Episode Transcript
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Charlton Curry a former NFL player now President and CEO
of Big C Sports Corporation. Mister Curry loves bringing sport,
worts and real life experiences to his worldwide audience.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
Charlton is a longtime.
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Award winning tip radio broadcaster covering all sports including NFL football,
NBA basketball, MLB baseball, as well as college football, basketball, baseball,
MMA boxing, golf, soccer, and others.
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On many networks and podcasts.
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Charlton hosts rivetting and formative discussions on race, big business
in sports. He is the co chair of the Sacramento
chapter of the National Black Wall Street Project, focused on
restorative justice and economic empowerment.
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Mister Curry is a business development consultant.
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For Resource Development Consulting and corporated the top endorsement in
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(05:47):
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Tune in live you do.
Speaker 7 (05:56):
Board, Why what any me? Let's get ready to turn run.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Yeah, Welcome through the show. My name is Charleston the
Big Sea Sports. This is Big Sea Sports coming to
them worldwide. I'm a Big Sea.
Speaker 5 (06:16):
Sports network because the number one network.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
In the United statesmer not Yiga. Sea Sports have been
noted the number one sports two in the black hole
in the university.
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Get the whole with Big Seed.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
You gotta get the hole with Big seed. What a
great day in them the hills, California today, it's a
beautiful day. It's called Monday.
Speaker 7 (06:38):
It is actually I was at the eighteenth twenty.
Speaker 5 (06:41):
And twenty five to this show. It SPONSI by your Northern.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
California canadac NNAs cony all news candle that gainst the
league the Dead of the world. When you go back
in tenth time, you tell him I want to take
a test time in the black hole.
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You gotta get them all with six seat, get.
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The hall with that. Do it and I'm thinking with it.
I want to say thank you to Exfinity, Comcast TV
and Comcast Bot Light Effect TV. From Riginnia Bigg's boards
to the universe. Just liking the look of Genesis one three.
But God says reparations now reparations whatever if then you
(07:19):
guys say it lift to be like I want to
say that all the universe. I want to say, today's
show is BOT to five. You're Northern California, candidac daalss
that's the Canada of the world. It's so good. You
say it twice. Lucy, I'm a home, Lucy, I'm home.
That THI that Cadillac with the cadillact Real. I want
to say thank you to Exfinity, Bobcats TV and Comcast
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b E Tech TV want to says worse through the US.
Speaker 5 (07:48):
I want to say I'm so happy about the day.
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It's happy Monday. Also, I want to say thank you
to my fetmous presss houtline because they've really are experienced, have.
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(08:22):
want to give him some praise because we all need
somebody to the lead up and the shore is good
when somebody's leaning back. At the same time, make sure
we take care of vetamins. There's so much going on
in them. The Hills, California react NFL football about two
weeks away. All frand level were of course preseason football
is not the same. But we're the great way to
(08:43):
end the Raiders and the forty nine ers game down
at a Legias Stadium, fifty nine.
Speaker 5 (08:48):
Yards field goal and then that has got the win.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
I want to say Major League Baseball, Aaron Judge is
a show Hill Tani. Whoever's gonna be the MVP, We'll
see the Athletics are playing baseball and dim the Hills, California.
And now you have the NBA getting ready to get
back into camp right up out of the end of October.
But college football is kicking off in about two weeks.
High school football's kicking off this week. You gotta get
(09:12):
at some praise. Give it praise, praise, praise because of praise.
If it trouble being the waist. I love what's going
on with Big Sea's sports.
Speaker 5 (09:19):
There's a lot of talk about getting big.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
You want to get bigger. That's why you left the weights.
That's why you run in them may heels, That's why
you eat the double doubles. You want to get bigger.
But sometimes you gotta be like a wrestler and you
gotta cut weight. I hope, I hope somebody can tell
me how to cut weight without going on those diets.
