And then she said, what did she
say after that? Does anybody remember it?
Speaker 7 (01:51:06):
I missed it?
Speaker 4 (01:51:07):
Well, just go to there is there different cycles.
Speaker 5 (01:51:10):
So here's what I think, here's what I suspect is
happening is that she is on a one. She's doing
it once a week like me, and by the time
it gets to do that dosage again, it's wearing off
on her. So she's actually feeling hungry the day that
she does her next injection.
Speaker 4 (01:51:25):
So it's normal. The medication's almost out of her body.
Speaker 5 (01:51:27):
Right, and then it doesn't have its effect again until
the following day.
Speaker 4 (01:51:30):
Yeah, so it's probably it's making her hungry. How long
does it take, like when I take my shot, how
long does it take to start acting in the body.
How long does it start tricking the mind to take?
Speaker 5 (01:51:42):
Say twenty four to forty eight hours?
Speaker 4 (01:51:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (01:51:44):
Okay, she did say mark something about still being hungry
at night.
Speaker 4 (01:51:48):
Yeah, yes, she said she's still hungry at night, wants
to snack. I just can't relate to that.
Speaker 5 (01:51:53):
You know, based on those two things, she probably just
needs a higher dosage of the medication.
Speaker 4 (01:51:57):
But remember she went two and a half to five
to seven and a half. She might just be immune
to it. Well, well, it sounds like.
Speaker 5 (01:52:02):
It was working for her, just not as well as
she thought. You know what, what might be good advice
for her? And obviously I don't know her medical history. Sure,
but with a lot of our patients we tell them
to split the dosage half and do it, you know,
every three to four days. Oh, I never would have
thought that. Yeah, wear off different. Yeah, some people, it
wears off pretty quickly.
Speaker 4 (01:52:23):
Like yesterday, yesterday was my shot day. Did I take
my shot yesterday? Yeah, you sir, dead Mark, So I
didn't feel hungry yesterday at all. I just never do.
In fact, it always. It seems to be pretty straight
with me.
Speaker 5 (01:52:35):
Yeah, and then with a lot of people it is.
But with some patients we recommend that they do that,
and even people that want to prolong their medication have
it last longer. Sometimes we tell them to split their dosage.
Speaker 4 (01:52:47):
And other people, while I'm thinking about it, and then Corey,
I promise, so go to you. You know it's still
it's less than three hundred bucks a month. Still, Yes,
you guys have en up prices it to be the
same plan I'm on right. Yeah, So think about that, folks.
If you've been wanting to try it and you can't
get on it because your doctor won't give it to you,
so you got to pay cash. It's the cheapest way
(01:53:07):
to do it. Less than three hundred bucks a month,
and that's that's you get the direct number to the doctor,
the MD. All your questions answered, the initial uh kind
of what do you call that? It's not really an
exam but a question consultation. Everything's included and mark and
no long term commitments. Basically, you do three months and
then everything's month to month and you can quit whenever
(01:53:28):
you want.
Speaker 5 (01:53:29):
That's correct, And that.
Speaker 2 (01:53:30):
Might sound expensive for some people, but you're offset with
your no food bill or less than you know, you're
not spending as much money on food, so you know,
don't get in your head, oh, I can't afford that
because you're not going to spend the money.
Speaker 7 (01:53:42):
On feud you used to.
Speaker 4 (01:53:43):
Now, I want to give people a real deal. I mean,
everybody's different financial situations, but in our case, it's it's
a no brainer. And what I mean is we used
to go either to either Shanahan's or say Ruth's, Chris
or somewhere a nice steakhast. You know, once a week.
I won't even go to a steakhouse anymore because I
simply feel like I'm going to get ripped off because
(01:54:04):
I can only eat like one fourth of the steak.
Speaker 7 (01:54:06):
Yeah, so, I mean we do.
Speaker 4 (01:54:08):
We literally save way more than what we spend with
you guys, doctor Joel, So you should actually you should
also market it as a savings.
Speaker 5 (01:54:18):
Yeah, you're right.
Speaker 4 (01:54:19):
Don't think of the three hundred you're spending. Think of
the eight hundred you're.
