Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Making his way to the roof for More's Land Joe
Florida triple.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Right. He trible R seven at seven has brought you by.
My friend's over at Homebuilder's Network. It's Mike.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
He's a good dude, Mike. Call him Mike Homebuilder. I've
been I've been working with him for years now. He's
been a couple of decades.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Man. Back when I had my house on the beach,
he came in a patch some.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Some roofing for me way back then. Known him for
a long time. I tell you that to let you
know he's not a fly by night guy. A lot
of people will hire a roofer and they take money
and they run off and they rip you off.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Not Mike.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Mike's a good dude who's gonna be there for you.
And uh he's got the home Builders Network. Home Builders Network,
they do you know, he'll patch a roof, He'll do
the entire roof for you. He did it for me
just recently, did a great job. Uh. You know, he
does an awesome job. He's very meticulous and he won't
cut any corners. He does it perfect. He also can
do bathrooms, an entire bathroom. They can do it in
(01:05):
one day. You don't have to wait forever. They can
do it one day, a brand new bathroom. And then
also they do windows and doors. He's been awarded, you know,
they get an awards for his window and door work
and then gutters.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
He does that like okay, anything home related.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
I just call Mike and if he can't do it,
and he knows someone that will and he'll hook me
up with the right way. It's a great resource to have.
It's Homebuilders Network HBNUSA dot com. That's HBNUSA dot com.
Mike the Homebuilder. Tell Mike, we said, well's up. He's
a good dude. Hey, I'm Russ.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
That's Ryan.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
An angel is gonna tell you about the prizes we
have in the prize Panatta.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
Today Today's price putting you out has brought to you
by dream Home Makeover. Spring is here and it's time
to fix up the house, and Real Radio has your
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(02:01):
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listening to us on your iHeartRadio app and you you
(02:22):
it won't interfere with your listening experience. It's super easy
to click on there and enter the context. Good luck,
good luck, Yeah, Russell Today's price spinging out a upburst.
We've got a pair of tickets to see the Orlando
Pirates versus the Iowa Barnstormers at the Kia Center on
June the sixth. If you're sitting there going, what are
the Orlando Pirates? They're indoor Football League. Yeah, it looks fun.
(02:43):
I'm seeing it. It's looking really good on television. I
really like their color scheme. I like their the mascot everything.
I was like the one that is it on Amazon Prime? Yes,
yeah that's what I thought. Yeah, yes, yes, yes yes.
And then we have a pair of tickets to see
Dave Matthews at the Mid Florida Credit Union Amphitheater and
that's going down on May the twenty six rush. And
(03:06):
those are the prizes in today is Prized Meta. Very nice?
All right, Who do we have on the line that
you like. We got jam pack lines homes and give
me the number one through five, and we got just
to give you an idea. We got people calling.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
From all over the world. Okay, where are we calling from?
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Well, see, if I give you that, then you're gonna
not pick them. No, no, because then you're gonna feel
that you have to just because Okay.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Well, I'm gonna go first one in. Let's go number one.
I never picked number one. Let's go number one.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
So this gentleman's name is Cray, and Cray is calling
us from Sarasota. Okay, all right, Cray, what's up, buddy,
favorite soda?
Speaker 5 (03:42):
What's going on?
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Man? How are you doing calling from Sarasota. I like Sarasota.
Speaker 4 (03:46):
I like Sarasota.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
But as a kid, it was always confusing to me
to Pensacola and Sarasota. I thought they were similar places
location wise.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
I used to go boating down there, and uh, that's
some good, good boating. But do you do you go
boating that very often living in Sarasota.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
No.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
I do a lot of fishing, a lot of fishing.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
Well, it's a boat, you get, okay, so you don't
get in a boat to fish and fish.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
Like from a dot from a doc or something.
Speaker 5 (04:13):
Yeah, beaches, beaches are nice, endless nice, Yeah, very good.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
All right, Craig, Well, today's prize is actually a boat. Hey, Craig,
how do you spell your name? D l A wife?
Clay Clay, oh Clay. I was having all kinds of
problems with him because I was calling him Craig, all right.
At first I heard him say Craig. I didn't know
how to spell Craig, and then he said Cray, and
(04:38):
I was like, how the hell does someone get a
named Craig? Like what did your parents think? But it's
actually play gotcha? All right?
Speaker 3 (04:46):
We're learning a lot about your Clay. All right, here
we go, Bud, I gotta tribute question. If you get
it right, you're king Clay. I've never said those words together.