I've been on a seafood diet. I've been invited to
every restaurant they've had up there. If the universe, I
(09:42):
mean the strip, I mean quackabowli, I mean crocodile I eat.
I think I even eat it. Even in a cow.
They said, big c let us cook the cow first.
I said, ooh, they got to cook the cow first.
That's off fear and another one at the same time.
I want you to know so many things are happening
in the world of bug Seats Sports podcast. I wanted
to appreciate all the great things that are going on
(10:03):
my neck of the woods. Just talk about moving up
in northern Californian. Second on the state trying to go
to the big leagues to join the likes of the
USC UCLA or Collin STAFFA. We know that they've jumped
over to the Big ten and that's a shame now
that fact. I've stuck with other programs trying to come in.
But it would be great to not jump past the
(10:24):
second bedrum. You don't want to fly over second midum.
You want to fly in to second middle. Hopefully don't
do that. When I come back with my proposal. I
want to take what's called the big z pause off
and on as a big sea time out. I'll be
back talking about sex state in the big leagues. I'll
be back in just a morning.
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Escalate iq.
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This is what I do.
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Eddy got intellect sus ninety two. They caught the way
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they don't kill them the Cadillac diamond in the back,
cold chilling and let them on. Attack on the attacks
my selling Skuy's the limit, give me gimm It's great.
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Drop no camera shots.
Speaker 14 (11:21):
They lies like altitude of latitude it well, love.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
It clearly and we'll hustle bus struck it away.
Speaker 15 (11:28):
A Reparations has been here and have been working on
for generations. From the very beginning, people were knocking on
the door saying we are old for our labor.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
Cali House. She was born a slave.
Speaker 16 (11:52):
She went out all around in the community telling black
people that they all asked the government to get somebody
because minute they were pulled and they were desperate.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
By nineteen hundred she had three.
Speaker 17 (12:04):
Hundred thousand dues paying members.
Speaker 16 (12:07):
It was the largest organization of black folk that had existed.
Pretty soon her activities came to the attention of the
government and they convicted her a fraud.
Speaker 17 (12:20):
The federal charge was that, at a time when you
should have known that the federal government would never give
negroes anything, why would you telling negroes they should organize
to try to get something. They sent her to prison
to serve one year term.
Speaker 16 (12:39):
She got out of prison, she went back to Danshville
to this shotgun house. She got uterine cancer, and she died.
You can draw a direct line from Kelly House to
the reparations movement.
Speaker 18 (12:55):
Today leaves on ash ship Beerie Black leaves the ship
be fire.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Oh these katies are fire. Kay, you work here?
Speaker 1 (13:24):
I think I piered out of magic smoke because I
working nine to five. I can still be too op one, right, whatever, kid, take.
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Your speak.
Speaker 19 (13:36):
Sweet, you really think you can out flip me over?
Hm hmm, that's cute, yo.
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I can go all through these bro, you ain't need
all that. I can guard your hand route you up.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Well, not ne need more because look for a quarterback.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
About you retired doing these please?
Speaker 1 (14:08):
You're right, Billy. He's to bring on my eyes every.
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Shoot for every athlete only at Digs.
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Dixon's to go all right way back from the Big
Sea Balls also known as the Big Seed time out.
He could follow up the Big Seed sports twenty four
hours a day, seven days a week on thirty two
past platforms. Ohlah blah unvirus all friend number one, What
a great day. I feel that so much great. This
is happening in Northern California, and I have a guest
(14:37):
on the line by the name of August Wesley's a
wrestling coach the Olympic team Camp Birdie and August, how
you doing flying around on that start ship fitting prize today?
Speaker 7 (14:45):
Hey?
Speaker 2 (14:46):
How you doing?
Speaker 1 (14:47):
I'm doing super fantastic. I really do appreciate sports right now.
This time of year is August the eighteenth. I have
August Wesley in the program. High school football already started
in some states last weekend. The big games are coming
up this week, even this Northern California area. It's hitting
the national ESPN audience with the Grand High School taken
(15:07):
on Fulsham High School and then another California power Modern
day of Santa Ana is playing a Florida Plower in Florida.