Speaker 5 (01:54:23):
Not spending, the weight you're losing on top of It's
just like.
Speaker 4 (01:54:26):
Suzanne, like, it's not it's not the fifty dollars for
the dress. It's the hundred she saved on the dress
because it's on sale.
Speaker 2 (01:54:34):
And then just a quick question, doctor Joel, can you
use your HSA card H for paying for that?
Speaker 5 (01:54:41):
Absolutely?
Speaker 7 (01:54:42):
Yeah, So there's another way.
Speaker 4 (01:54:44):
Nice, I never would have thought of that. Hey, Corey,
tell me about your boat purchase.
Speaker 15 (01:54:49):
Hey, guys, So yeah, I recently purchased a new Ranger
boat from basket prol Cabella's who Nice pretty much had
just the ongoing slew of problems with this boat. I
purchased a boat in December. I picked it up from
the dealer in March. The first time I used it
was April, and that's kind of when my problems started.
Speaker 4 (01:55:08):
Hey, which one is it? I'm just curious what's the model?
Speaker 15 (01:55:12):
So I got the Ranger of VX seventeen eighty eight.
It's an aluminum boat with a one hundred and seventy
five horse motor on it.
Speaker 4 (01:55:18):
Nice, Okay, keep going. So you bought it, and now
what it's broke. It's going back to the shop all
the time.
Speaker 12 (01:55:25):
Yep.
Speaker 15 (01:55:25):
I've taken it to and from the dealership. I live
about three to four hours from where I bought it
in Wisconsin. The dealership is in Minnesota, so kind of
a pain there. And the problems I'm having some have
been solved, others they're not able to solve. So they
want to send this boat back to the factory.
Speaker 4 (01:55:42):
Yeah, that's no lemon ll.
Speaker 15 (01:55:46):
No lemonlaw on boats' Have you talked to them.
Speaker 4 (01:55:48):
About trading out of it or they're just not doing anything?
Speaker 15 (01:55:52):
They would be willing to trade me out of it
for like a twenty two thousand dollars deficit?
Speaker 4 (01:55:57):
I'm no, No, that's not what I'm man. I mean,
this thing looks like it's around sixty grand, right.
Speaker 15 (01:56:02):
Yep, yep. That's about where're at. I got about it.
Speaker 4 (01:56:04):
So they're offering you a trade in at forty How
often have you got to use it at all?
Speaker 15 (01:56:10):
Each time I use it, it seems that I have
another problem. I have used it, you know, I've been
out in into half a dozen times probably, but it
always seems my day gets ended with something happening that.
Speaker 4 (01:56:19):
What's the biggest thing that's happened to it? I mean,
have you been stuck?
Speaker 15 (01:56:24):
So there's a trolling motor like patrolling motor, self deploying,
and that thing is pretty much your lifeline on that
boat when you're fishing. It's your spot lot anchor, it's
your you know, moving around casting, covering water and things.
Had problems with that. I ended up replacing that.
Speaker 4 (01:56:40):
What's the issue with it right now that they want
to send it back to the factory.
Speaker 15 (01:56:44):
So the issue right now is the live wells. There's
two libels in the boat and they will not drain.
And they tell me that when they produce these boats,
they plumb everything and they spray flam the floor and
then they weld the floor on and the plumbing in
that live well is kinked or something to that effect.
Speaker 4 (01:57:02):
So they're saying they can't fix it. They can't fix
it at that store. They literally got to send that
back to the manufacturer. Have you talked to the manufacturer.
Have you talked to Ranger and said, hey, this really sucks.
I dropped sixty grand and here's where we're at.
Speaker 15 (01:57:18):
I've explained that, and they really don't seem to care.
They said, this is our process. As a matter of fact,
the process has started. I dropped that dealer off or
that dealer that boat off at the dealer on July seventh.
It is still sitting at the dealer to be picked
up and shipped back to Ranger. So I've been without
that boat for a month and this whole process. They
won't even give you a timeline, but they're talking months
(01:57:40):
from what I see on the internet. I mean, I'm
looking at six, nine, ten, twelve months.