And you get to plug and promote whatever you want,
and you get the prize from the prize when you
out of David Matthews uh tickets or you get to
go to the football game Arena football game. If you
don't get it right, no whorry. You got two people
here that can help you. You got Angel and you
(05:07):
got Ryan. So you sort of have two shots at it,
so good luck, here we go. This made national news,
by the way, Okay, a commitment speech at the University
of Florida, that's where Ryan went took an awkward turn
when a speaker, the beledictorian Gloria Caulfield, called this the
next Industrial Revolution and then and then everybody booed.
Speaker 2 (05:31):
And the people don't usually boo at commitment speed, but
she got booed. What did she mention that got her booed? Play?
Speaker 5 (05:39):
But man, I have no clue.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
So what do you think somebody could say in public
and then everybody would boo them? Something to everyone seems
to dislike.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
It's not nazis.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Nach politics, something about politics. It was not politics. Who
do you want to help you? Do you want Angel
Rivera or do you want Ryan Holmes.
Speaker 4 (06:06):
I'll go with Angel Angel Angel.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
A commitment speech at the University of Florida where Ryan
went took an awkward turn when the speaker called this
the next industrial revolution and then everybody booters. You got
big bood? What did she mention that got her booed?
At the University of Central Florida. This is making national
news and she wasn't the valedictorian. She was actually one
of the professors.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
She's the vice president of Strategic Alliances Travis Stock Development,
and her name is Gloria Kauff. You looked it up. No,
it was all over the internet. And the main thing
is that again, when you're pitching this stuff to your
students and your students are responding to you. She was like, oh, AI,
AI is the next industrial revolution.
Speaker 4 (06:52):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Yea, AI perfect, AI is the answer. Yeah, she mentioned AI. Dude, Russ,
this is like, this was all over social media yesterday.
It was all over the place. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
it made national news. I just saw it this morning
and she mentioned AI and got super booed. The best
the best part of it. If you guys haven't seen this,
(07:13):
go back and watch this lady's response because she thought
she was breaking something to her students, and their students
let her know, No, lady, this ain't that, ain't it?
And then then she come back and say, hear me out. Now,
hear me out? She tried, Yeah. Yeah, but yeah, that's
the that's the disconnect there. The point is that AI
is super unpopular right now. I mean, it's one of
(07:35):
those things you can bring you know, like politics or
Nazis or make Kanye. You know, you bring those things up,
you're gonna get booed. You bring up AI and I
think you bring up AI, you get booed. I think
you bring up two of those other things. Right now,
it's gonna be a less boot less boots. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
So, now why do you think that younger generation was so?
I mean because they look at it like this is
gonna make it more difficult for me to get a job.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
First of all, if I'm hiring, I'm not hiring anybody
that is graduated from twenty twenty three to twenty twenty six.
Not because y'all cheated. I know y'all cheated. I know
everyone to use chad GPT and you barely know anything.
It's real, sad.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
So they used AI to get where they're at.
Speaker 5 (08:20):
It.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
It's awful, it's proving itself.
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Yeah, but there is an argument to say, guys, it's
in the world now you have to learn to live.
Speaker 4 (08:28):
With it and use those I have to live with
that either.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Well, I mean it's coming gone.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
You know.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Okay, So you're so when you say that, what is that?
What are you saying? What does that mean?
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Man?
Speaker 3 (08:38):
What I'm saying is it's out now you have to
learn to live with it and use it to better
yourself and to make yourself and to.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Be able to be How does someone navigate that that line? Then,
because it is proven that the kids that are graduating
are cheating, the kids in the that are graduating believe that.
Oh okay, so so then how does one rectify what
you're saying? And then what the reality is? The reality is.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
It's so you have to learn to deal with it,
and you have to learn to use it to your
advantage instead of to I mean, okay, So.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
What I hear you saying is that, then it's okay
that these kids cheated. They figured out how to use it,
They figured out how to use it and make it
work for themselves. And I know that's just going to
be reality from this point on. It's going to be there.
It's not going back. We're not putting the genie back.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Well, we do, because what AI required you think it's
just out there and it happens. No, we have to
build these obnoxious ass data centers for that for it
to run properly, that like completely eat like our millions
of gallons of our water supplies and start the environment
around it.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
See how much money people are making off AI. I
know that three companies are Yeah. Yeah, so if people
are making money off of it, it ain't going anywhere.
You know, you can say it all you.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Want to have to just give up that, Like what
it's more American than fighting back. Like there's a proposed
data center in Utah right now that is like, uh,
it's so huge and it's supposed to use it's.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
More than I think they said something like twenty or
thirty walmarts.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
There is nine jiga wats of power, giga wants of power.
