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May 17, 2024 14 mins
A Town is for Sale in California for $6 Million and there's going to be lots of drugs at Music Festivals this year
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(00:00):
One O seven nine k b PI and your show time for stupid stories.
Stop y'all stop. Yeah you arestories brought to you by steal and
Steel Dealers dot Com. Sweet allright, NASA is gonna launch a mission
to help clean up some space junk. Oh dude, I hope god they

(00:20):
call him trash and notts. Comeon, that'd be awesome. Uh hmmm,
I should include this in a RockyMount men's clinic spot. Uh.
Men who suffer rect out of functionerect out his function have serious thrust issues.

(00:41):
Get it shut up? All right? Uh, let's see In other
news, studies says the best wayto get women to sleep with you is
to make your laugh. So maybeyou could tell you're out to a bar
and show us some hot women yourbank statements. That's always good. A
brilliant study is find the people aremore likely to lose weight if they're paid

(01:04):
to do it. Well, oh, follow that one or her hastake.
People are likely to do a lotof things you've paid to do it.
Yeah, it's called getting paid motivatesa lot of people. Sixty eight percent
of people believe a romantic relationship isonly serious if you're comfortable talking about bathroom

(01:26):
behavior. Oh, all right,guess that's the serious line we talk about
bathroom behavior. That's that's when youknow it is serious. Weird woman in
Delaware has won a long legal battlewith the Delaware DMV ready for what she
wanted as a vanity license plate.Oh these are always good, These battles

(01:49):
are always good. Yeah, sowhat does she want? She wanted F
cancer? Oh? DMV was like, no, we didn't have it,
especially since it's clear what the Fstands for in that one. Yeah,
is it? Well? I wouldthink so, but the woe beat cancer?
She claims she should be allowed tohave the plate. She says it

(02:13):
stands for fight cancer. Okay,see he's a good play on the F.
So not the F word, butfight cancer. Guess what they sided
with her? She won it?Really, Yeah, she gets to have
F cancer as her license plate.Awesome, yeah, fight cancer. God?

(02:35):
What did you think it was?All right? Luxury supermarket, it's
selling expensive bags of ice ice.Yeah, it only costs twenty nine ninety
nine for what usually costs five orsix bucks. I mean, how much
does ice cost? Does it costfive or six dollars? I think that's
expensive anyway? You get eight iceQ balls there for fancy cocktails? Oh?

(03:00):
Are they like the ultra clear?I mean, I don't know.
Eight dollars for eight like balls ofice. That's insane, right, that's
stupid. Four dollars per I mean, I guess the property I need to

(03:22):
sell you down in uh, youknow, uh, Mississippi. And to
survey a thirty six percent of womensay they have passed out on a date
due to stress. Wow. Eighteenpercent of women met they have puked while
on a date. What's wrong withwomen not being able to handle stress?
How stressful these dates? Wow?All right? So wild story out of

(03:45):
China. Man. So usually brainsissue doesn't survive freezing, you know,
then thawing, although it has,it's not people for you know, God,
I think Scoop just looked up.There's more than five hundred people that
are frozen. Yeah, that's notpeople from pain to have either just their
brains or their entire bodies cryogenetically frozenand hosted to being you know whatever,

(04:09):
reanimated. I guess how you describeit in the future. Which why does
this doctor see Shio and his colleaguesat the food On University in Shanghai China.
They have successfully developed the first solutionwhich can keep brain tissue alive when
it's frozen. Oh okay, howthey do this? So a team used

(04:34):
human embryonic stem cells. Back tothe stem cells, stem cells are the
players and everything, man, right, God, So what he did is
they use these stem cells to growbrain organoids small clusters of self organizing brain
cells for three or three weeks,after which they developed into different types of

(04:59):
brain cells. So then they placedthese organoids in different chemical compounds. They
hoped to preserve the tissue while frozenin liquid nitrogen for at least twenty four
hours. What happened after throwing thesamples out, the team monitor them for
growth and sell death over the nexttwo weeks, and based on oh,
their most successful run, researchers repeatedthe process using different combinations of the chemical

(05:25):
compounds. Eventually, you know,getting down and filtering it to one chemical
compound that was made up of youknow, a few other compounds, but
one bath that they could put thisbrain tissue in that when you froze it,
it wouldn't kill the brain tissue.Wow, okay. So once they

(05:45):
found this fluid, this combination ofit, they started testing it with well,
with brain tissue one of a nineyear old girl that had epilepsy.
Anyway, they did this test andthey added this dim cell to it,
and the brain tissue continue to growto one hundred and fifty days after throwing

(06:06):
out. So that's the first timeit's ever you know, it's ever done
anything close to that. So it'sa big, big, big breakthrough.
And the story goes on and readseverything else that could you know, get
played to roll into that. Butwow, what a what a crazy when

(06:28):
you think about that, it's justI don't know, it seems like you're
playing with God there. So doesit seem like they can thaw out these
five hundred people with this or isthis something you have to do before you
get frozen? You know all Ithink they're still testing it. So they

(06:50):
use those brain organoids just to seeif they would grow after they frozen and
thaw them out right, and theycontinue to grow for one hundred and fifty
days. After that, they stoppedthe test, and now they're doing it
with the brain tissue of that nineyear old little girl that had epilepsy and
her symptoms were so they froze herbrain or parts of it and then thought