Speaker 10 (01:57:44):
You know what I think?
Speaker 4 (01:57:45):
I think we put.
Speaker 7 (01:57:48):
I'm going to suggest Deputy Bow again, but yeah, yeah, well.
Speaker 4 (01:57:52):
He's a tenacious little devil, Yeah he is. Yeah, let's
put this. I want to give this the Bow. I
don't see any problem with the retailer, to be quite honest,
this is a manufacturer's issue. They don't want to take it.
They don't want to boat. They'd end up with the
boat that they can't sell. I mean, they'd end up
with the same problem you have, So I really don't
(01:58:14):
blame them, but I think Ranger they have the ability
to do something here. Either accelerate it and give them
a promise State Bow, or they have the ability to
get them a boat that actually works, a boat that
he can train the water out of. I mean, that's crazy,
and it's a multitude of problems, but that one seems
(01:58:35):
to be the biggest, because even the retailer is wiping
their hands of it, saying, we can't do anything because
it's welded. So let's give this to Deputy Bow. We're
going to reach out and let's see Ranger if they
do the right thing, and Suzanne maybe find a public
relationship laship.
Speaker 2 (01:58:54):
I did want to ask Corey, like, in your ideal world,
what would be the best remedy for you, A different boat,
a refund or what?
Speaker 4 (01:59:02):
Well, refund's not.
Speaker 7 (01:59:03):
Going to understand. I just want to get where he's
trying to go.
Speaker 15 (01:59:05):
With this ideally a refund with the idea, but that happened.
That's that's not gonna happen. They're not gonna get you
money back. But yes, I have asked, just give me
a different book, give me a boat that works, give
me the equivalent model, and you know, you can take
this one to whoever you want with it. But that's
what I'm looking at, So I.
Speaker 4 (01:59:19):
Mean, that would be great, So let's give that to Bow.
But really the thing is who's in I think we draft.
I think the original thing we do is find their
PR people and send them our standard. Hey, you know
we're a radio show. Blah blah blah.
Speaker 2 (01:59:34):
I'll do that part of it and then put bou
on it after that. So Kelly sending us for all
of his information in an email.
Speaker 4 (01:59:40):
Yeah, A lot of times what we do, Corey is
like I might even take a snippet of this call
where you're talking about it, and we'll send that to
the PR people and make sure they understand that. You know,
we have fifty sixty thousand listeners every month just on podcasts,
let alone all of our lives stuff in Facebook and
you YouTube and other radio stations, so we make it
(02:00:03):
very well known who we are.
Speaker 2 (02:00:04):
Hey, Mark, I mean, should I start with bass Pro
since he purchased it from them, or just get straight
to the.
Speaker 4 (02:00:10):
Manufacturers, Right to the manufacturer bass Pro. There's nothing they
can do here. I mean, really, I don't feel I
wish they'd do something because they have contacts definitely with
Ranger because they sell their products. But ultimately the people
say that again the.
Speaker 15 (02:00:28):
Bass prol may even own White River Marine Group, which
is the manufacturer of Ranger boats.
Speaker 4 (02:00:33):
Wow, if they were all intertwined, that'd be crazy. I
didn't know that.
Speaker 15 (02:00:37):
I believe they are, so all right, somehow there's a
connection there.
Speaker 4 (02:00:41):
But still we want to go to Havever's on top
of the pyramid. I mean, it's simple as that. Whoever's
responsible for that boat, And then that's where we got
to start. So Corey, hold tight. We're going to get
working on this. Suzanne's going to reach out to the
public relations and then Bow will do follow up after
we actually receive something back, which we will. Hey, Cheryl,
(02:01:01):
really quick, what's going on with Verizon? Then I got
to take this break and I'll come right back.
Speaker 13 (02:01:07):
Well, you're right, and this is the second time, and
they want more money, and when is this gonna stop?
Speaker 4 (02:01:17):
All right, hold on, I've got I actually actually, in
the past couple days, I have done something that everybody
is going to want to hear when it comes to
cell phone coverage. I did something remarkable. I found well
I'll tell you after this.