Uh where New York the entire city of New York
uses ten.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
I think we just have to like pretend that this
is okay because Kevin O'Leary wants to have data centers.
It's ridiculous the current AI whatever we're doing right now.
Maybe they'll fix it in a few years and it'll
and it won't require this massive power cost. But the
way that it is right now, it requires a massive
power cost, it requires a massive water cost, and it's
just fundamentally not sustainable.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
It seems to me to be. This is my opinion.
It's the same argument as Oh, there's so many guns
out there. We gotta we gotta stop selling so many
guns because there's a gun problem. You're it's it's lip service.
You're saying it, but it ain't gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
They're not.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
The AI is not going away, and you're not gonna
stop it. You're not gonna regulate it. It's not gonna happen.
It's just like yelling about guns. You can yell about it.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
I guess yelling about gun it is.
Speaker 3 (10:48):
One hundred percent the same kind of a thing. You're
you're you're saying, you're you're saying a bunch of stuff
that's not going to happen. We're not putting the genie
back on the bottle.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
With AI, you need to really educate because you like
I I we're friends and we're doing a shit, but
you're very uneducated on how all of this stuff actually
works and the systems required to make this stuff proper.
So I know you like to make the little thumbnails
with our guy, and that's pretty fun. That's a fun,
innocuous way of using AI. But then there's the there's
a the complete data center cost, which is an insane
(11:16):
thing on its own, and we don't have to just
accept that. And b it's we're at Internet breaking level
of AI right now. So like the way that hackers
and people state acting governments are using AI to find
flaws in the systems of not only Windows but Linux
and these things that run the fundamental backbone of the Internet,
using AI to find these like exploits, they're completely breaking
(11:38):
the system right now to where like this gets a
little bit technical, but like Linux is basically what runs
the Internet. Everything runs off of that system. They've found
exploits in it. In the last three days, three major
Internet breaking exploits that have been released out into the
wild and allows hackers and say governments to just kind
of get into any system and kind of bork them.
And that's what we're also fight against.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Two.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
So I never believe that you just have to like
sit back and take it because some rich tech guys
say we need it and throw out the propaganda of like,
well we're in a racial Channa and we gotta win.
There can still be guardrails, there can still be active
things that we can do.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
It can be do you actually think they're going to do.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
Yes, because you AI is just not this ethereal magical thing.
You need actual physical structures, and most a lot of
communities are fighting back and shutting down the building of
these data centers, and it's gonna be a long and
arduous fight, but we have to fight.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
So you believe that everybody's gonna stand up and fight
it and and we'll all stand up, let me, let
me finish and go back words with AI, it'll go
We're gonna go backwards the things where we are now.
If with what you're saying, you believe everybody's gonna stand
up and fight and we're gonna get rid of some
of this stuff and AI will go back.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
We won't be able to use it like you can
use it now.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
It's not about going backwards per se.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
It's it's that these hech oligarchs, your open aies, you're
elon Musk, these guys think that are pushing this hypes
that AI is everything, We're gonna it's gonna fix everything,
and it's this big thing. And in the real world
it's been proven that like it's not actually helping with
productive productivity. The only real thing is actually kind of
helping with is coding overall. So yeah, I do think
(13:21):
you can fight back they're always these rich billionaire people.
They're always going to push for more and more, and
they have the power to do it. It's always going
to be the little guys like us that have to
stand up and go no, you can't have everything. So
it'll probably be this compromise over time.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
I think in theory what you're saying is right, but
I don't think everyone's going to stand up and fight
for it.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
It's going to go back.
Speaker 3 (13:45):
Communities right now, it's going to continue to go half
data se and you either learn to work with it
or you don't learn to.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
More than half of planned data centers have been canceled
at this point because communities.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
One in Tampa still going through. Yeah, but okay, that's one.
There's other cities that have completely voted out city count
the whole city council. I just got voted out of
us one of these towns because they tried to prove
want of these data centers. It's like, I get what
you're trying to say. Okay, we got to come to
means with this, right, but that doesn't mean that we
have to accept without guardrails and again and not discounting
(14:17):
that it's killing us. It's absolutely killing us this stuff,
These data centers are ruining water supplies. You're cool with that? No,
I didn't say it was cool with that. Okay, it's happening,
so no, no, But so that you could draw a
line with Okay, yes, I want it. I want guardrails
on this, I want watermarks on these things. I can
be vocal about that. I don't have to take the
position of well, it's all happening and I got to
(14:38):
accept it and yeah, it's going to ruin the water.