They're playing, They're playing for the same time as a
plant is out of Fort Lauderdale. And I just want
to touch on briefly before we get into the sack
state jump and some pro football. Football in California is
such a big deal. The state is the world's fourth
(15:30):
largest economy. There's more that happens here as far as
feeding the whole world with agriculture. But still, when you
think about football states, people for some reason they think
Texas are Florida, Ohio. Give me your thoughts. You've been
here in the region, your thoughts.
Speaker 20 (15:44):
August, Well, California is definitely a benchmark. You see California
teams on ESPN, you see them ranked high in the
national rankings. You see multiple kids getting scholarships to Alabama,
to Florida, to Texas. So definitely the job is getting
done in California.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Now, you were out here, August, you grew up out
here in California. You've seen the growth of high school football.
There was a time when it would just be regional football.
I started covering sports with cal Press back in the
Day and then in cal high sports it went on
to Sack Press, which became Max Presen. CBS bought them
and now you're seeing high school football that's actually on
(16:28):
the air through ESPN. Now the kids don't make any
money from it, but high school football actually on ESPN,
which you have ever thought we would have seen that
they've done it for it's sixteen years in a row.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Now your thoughts never. I never would have thought it
would have grown to such a spectacle.
Speaker 20 (16:42):
Giving the kids a platform of being seen on the
national stage.
Speaker 2 (16:46):
But that said, California itself has grown.
Speaker 21 (16:50):
It went from just having section championships to now there's playoffs,
there's an open division where teams can get in, and
there's divisions just by eyes.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
So you've seen it grow in our state.
Speaker 20 (17:02):
And often as California goes, so does the Union and
many topics.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
So the growth in the sport notoriety, the finances that
go to these.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
To these kids get recruited, playing in different leagues, getting scouted,
it's just growing and growing.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Enow that you can sit back and watch high school
on CV. I don't mean PBS, I mean FPN.
Speaker 8 (17:26):
It's great that it's grown like that, but It gives
kids an opportunity to be seen on different platforms because
a whole lot of Heighsend Trophy voters don't stay up
to watch the West Coast games. So now you can
see them on ESPN on a prime time to see
Grant and Fall someome two schools that have won multiple
Section titles and have athletes that went on to play
(17:47):
at the Air Force academies and multiple Division One programs.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
It's just an awesome feather in the cap coming from
Northern California.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
Yeah, NFL football too.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
A lot of players that played at Grand High School
went on and played Thompson Checht and brothers, but they
played in the NFL football. There's a lot of great players.
And when I think about that, and then falso has
been the new kid on the block. Is great for
the region Sacramento. They have ESPN on not just running
to the Bay Area, are Southern California. So that's a
good thing. But I want to take it to the
next step up when you leave college. And you know
(18:19):
this in great high school programs in Sacramento, but when
you leave high school, you want to go to college.
There was a time that Sacramona State was just like
a Division two program, and they still are. But this
is the same region in northern California that's just an
hour away from the Bay Area. They played cal they
haven't beaten them in football. They played Stafford, they beat
(18:40):
them in football. This team has gone up to Oregon
State and beat Oregon State in court Vallas, Oregon. They've
gone over to Colorado and beat the Colorado Buffaloes, and
then they played Frethlie State close. They played Arizona State close.
But still they're being overlooked when they're trying to join
a new PAC twelve conference they're bringing in Frede State.
(19:00):
They're bigger than a San Diego State, a Boise State
in northern Texas State, a Utah State to me is
a bit insulting. The reason here is bigger than Cornvallis, Oregon,
or Eugene, Oregon. It's also bigger than Plubland, Washington, where
you have Oregon, Augon States and Washington State. Why is
this program and the city being overlooked year after year?
Speaker 2 (19:23):
Your thoughts as a coach, you know a couple of
different things. One, I gotta say, you got a recency bias.