Speaker 9 (02:01:38):
Go with a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation. In comparison,
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three all three seven
to seven to one.
Speaker 11 (02:01:58):
Help.
Speaker 9 (02:01:59):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate Man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two, all right three three seven.
Speaker 4 (02:02:15):
One three eight two five five three zero three Martino, uh,
by the way, renew Home Innovations. Man, these guys are cool.
You know, Nick and the gang can come in and
in some cases do a bathroom or do a shower
within a couple days. Think about that, within a couple days.
(02:02:36):
And their pricing is really unbelievable on the stuff they do.
They have these solid surface walls they can do in
your shower made out of courts. Zero maintenance. Think about that,
zero maintenance. They have a huge inventory for those rapid installations,
and right now, not only can you get a free
shower door with the great pricing they got in the sales.
(02:02:56):
But you can also get twelve months, no payments, no
entry on that new bathroom. And they do have some
additional discounts for veterans and senior citizens. But they can
help you to redesign the tub and shower space. And
they're certified American Standard Partners. They're just great people and
it's a great company to deal with. Renew Home Innovations
(02:03:19):
dot Com. Now real quick, Suzanne, you did some research.
I'm going to bring Corey back up. Corey ironically. Guess
who so ironically Bass Pro Shop owns it all.
Speaker 7 (02:03:29):
Yep, that's right.
Speaker 4 (02:03:31):
I didn't know they owned Kabella's too, did you know that?
Speaker 15 (02:03:35):
Yep, that was recently purchased a required and they're all
one big conglomerate.
Speaker 4 (02:03:39):
Yeah. So we're going to reach out directly to bass
Pro or whatever the main thing is named and try
to find a PRP.
Speaker 7 (02:03:47):
Yeah, and go from there's something done for this guy.
This is not fair if you ask me.
Speaker 4 (02:03:52):
You know, we've heard it a few times on boats,
but I'll tell you where we hear the same call.
I bought a brand new fifth will. I bought a
brand new Ultra Light trail and I bought a brand
new RVA Class A or A B or C, and
I haven't been able to use it all year. The
slide won't open up where the slide got stuck. It's
been back at Camping World for you know, three months,
and no one will fix it. But we rarely hear
(02:04:14):
it on boats. But I'll tell you why. Because we're
in Colorado.
Speaker 2 (02:04:18):
Yep.
Speaker 4 (02:04:18):
We've got Chatfield and Cherry Creek basically in Grand Lake
if you want to drive well, Corey.
Speaker 7 (02:04:23):
Is out of state. If I remember, after talking to
him yesterday.
Speaker 4 (02:04:26):
Where are you at, Corey?
Speaker 15 (02:04:27):
That is great in Wisconsin?
Speaker 4 (02:04:29):
Okay, you got both boys jealous. We used to go
up to you Ever heard of Sha Tech?
Speaker 15 (02:04:35):
I sure have that many times.
Speaker 4 (02:04:37):
We've been to Chattech many times. We had a friend
at a lake house there, and when the kids were little,
we'd go up to Sha Tech. We'd stay in their
little lake house and he had a pontoon boat and
a little fishing boat and we'd bounce around on those
lakes and what.
Speaker 7 (02:04:50):
Was that little uh gill Gilligans? Oh, cheese kurts Mark.
Speaker 4 (02:04:54):
They still had a drive through, Corey. I mean not
only like not even not a the drive in movie theater.
It's probably still there. But what was amazing about it
They still had those stupid things you would hang on
your window and then under the screen they had an arcade.
I mean it was like built in the fifties, cool
(02:05:15):
place on Earth.
Speaker 2 (02:05:16):
Hey, Corey, I just texted you, so get some info
back to me that I requested and we'll get going
from there.
Speaker 4 (02:05:21):
All right, brother, All right later man, Hey Cheryl, I
want to finish up with you for Verizon. Is it
purely the cost went up?
Speaker 13 (02:05:31):
Well not only that, Yes, the cost went up, and
no one can give me an answer, and it's driving
me crazy.
Speaker 4 (02:05:41):
How much has it?