Speaker 3 (14:40):
I think the reason people were booing though yesterday about
the words AI was because of the data centers and
the water supply.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
I do not I believe. I listen to those kids,
Matt Police Finish.
Speaker 3 (14:51):
I believe it's because they feel that it's going to
take their jobs, and that is that is the reason
why I think that is a part of most people
feel like, especially if you're graduating from Kyle and you're like, man,
this is going to make my life more difficult. And
all I am trying to say is that unfortunately it's here,
so you have to learn how to find a job
that that you know AI does not prevent prevent you
(15:12):
from having the job you want.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
So you have to learn to work with it. The
disagree this is I guess you could just buw it.
You can brew it and and and go, but that's
not gonna do anything. You're sitting there and saying that
no one's fighting it, and those kids are fighting. I
didn't say no one's fighting and there are people that
dislike it. Now that there are people that dislike it, well,
i'll check raise you. There are people that are fighting it.
There are people that are protesting, they're actively going against this,
(15:35):
and we need to enable those young people and and
and do that because just because it says it's AI,
there are people that just bought it and say, Okay,
everything's going to be better now, and it's not. And
it's proven not to be true, and it's proven again.
It's ruining our art, it's ruining our music, it's ruining
just our quality of our social interactions. So how do
(15:57):
you think it's going to be shut down or again? Birds?
Or what I agree with you is that we're you
said it perfectly. We're not putting the toothpaste back of
the tube. That's all I'm saying. Yeah, it's but it's
not ross You're you're inferring more there, and that's why
that's why you're getting the reaction that you're getting for
both of us because of the.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
Way when it compared to guns, I compared to cigarettes.
I guess I was going to compare it to anything.
We're like, cigarettes is an American industry. The entire United
States really wouldn't be where it was at without the
tobacco farms and all that kind of stuff, Right, But like,
we realized that cigarettes are bad and it's killing us,
so we have to regulate it and let's like hopefully
kind of phase it out is more how I look
(16:34):
at it.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
So, who do you think is going to regulate AI?
Speaker 5 (16:37):
What? What?
Speaker 2 (16:38):
What administration? Anna say, what administration?
Speaker 5 (16:41):
What this?
Speaker 2 (16:41):
People? Yeah, exactly so.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
So And do you think if let's say the Democrats
ran on a platform of hey, we're going to regulate AI,
we're gonna get rid of a lot of AI, we're
gonna make sure that do you think that would win?
Speaker 1 (16:54):
I think I think politicians on both sides are bought
and sold by by these big tech oligarch Unfortunate, we
had a guy back in the day we all kind
of like laughed at and we're like, what a crazy
dude would be Andrew Yang, who like totally told us
this was coming six seven years ago, and here we
are now.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
People didn't care. People don't understand and understand that people
don't care now. I mean, I do know that people
hate AI. I get that, I do get it, but
they're understanding the key point hearing Russ is not hate
or just like, it's understanding. And when he was running
that the level of comprehension or understanding wasn't there. People
are catching up to it and now understanding the impact
(17:32):
of it and realizing the impact of it.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
The reason I'm equating it to it's the same argument
we have on the radio whenever there's a big shooting
or whatever, and it's like, oh, we got to get
the guns, but it should get rid of the guns.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
The guns the guy, and it's a lot of guns
are built into our constitution. It's a lot of talk
that ends up as assitution. Okay, Like it's two very
different things that I will We're we're super without a member, guys.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Sorry, It's the same thing as far as arguing about
something where a lot of people agree, but yet nothing
gets done because politics are involved. That's what I'm trying
to say, a lot of people agree about the whole
gun thing, but but think of politics are and the
same thing with AI. A lot of people agree, but
there are politics that are involved. I think Robot Angel, Okay,
(18:27):
so understand this, and I get what you're saying, Russ.
But the difference here, and it's at the core value,
is is that AI is not written into our constitution.
So the reason why it's it's which is it's a
hard argument is because the fact that the gun protection
laws are in the gun protection is written into the Constitution.
We can't even have this dialogue, we can't even have
(18:48):
this debate because it's already there. So that before AI
gets written into the Constitution or gets written into it
as an amendment, we could still have these arguments and
we could still fight it, and we can still protest
it and do all the things. And I agree with
what you're saying one hundred percent of what I'm trying
to say is it's one of those things that where
we're doing a lot of talking but yet nothing is
going to happen because we've been doing it for years.