Speaker 8 (19:28):
You're gonna look at to see that Sacramento State last
year finished on the five game losing streak.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
That doesn't sit well. They also finished with the three
to nine record that doesn't sit well.
Speaker 8 (19:40):
So when you look at some of the people that
they've played, some of the teams that didn't have great
records themselves or maybe didn't qualify for a Bowl, sax
State has struggled. But I want to say that in
a capsule because if you will look at twenty nineteen,
twenty twenty one. In twenty twenty two under coach Troy Taylor,
they won the Big Sky Call friends. Yeah, so you
(20:01):
gotta say that sax State has been competitive. They have
many athletes that have went on to play in the
Canadian Football League and they've done some special things there
for the Hornets. But at the end of the day,
they look at what's just been done, what is the
most recent sample size, and they struggled, and it's because
they can't get all of those kids to stay closed,
to stay local and play.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
Or of sax State would definitely be in the conversation.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
Yeah, I look at the Vata or University of Nevada
arena just about two hour drive up in the Nevada
beautiful stadium back in stadium. I remember first seeing that
stadium back in nineteen seventy nine. They held about eleven
thousand people. Now they're building over thirty five thousand seats,
and they're about to sink it deeper into the ground
and go up to forty thousand. We know UNLB they're
playing at a Legias Stadium, whether Raiders play. But since
(20:48):
that time Northern California football August, they've lost Humbo State,
they've lost Chico State, they've lost University of San Francisco,
San Francisco State, cal State, Hayred, Santa Clara, University of Pacific.
And you would think, and I think so, Norma said.
If I didn't miss that name, and you would think
those schools are all within about a two hour drive
(21:10):
in Sacramento. It would be Apple time to just build
a forty or fifty dollars seat stadium. And if you
build it, they will come. But if they don't see it,
it doesn't exist. That makes sense to get your thoughts.
It does.
Speaker 8 (21:23):
And also you got to look at what's around those
schools that you just mentioned. You got plenty of junior
colleges that have been very successful. You got to see
your college that was on ESPN because they had over
a fifty game win streak, sent many kids to Division One,
and those are the local kids that they had coming
in here. They've built that school up because of the
success that they have over ten years ago at this
(21:45):
point now, So it really is going to scratch your
head and make you wonder how all of these college
football programs in the Junior college division are still there
are still playing in California. Junior college is different than
the national Junior college California services itself in every sport,
so they have their own playoffs, their own state championship,
(22:07):
which would rival many other conferences in some of the
national teams.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
So when you have that kind of foundation.
Speaker 8 (22:14):
Feeding in to the few universities that we have in California,
you would think it would be a no brainer for
all of them to the Division one and not to
lose programs.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Yeah, I agree with you, and I didn't even mention
Southern California lost a ZUSA Pacific football which is preston
of COYL when they have played for the Kansas City Chiefs.
Cal State full is gone and Lombee State football program
has gone, and Sacramento.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
The Lake, Bakersfield's gone too.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Yeah, they're playing only basketball now for the bakers I
think they called the road Runners, I believe. But when
I think about that, seeing Pete Carroll on the sideline
as head coach of the Raiders, he came to UOP.
John Ruden campsa UOP. There's a lot of guys that
came to UROP. That stadium got torn down. That's just
maybe forty five minutes south of Sacramentum. Like the writings
(23:04):
in the wall, there's so many things happening here, and
we have secondmental in public FC. They just broke round
just north of downtown Sacramento by the am I think
it's called Amtrak railway that runs through downtown. They just
broke round today, owned by a Native American casino August.
The money's there, Okay, the money is there. And now
(23:24):
second one of state, they're talking about moving or building
a new stadium at cal Expo, which is about four
miles north of the stadium. There's pro and con for that,
and we'll talk about that more when I come back.