Speaker 13 (02:05:44):
Well now it's thirteen hundreds.
Speaker 4 (02:05:46):
Thirteen hundred, my god, What do you do with these people?
How many phones do you have?
Speaker 1 (02:05:54):
Well?
Speaker 13 (02:05:54):
I only have one phone. Now I have the phone
from Metro. I was told originally, if I didn't like it,
bring it back in thirty days for fifty dollars rese
docs feet it would be canceled. Well, I took it
back a week later. They said, oh, we don't do that.
Speaker 4 (02:06:12):
Well okay, but where are we at right now? What
can I help you with? Right now? Is it trying
to get the refund? Is it going forward? What are
we doing here?
Speaker 13 (02:06:22):
I just want to get them out of my life.
I can't use their phone.
Speaker 14 (02:06:27):
I still have it.
Speaker 4 (02:06:28):
Why can't you use it?
Speaker 11 (02:06:31):
Well?
Speaker 13 (02:06:32):
Because I went to another company. I don't want anything to.
Speaker 6 (02:06:36):
Do with me.
Speaker 4 (02:06:36):
Okay, what company are you with right now?
Speaker 17 (02:06:40):
Metro?
Speaker 4 (02:06:40):
And you have a phone? Hold on please? You have
a phone with Metro and you're paying what is acceptable
a month and you're one hundred percent happy with that?
Speaker 14 (02:06:49):
Right, yes, sir?
Speaker 4 (02:06:51):
So why are you even messing with this other company Verizon?
Why are they calling you and asking you for money?
What's going on?
Speaker 13 (02:07:00):
So I went to Verizon before he went to Metro,
and then when they started can neither run around? And
nobody could answer questions? Just passed the buck, past the buck,
passed the mint.
Speaker 4 (02:07:12):
Yeah, I want you to really, Cheryl, listen, I want
you to focus first, to go ahead, sh wait a.
Speaker 7 (02:07:16):
Second, Cheryl, did you call the show before.
Speaker 4 (02:07:18):
Back in July? Yes, I told you my notes or
this got a.
Speaker 2 (02:07:25):
Pardon me got of a rise in phone expecting a
sixty five dollars month phone bill, but canceled after two
weeks out of frustration. Now she has to pay an
eleven fifty eleven hundred and fifty dollars. This is because
Mark she signed a two.
Speaker 4 (02:07:38):
Year contract and for the phone.
Speaker 2 (02:07:41):
For the phone, I thought I reached out to the
angel and I thought this was resolved, but maybe I'm confused.
Speaker 4 (02:07:46):
Well, we can try reaching out again, But Cheryl, I
don't even understand why you care. In other words, put
that phone in a drawer and forget about it.
Speaker 13 (02:07:57):
That's what I did. But can they put a lead?
Not my house, not the money.
Speaker 4 (02:08:01):
They'd have to take you to court over one thousand bucks,
which would cost them five thousand bucks just to get
to judgment.
Speaker 7 (02:08:08):
Susannah's what happened Cheryl.
Speaker 2 (02:08:10):
On Thursday, July tenth, at twelve twenty seven pm, after
you called, I emailed you saying, Cheryl, I'm going to
try to help with your ververision issue you're having. This
is the info I need and I sent a list
of things I needed from you before I reached out,
and I never heard back from you. That's why this
one did not get followed up on, Cheryl.
Speaker 4 (02:08:30):
So Susanna will send you another email if you want
to go that route and it doesn't hurt. But no,
they can't put a lean on your house over this.
Speaker 13 (02:08:40):
Oh okay, Suzann, please send me.
Speaker 7 (02:08:42):
That I do not okay, and I'm not going to
read your whole email. But does it start with Cheryl
five three four four yes, ma'am, okay, I'll we send
it right now.
Speaker 4 (02:08:53):
Check your trash and that stuff, Sam, But meantime Susanna
will work on that. But regardless, take the phone, get
it out of site, out a site, out of mind.
Quit thinking about it now. If you get served for
a court date, that's a different story. But that's not
going to happen over this. It's simply not going to happen.