(19:10):
A lot of talk about it, but I doubt you're
gonna see people shut down, then put me.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
In the pod. Then, Man, if we're already there's nothing's
going to happen, then I'm put me in the pod
with NEO. If that's the energy that that's coming from,
like you, there's I see you rust and then I'm
looking I'm doing the thing where everyone that's rusted feels
that way. Then what then what's the point then if
we're not if we're gonna lay down and we're not
(19:35):
gonna find about it, we're not gonna be vocal about it,
We're not gonna have conversation about it. It's like this
is what it is and just accepted.
Speaker 3 (19:41):
So how do we get to where you guys are
talking about, where there are guardrails put on it.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
We're getting there right now.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Look here, like half of data data centers planning in
the US have been canceled or delayed. People are like
sixty nine US jurisdictions say AI data center bands. We
don't want them. They're big, they're loud, pollute, we don't
want that. And that's the people are fighting back. It's
taken a while for the regular average citizen to get
on board well understanding on how this works.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
So is that fighting a I or is that fighting
the production of AI? You know what I'm saying, like
what you on without? Like your argument is about the
the the buildings and about the water supply and all that.
So let's say someone, Oh, I've found a way to
have AI without all this stuff and I created so
then the argument again, we fixed the problem. But really
AI is the problem taking people's jobs and and and
(20:31):
and you know, taking the artwork and all that kind
of stuff. That's the real thing. But what you're arguing is, oh, well,
it's the way we make AI that I have a
problem with. But you can't have one without the other.
But let's say you probably one day you may be
able to write like they like, they may able to
figure out way to do it without having so much
you know.
Speaker 4 (20:47):
Uh, but we're not there right now.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
We're at the point where you need massive data centers
and to pull a ridiculous amount of power and water
to run to have a chatbot say thank you.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
So is your worry the water and the power or
is it the after effect of what AI does.
Speaker 4 (21:02):
See here's the thing.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
I'm not a black and white person, and I can
have multifaceted worries about different things. I'm definitely worried about
the water, the power. I'm worried about the effect on
human beings, specifically children. I'm worried about the chatbots that
are having people murder people and telling you how to
do that completely without any fines happening to open AI.
And I'm worried about the Internet becoming ninety nine percent
(21:27):
bot traffic and you don't ever know who you're actually
arguing with and what state actors are using that to
influence our decisions.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
So it's a multifaceted thing.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
But like you started at the data center, you can't
have AI without the thing that powers AI.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Yeah, so let's say, agreed with what everything you just say,
Let's say that for whatever reason, AI is able to
figure out how to cure cancer, you.
Speaker 5 (21:48):
Know, And.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
There's multiple there's different kinds of AI.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Yeah, There's there's the kind that's image generating, like the
kind of use for the thumbnails. I love to see
Jake and the thumbnail every morning. There's kinds that do
ten folding and find different medications that do that, and
then they're kinds that are large language models that do coding,
and then there's ones that are specifically made to talk
back to you like it's a human being to try
to change your mind on subjects.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
That rich people want you to do.
Speaker 5 (22:13):
Right.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
So, well, it's like a sword. A sword can be
a weapon or a tool.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
So when she said it's the next industrial revolution, uh,
it is the next big issue to deal with. You know,
that is a fact. It is the next big issue
to deal with. And her getting that reaction that big
boo is a tailtale sign. That is just like you say,
most things you bring up in front of a bunch
of people, you might get some booze, but not as
(22:37):
bad as she got yesterday, because it is definitely a
touchy subject. As you've heard today, I did take a
little break because you can't be interrupted me making me mad.
All right, you interrupted me, that's my show.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
Shut up. You're listening to.
Speaker 4 (22:52):
Match of the Morning.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
Fine, welcome Michael the Match.
Speaker 3 (22:57):
This morning's We're Radio one or four point one broadcasting
Heart Radio.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
Hey. Tickets are on sale right now for the Monster
Live at Night, It's Monsters Live at Night.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
Happened on June fifth, and that's gonna be in Mount
Dora at the beautiful Mount Door Music Hall. Tickets are
on sale right now you can go to Real Radio
dot FM, Slash Night or Real Radiomonsters dot com. Either
way you can go and find tickets for that. And
I'll tell you more about that a little bit. We've
got to Clay still on the line. We went alluded
and hey, you ruin the show, Clay.