(07:13):
it out and got it to fireback up and make connections, fire neurons,
all that stuff that they were supposedto do. So I guess now
they're working on the next step forthat. I don't know. I don't
know where that leads us. Butwhat if you just have your brain?
So this is wild to think.What do you just have your brain transplanted

(07:36):
into a robot? I think that'sthe idea, I know, right like
it kind of leads down that path. That would be wild. Man,
what all right? Now? Aboutthe town in California goes up for sale
and it's the entire town in California. They put it on the market for

(07:57):
six point six million dollars. Iwould say this is an unusual real estate
opportunity. It's been listed by aSan Diego based agency. Apparently Campo is
the town. It's about a milefrom the Mexican border, about fifty miles
southeast of San Diego, and atfirst glance, it feels though it's like,

(08:20):
you know, the time capsule.So it's got a bunch of dirt
roads, wild west looking, woodencabins, scatterings of abandoned buildings left to
the mercy of mother nature. Camporequires a lot of renovations to revitalize the
town. However, at six pointsix million dollars, it's actually quite a

(08:43):
steal. Let's see, there's god, there's a ton of buildings, looks
like the commercial tenants, which thereare currently six hundred and okay, so
with over twenty buildings, Campo offersa mixed apartment, single family homes,

(09:03):
commercial properties ready and waiting to berented out. Additionally, the listening explains
that the vacant building can be renovatedfor new uses. Commercial tenants, of
which there's six hundred according to thisagency, a church, post office,
veterans of Foreign War chapter, metalshop, cabinet shop, lumber shop,
border patrol outposts, not including thesale for the town police department, fire

(09:28):
station, and grocery store. Sosomeone else owns those, yes, okay,
it's uh. It goes on tosay, you know who's interested in
it? Uh tony hawk? Ohwow, okay, how about that?
So let's make a skateboard centered community. I don't know, halfpipes in those

(09:52):
streets. I mean it's a prettybig town for six million dollars. I
mean, if it's big enough tohave a grocery store, fire department.
All that they're not you know,borrowing an existing communities version of that.
Yeah, the town presents a canvasfor investors with vision of every potential of

(10:16):
high cash flow, a significant upsidethrough strategic development and uh honed operations.
That's what the website says, plusreally explains, that's ripe for revitalization.
Community provides buyers with the potential tosteer the future of downtown Campo. Here

(10:37):
you go. It's known for itsnatural beauty, historical significance, and close
knit community. Yeah, and you'reabout a five minute walk from Tijuana.
Yeah, this is where Glenn canDress took us through the Tijuana and got
oh, I believe it or not, it shrimp cocktails. He was huge

(11:00):
on shrimp cocktails from Tijuana. Iknow, it sounds stupid, Tijuanna shrimp
cocktail. He's like, dude,we gotta have some. So when I
was hanging out from Glamus, wewere in Glamis, which is you know
down there close greenk Dress has aplace or had a place down there,
and you know, and some littlesouthern towns just outside San Diego, and

(11:22):
we said like, let's go toTijuana, so we went down there.
That's uh with Campbells where we wentthrough anyway, kind of wild story.
But you can buy the whole damntown now six six million dollars. That'd
be wild, own a whole town. I'm surprised some movie producer to buy
it because it's kind of a wildWest deal. Sure. You know how
many people attending music festivals playing ondoing drugs this year? Safe to say

(11:46):
all of them? So top threemusic festivals that these people, these nine
hundred people surveyed for this year's DrugSafety and Music Festival study. It's by
health research firm called Inner Body.You would know the most popular drug of
choice? Oh uh? Are wecounting pot in the mix? I would

(12:09):
imagine that's probably number one? Yes, yes, the most popular drugging choice,
marijuana, Second, most popular shrooms? Maybe that was third? Third?
Okay, second, those would begood for festivals. Second. Second,

(12:31):
come on, I don't think LSDis making a comeback. Let's no.
Second third of the list was LSDtied with shrooms? Oh okay,
so still I haven't got the secondplace? Uh, cocaine then probably the
second place cocaine keep your dancing,So yeah, Apparently, out of this

(12:52):
nine hundred people that were surveyed forthis year's Drug Safety at Music Festival study,
eighty seven percent of them went ondoing drugs. Wow, that's a
lot. That's crazy. Top threemusic festivals for drug use are ready.
Bonn Rue has gotta be out thereright No No Rock Fest in Wisconsin,

(13:18):
Bernie man Nevada, and Coachella outin Cali. Oh. Okay. Three
out of five people putting to purchasetheir drugs at the music festival. Funny.
Also, we're mentioning the alcohol isthe most consumed substance at festivals before
drugs. Yeah, I'm sure allright. Lastly, thirty nine year old

(13:39):
I don't think it was Yeah,thirty nine year old man in Florida.
Uh. And then Carlton Lacy wasat a bar last Saturday, two in
the morning. The bartenders announced thatthey were closing down. Last call,
We're shutting down. Man. Carlwasn't having that, no, sir.
He put out a gun, puttingin one of the bartenders and shouted,

(14:00):
who needs to leave? So hestarted waving a gun around. Second bartender
stepped in. Carlton apparently pointed thegun at her chest and so keep playing
with me, bitch, keep playingwith me. Damn wow. Police recalled.
When they got there, Carlton hadleft, but they tracked him down

(14:20):
and he started two counts of aggravateus UP, resistant rest, possession of
a weapon by a convicted fellah oh, not worthy to have one more drink,
buddy, not worthy to have onemore drink, carl Come onright,
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