I'd be so amazed if they came after you for
(02:09:13):
a phone worth about five hundred bucks or whatever it is.
But anyhow, hold on, Cheryl, we'll try to go down there.
I want to tell everybody about something. This is not
a commercial by any means. I got so sick AT
and T. Hey, Doc, what service do you have?
Speaker 5 (02:09:29):
I have AT and T?
Speaker 4 (02:09:30):
You have AT and T. I found a company if
you go to Trust Pilot. The reviews are unbelievable. Anywhere
you look, the reviews are great. The customer service anytime
I've called in because we switched over four phones in
the last two days, I've had to call a few
times just the way it is, and I'm good at
(02:09:53):
it now, though I switch phones like crazy. But let
me tell you something, this company is the most remarkable
mobile company I have dealt with. If I call up,
I'm talking to a real human that knows what's going
on five to ten minutes, or you can chat almost instantly.
The pricing was so good I couldn't believe it. Is
(02:10:15):
why I started looking at trust Pilot and reviews and
really digging into reviews, not just reading the first couple,
digging into reviews at trust Pilot. God, I need to
get money from these people for this. I mean, honestly
I do. In fact, we need to reach out and
get an endorsement deal with these people, because I'm going
to have a hard time not talking about them when
(02:10:36):
people call about cell phone problems. You know, AT and
T we've had for what my god, ten We.
Speaker 7 (02:10:43):
Had Sprint for the longest time, and when they went
to hell in a handbasket, we switched to AT and
T like fifteen twenty years ago.
Speaker 4 (02:10:50):
We've had AT and T so long and I am
so sick and tired of the creep up. Just pay
more and more and more and more. And honestly, if
you live around the Castle Rock area, I don't know
what tail's wrong with AT and T. It's like it
just sucks now, just sucks if you're on their five
ge or whatever. And we've got all brand new phones.
So if your phone's paid off, they don't have any
(02:11:10):
of that bs. In other words, I mean you might
be able to buy a phone from them and stuff,
but you know they don't have like, hey, we'll give
you thirty dollars in credits, blah blah blah. So listen
to this doc. So AT and T they actually call
AT and T Dark what is it called dark wets,
U SI Star dark Star. So they have three networks.
(02:11:32):
They sell US Cellular, I'll say it right now, or
I'm sorry, not US Cellular, My god, don't go there,
US Mobile, US Mobile. There's a picture of like an
eagle or a bird on it. US Mobile. They sell
all three, resell all three. So they have WARP that's
(02:11:52):
their WARP network. That's actually Verizon's backbone. It's one hundred
percent Verizon. Then T Mobile is called lightning or light
something like that, and then Dark is AT and T,
so they resell all three. And what I've learned about
phones is this newer phone iPhones like Suzanne has. You
can have pretty much not unlimited, but you have e
(02:12:15):
sims left and right. You don't have to put a
card in anymore. Everything's just done. So listen to this unlimited,
unlimited data, unlimited talking text, unlimited hot spot, unlimited hotspot.
This is all AT and T on their Dark network. Okay,
(02:12:38):
what's the real name of it. It is really called
Dark dark Star. You're absolutely right, dark Star unlimited hotspot.
Right now, I've got the Mac Daddy on AT and T.
I only get twenty gigs a hotspot. You can get
a free smart watch plan. So if you have a
smart watch it is cellular, it comes with it twenty
gigabytes international data, and then it has international calls and
(02:13:01):
text or no problem. I think it's one hundred percent
free free network transfers and then add on. So this
is so crazy. If you pay yearly, okay, you get
all that for three hundred and forty eight bucks for
twelve months. Three hundred and forty eight bucks. That's incredible.
Speaker 9 (02:13:22):
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com. You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Time for an insurance checkup free, no obligation. Comparison call
Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens of
insurance companies find out now three oh three seven to
seven to one.
Speaker 11 (02:13:41):
Help.
Speaker 9 (02:13:42):
You'll think you're his only customer when you choose Frank
durand the real estate Man dot com to list your
home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two zero
sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 4 (02:13:57):
All right, doctor Joel, let's talk weight loss real quick.