Speaker 2 (23:30):
Sorry about that. We got all wrapped up. But Clay
has the floor that's right.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
And if your floors are Clay, you can replace that
with wood flooring, lambing and vinyl floor and all that
kind of stuff with Corey at Core Flooring at core
flooringfl dot com. He's got a huge selection to those
in his store and win a Park on State Road
four thirty six. Check them out, and for limited time,
core is offering ten percent off all flooring installations starting
at just one dollar per square foot. And he just
(23:55):
did my mom's floors and they look fantastic. It was
actually floored by how well Flooring did those floor so
so check them out now Clay, you have the floor, Clay.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
How long you been listening to the show, buddy.
Speaker 5 (24:06):
Oh man, I'm twenty seven. I've probably been listening since
I was about ten years old, traveling with my dad.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
Legacy listener. I love that.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
That's one of my favorite things to hear. Now that
and you're still listening to this day. You remember listening as.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
A kid, huh?
Speaker 5 (24:21):
I do, But I remember the Bubba the Love Sponge show.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
Oh well you oh well, that would say that's not us.
You're talking about Buba whoopass Wilson.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's it.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Yeah yeah, different guy, different Bubba one still alive, one's not.
But hey, so there you go. That's okay. What do
you do for a living?
Speaker 5 (24:40):
So? Actually I build houses with my dad. Okay, he's
a he's a general contractor. We built houses in Sarasota
and Bradenton and actually our specialty right now is they're
called ad us, their additional dwelling units and their little
mother in law suites to add on like to your
backyard or two and to your house kind of thing.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
Man, you're going to be wealthy one day, aren't you.
Speaker 5 (25:05):
Trying to be?
Speaker 1 (25:06):
I like those the Seminole County just past that where
you can add one of those into your backyard, and
I've been looking into doing that.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
That's really interesting.
Speaker 5 (25:16):
Yeah yeah, I mean it's it's definitely growing. The industry
is growing it's supposedly growing about six percent of years,
is what you know. How it's how it's moving up,
and it's it's getting bigger and bigger, you know. It's
it's not it's not cheap, but people are looking into
long term wealth and that's that's what it's about.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Klaiy do you guys also do because you're so the
mother in law suits, but are you also doing those
kind of floor plans where it's almost like two different
living spaces under under one roof kind of thing? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (25:49):
Yeah, so right now, actually we have we've got about
seven or eight buildings going up right now, builds, i
should say, and right now one actually that we're living
in as it's a two story house. It's living upstairs,
living downstairs, with a garage downstairs. But upstairs is two bedroom,
two baths, downstairs one bedroom, one bath. It's all separated
(26:11):
and it's actually a pretty cool, uh, pretty cool little spot.
Speaker 2 (26:15):
Very cool. Yeah, Like I've been noticing that kind of
trend with a lot of uh remodels and stuff like that.
Where uh And then I said, because there's an extended
family member who what they did with their they and
they have a really nice, pretty good lot house for
USTs and everything. But the way that they instead of
going out and purchasing another house for the mother in law,
(26:36):
what they've done is is basically on on that slab,
they've configured it where the you know, mom has like
a whole portion of the house. She has her home
entrance and everything, and it's like almost two and then
and and the and the and the family with the
kids and everything really didn't lose any space and and
(26:56):
and but they're all under one roof kind of thing.
And it looks and then they would the company that
did there, So it looks really fantastic. So Clay, what
would you like to plug and promote and tell us
about buddy?
Speaker 5 (27:06):
Basically just that, I mean it just just they're called
eight years and our company is called tiny Home Florida
Tiny Home and that's the tiny home fl is our
company name. And check us out on Facebook. I don't
think we really have a big website going or anything,
but we're on Facebook. And invest your money into the
(27:27):
housing market.
Speaker 3 (27:28):
Hey, Clay, what do you think it is? Because people
are fascinating with tiny homes? I mean, like everyone I know,
you know, and I personally too fascinated with tiny homes.
What what do you think the fascination is with tiny homes?
Speaker 5 (27:43):
Yeah, I don't really When I say tiny homes, I
mean we don't. We don't necessarily build tiny homes. I
mean the smallest, the smallest that will build is like
a duplex that's one thousand, fifteen hundred square feet. Okay,
And it's just it's just smaller thing is basically what
we mean. And I mean it's not like a tiny
(28:04):
home like three or four hundred square foot. It's that's
I don't we don't do anything.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
You don't do those, Okay. I find those fascinating though.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
Well they figured out how to make the kitchen and
the bedroom's right here, and it's all like one little
tiny home, and people do get fascinated with those. All right, Well,
we put your your website on our YouTube channel so
people could see it. And I appreciate your holding for
so long. Has we got a nice CLI that AI?
Heyst let me ask a question with what you do
building homes. Do you use AI for anything in your business?
Speaker 5 (28:34):
Not necessarily. We we use a lot of investors, so writing,
you know, asking and writing to the investors is kind
of it's kind of helpful having an AI system that
kind of because you know, we're we're we're homebuilders. We're
not you know, we didn't go to college and whatnot,
so maybe wording it correctly most of the time is
(28:55):
not our thing. And having having AI be able to
kind of check over what we have and and readjust
it a little bit. Yeah, make it, make it sound
a little bit better is pretty much all we use
it for.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Okay, so you you you have found the best way
to use it for you and your business. Absolutely, yeah, okay, cool. Hey,
I appreciate you calling, buddy. We're gonna put put you
on hold. Make sure your thank you so much. All angel,
All right, buddy Clay, take a little break. We've got
more big dumb fun when we come back. Don't go anywhere.
You're listening to the match of the morning. Wheel Radio
is on Instagram at Real Radio. I did realize that
(29:40):
he called his business tiny Homes, and then he's like,
we don't make tiny homes.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
Why did you name it tiny Holmes. That's sort of
a class. You got to send us a link to
your business because people are the Facebook page, because we
had a lot of people asking Yeah, they want to
ask you about there's a million tiny homes fls on
the web.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Yeah, you need to change your business name to like
Clay's Tiny.
Speaker 4 (30:01):
Homes or something. Very hard to find that in a
search engine.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
They had that that home builder's expo out at the
convention center, you know, at the that's always and it's
always a great one. But the one that had the most,
the biggest impact or the biggest line or whatever. Mary
Ellen was working out there paramedic were the tiny homes
like people were fascinated with. And is do you think
(30:27):
that goes back to maybe being a kid and like
having a little dollhouse or a little a little a
little uh, a little you know, clubhouse when you're a kid.
What why is it we are fascinated with the tiny home.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
I think it's a multi level in the sense that
there's some of us are amused by it. We think
it's cool. But I also think for some of our
senior citizens who are living on fixed incomes, uh, it's
a it's it's an option for them because they can't
afford anything else.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
I don't think that's why people are in line to
see them. You know, it's it's not old people that
are in line to see them. That's I'm saying, people
like us are going to go and look at it.
And and Ryan even thought contemplated it for a second.
The reason that the people that they're selling to is
our is our retirees. Okay, but why are we that?
Because yes, this is a big guy in little car
(31:14):
and kind of concept. Yeah, and then you try to
figure it could I I think it's because you go, Okay,
could I live like this?
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Right?
Speaker 5 (31:19):
Like?
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Could I could? I? Could?
Speaker 3 (31:21):
I just have the bed there and there's the kitchen
and then that's all I really need because really a
lot of us just kind of stay in one room.
And then you're like, if you if you spend a
lot less money, okay, that that kind of goes into
what you're saying. Then I'm getting there. If you spend
a lot less money on a house, then you can
have more money for other things and you don't have
to have a big, a big house, you know.
Speaker 4 (31:41):
Uh yeah, I mean that's how I live my life.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
The living space is your.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
Living space is really even if you have a big house,
I think most people kind of just live in one
little area.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
It's I believe that, like you would like an octopush
in a like a tank. An octopush will only grow
as big as it's tank. So like my house is
not that big, but it's now filled with stuff all
over the place. And I know, and of course the
solution my wife's solution, which she wants her walking closet
(32:10):
in her bigger house. I'm like, the new house will
just get filled with more stuff stuff. So when you're
forced to like go down to like a minimalist kind
of thing, you know, I watch it when I look
at tiny holes just like that.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
It's like, how do you live?
Speaker 2 (32:24):
Oh, look at the little cubbies that you can hide
stuff in and do all that, but think of the
living space you now.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Listen, if you're someone listening right now and you have
a huge house, answer honestly, you can text us at
seven seven zero three one. Do you use all of
that or are you really kind of in one or
two rooms? And and the rest is just you know,
because you can have it. You know, like I have
a pretty big house now, but we only stay like
we're just in one maybe three places, the bedroom, the
(32:52):
living room when it's too hot outside, and then the
outside area and everything else. We really don't use that much.
Maybe that's the fascination with tymes.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
But you also save a lot of money on power
and AC bill and that kind of stuff. So there's
there's there's pros and cons to all of it if
you can live like I know that I have like
way too many clothes myself. And that's like saying a lot,
you know what I mean, because I don't I look
like if you watch the YouTube channel, it doesn't look
like my wardrobe varies a lot. But I have a
ton of drawers filled with clothes that I never wear. Yeah,
(33:22):
And I have like just stuff in the house that
like I never use. So those people that can go
down to like a minimalist life, it seems like like
it's something like it was like watching Marie Condo, Remember
the lady who like you teach you how to fold. Yeah,
you watch it and you go, I wish I could
do that, and you never did do it?