We've been talking about health and everything throughout the entire day.
In fact, real quick, Larry, real fast. What's your question
on my whoop? Larry Mark Mark, Hey, please do tell.
Speaker 13 (02:14:16):
I want to know what you're wearing.
Speaker 6 (02:14:18):
It not a watch, but it's a wearable.
Speaker 4 (02:14:20):
Yes, it's a wearable. It's called a whoop. And let
me put you back on Oaks. I'm going to finish
up with Joel.
Speaker 7 (02:14:24):
Bud Whoop, Yeah whoop.
Speaker 4 (02:14:27):
You can buy it right on Amazon from the woop
Amazon site or get it directly at woop. But it's
basically a couple hundred bucks for the year, and that means,
you know, you don't pay anything monthly. And here's what's
the coolest part, Larry and everybody listening. Anybody that wears
like my wife does, a smart watch, you know you
(02:14:48):
have to plug that sucker in almost every night. My
Whoop does almost everything. Her watch does almost everything, except
it doesn't show me the time. It's just like a band.
Looks like a band, super lightweight, but it does everything,
heart rate, sleeping, anything hers does, mind does. But it
last twenty days now.
Speaker 7 (02:15:09):
Yeah, But to be fair, the Whoop doesn't have a GPS.
Speaker 4 (02:15:12):
Yeah it doesn't. But I don't need a GPS. Yeah
it doesn't. That's one of the reasons. It's lighter in
the battery, but the battery lasts. It's for fitness and health.
It lasts checked us out fourteen to twenty one days.
I forget. That's why I like it. I put it
on and I haven't taken it off for almost seven
hundred days. Whoop. We got to get them as a
sponsor too, damn it and write that down, Kelly Dragon, Suzanne.
(02:15:36):
We got to get these people. I mean, if I'm
talking about it, I should get paid, right, doc. Yes,
don't you think so?
Speaker 5 (02:15:41):
I think absolutely.
Speaker 4 (02:15:43):
Thank you. Now, seriously, let's get back to the weight
loss drugs GLP ones. We've talked about the benefits throughoute
the show. We've talked about a lot of stuff, a
lot of really great information, by the way, even outside
of the GLP ones, but some of the other stuff
you guys do. I do want to reemphasize people that
suffer from neuropathy. These guys can go in there with
(02:16:03):
some of these new FDA approved medications and literally open
those blood vessels back up, and you truly have patience
that you know, within two months it's gone.
Speaker 5 (02:16:13):
Yes, sometimes sooner than that.
Speaker 4 (02:16:15):
Think about that, it's gone that neuropathy that's been bugging you. Now,
if someone wants to know if that kind of procedure
is right for them, I mean, is that a free
initial consultation as well?
Speaker 15 (02:16:26):
It is?
Speaker 4 (02:16:26):
I love that. And then of course the hair transplant
along with the hair stimulation or growth. What do you
guys actually call.
Speaker 5 (02:16:33):
That hair restoration? Stensil hair restoration or stemsyle hair transplant
and restoration?
Speaker 4 (02:16:39):
Yeah, so you guys do it depends, but once again,
free consultation. You might be good with just some kind
of PRP.
Speaker 11 (02:16:47):
Or whatever I mean with that.
Speaker 5 (02:16:48):
With our hair consultations, we start with just send us
some pictures of your scalp. That's it, and then we
do a phone consultation and then if necessary, you'll come
into the office and we'll do an in person consultations
to give you an answer of what we can do
by just looking at the photos.
Speaker 4 (02:17:03):
And these guys aren't a jack of all trades. I mean,
they stay in their lane. They got a few things
they do and they do them wonderfully. The diet stuff, though,
I want to reiterate, not only is it great and
as it work, but everything is three hundred bucks a month,
no long term commitments. That's why I love it. When
you want to stop, you simply stop. Listen three hundred
a month for GLP ones at Denverregen dot com. Any
(02:17:25):
questions you can call up, talk to doctor Joel, talk
to the intake people. Free consultations, Denverregen dot com. I'm
gonna say it again, Denverregen dot com. We'll be back
here tomorrow for car Day.