Speaker 2 (33:39):
Yeah, or you do it one time.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
If you have friends over right and you have a
small house, they're like, oh, poor person and they don't
have they don't have any money, they're poor, they got
a small house.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
Any worry about people judging?
Speaker 5 (33:51):
You know?
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Yeah, I mean that's that's a reality.
Speaker 4 (33:54):
It is a reality.
Speaker 3 (33:55):
I do that.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
I do the same thing too.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
When I go to a big somebody has a big house,
I'm like, you must be so.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
You're important because you have a really big house.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
But you don't need it though either, I mean nature,
I don't know. And I know, like multi generational homes
are now becoming this thing here.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
Yeah, that's what it was called. That that what I'm
telling you about. I didn't realize that that was the
name of it. But those are They're awesome, dude. It's
absolutely what is a multi generation like I was saying,
And that's so that's the official term. So and there's
a couple of companies in in Florida that are really
running with us, but basically on you know whatever. You know,
let's say you've got twenty five hundred, twenty seven hundred
(34:33):
square foot floor plan. They can design it so that
it's basically a mother in law suit built in under
one roof. But everyone has their privacy and everyone has
their own interests and everything entrances in and out of
it and every it's what.
Speaker 1 (34:48):
I'm gonna have to do because like I know, like
I'm gonna have to take care of my mom and
at some point she's gonna have to like move in
with you kind of have one the way your homes
sets up, I guess right.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
Just in this conversation alone and then the guys that
were and in and everything, I started looking at up.
I'm looking it up right now because you know, my
parents are getting older too, and I'm you know, I'm
looking at the feasibility of that and comparing like you know,
buying a brand new one that's built that way or
what or what it would take to like redo their place.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
Right all right, But honestly, my house, my rules, Okay,
like that, that's how we're going. We're going back with.
Speaker 4 (35:22):
Sneaking, no boys in.
Speaker 2 (35:23):
You got a curfew. Oh man, I can't wait. That's
what happened.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
I told my mom, you know, and Mary ill and
told it, you know, this could be your room if
you need to come in. And then she started making rules. Well,
we got to put it in my big back. She's
got one of these walk in bathtubs, right, yeah, we
got to put the walk in bathtub. You got to
put in way railing. I'm like, now I gotta do
all this construction because we're trying to get place.
Speaker 4 (35:44):
To live trust me.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
Oh like we we retrofitted in the bathroom from my
grandma when she lived with us, and it was way
easier than dealing with her trying to get in and
out every single day and.
Speaker 2 (35:55):
Then you're stuck with it. Uh, walk in bathtub when
you just get rid of it when she passes. Those
are expensive to put in well, and you'll need one eventually. No,
I don't need one. You will need one eventually. On
the size of your lot or your proper line. You
couldn't build a build a smaller probably could. Yeah, there
is an area in the back. We have a big
area in the back where we could. Our neighbors just
(36:15):
did that. They just built.
Speaker 3 (36:16):
They just added onto their house so their parents her
her parents could move in to the house with them.
Speaker 5 (36:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (36:23):
Like if my parents lived in a different side of
town like this East Orlando, but in the sub division
they live in. Uh, I don't think they could. I
don't think they could get permitted for a different building.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
I just looked into it because it's funny. They called
it because Seminal County, that's where I live. Shout out
to the four oh seven. I don't know, but like
they just made it, so you can do that in
my backyard is ridiculously large. Oh god, I've been going
back there because like start building now, well it's only
like fifty grand. Yeah, so like I can pull from
the house and build that and I can either rent
(36:57):
it out or if my mom needed to like suddenly
like move move in with us. I can't have her
in the same building. That's the thing under the same
She's got to be a little bit detached. All you
gotta do is walk across the Fine. You can't be
in the same hall, you know. I gotta take a break,
all right. Was the one proof.
Speaker 2 (37:14):
The one thing that I was surprised that hasn't been
as popular as I thought it was. And the textures,
edit shop and container homes. I thought right now they
would be all over the can I see them. I
see them on Facebook all the time. People take them,
they put them in the ground them Ye, barn miniums
and sip and container homes. I thought they would be everywhere.
There's a lot of it. Got us again, all right,
(37:35):
don't go anywhere. You're listening to the match of the
morning we left and fine thirty five