But I want to get your thought. You know so
much about this region. You grew up in it, you
coast in it, you had children in it, and so
I'm going to do what's called the Big Sea Pause,
(23:45):
also known as the Big Seat time out. Shaquille O
Mills in town. They're doing a fundraiser. I want to
talk about so many things when it comes back. I'm
thinking it was called the Big Sea Pause, often known
as the Big Seat time Out. I'll be back in
just a moment.
Speaker 22 (24:05):
Oh, I know, my boys. Remember who we are and
who we represent. There's not a lot of places for
the people.
Speaker 23 (24:18):
Whoa whoa Okay, like whoah, my life.
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The java. Damn we don't bow.
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All right, we're back for the Big Seed Pause, also
known as the Big Seed Timeout. You can follow Big
Ced Sports twenty four hours a day, seven days a week,
EARN thirty two podcast platforms, All Love the Universe and
also streaming on six TV platforms Exfinity, Comcast TV, Apple TV,
Opro TV, Amazon five TV, Episode TV, and coming soon
(27:43):
to DD three TV. I got the Great August Wesley
coming in from the USS starship Enterprisse on his mission
to a sports play new world to seek out new conferences,
his sex stah. Part of that conference a linement August,
how you doing, sir? Welcome to the show again, Part two. Hey,
I gotta tell you, August, there's something about the sports
(28:05):
world in Northern California that has growing. But I would
hate to see them say let's just take one step
like John F. Kennedy said, one small step for man,
one giant leap for mankind. And I hope that they
take that approach and quit trying to just align yourself
(28:27):
with where they are. Don't worry about going to the
Mountain West. Make a PAC twelve statement. You already have
Oregon State, Washington State. They're bringing in Colorado State, smaller
market than Sacramentum, Utah State, smaller market than Sacramento. Frenthlow State,
smaller market than Sacramento, Boise State, smaller market in Sacramento.
(28:47):
San Diego State, smaller market than Sacramentum. And you can't
tell me enough why they want to keep thinking small.
They got to go for the big the big boys,
and that means build a fifty thousand seas stadium. When
you build it, the recruitisal come. Your thoughts, I.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Agree with you. If you build the facilities, kids will come.
They'll be excited about it.
Speaker 8 (29:06):
In Sach State has a lot of things to offer
the community, the region.
Speaker 2 (29:11):
I mean, it's a selling point. It's easily accessible. You
have major highways that go up and down.
Speaker 8 (29:16):
We have an international airport. Like what are we talking
about here? The basketball team has done well. You had
a coach that was there before Mike Bibbie. Before him,
Brian Katz. He went to my old high school. He
was a coach there Center High School, Go Cougar's where
he was a multiple time Coach of the Year. He
is the winningest coach in sax State history while they've
been in the Division one.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
So I just don't understand why people are even thinking
about it.
Speaker 21 (29:39):
Sax State is ready and primed to be a Division
one all sports school.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
Yeah, they had the Yales Oalymics. Tack and Phil talking
to the great August Wesley. Now, now August's listen to
august perspective. August grew up in the region, and August
is an Olympic coach. I mean Olympics. You can't bigger
than that. So he's seen from seed to Shining Sea.
While you cannot keep thinking small, thinking well, let's just
(30:07):
take one more step, but build the twenty five thousand seats.
Did if you have twenty thousand seats down, build fifty thousand. First,
let's say has forty two thousand seats. No, that is
going to forty thousand, you'll pee. I think he held
thirty two thousand Samose State. For some reason, they're trying
to refurbish the stadium and go back up to thirty
thousand US Lil you're in the region that can challenge
cal Berkeley when it comes to gatten athletes that may
(30:28):
not have the GPA for Calier Berkeley, but Sacomore the
state has a good athletics and academics. Stafford went down
from eighty four thousand to fifty two thousand, sax State
went down there, and one the region of Sacamoono is
not getting any smaller. They gotta think big and don't
wait until we're ninety years old before they do it.
Speaker 8 (30:45):
Your thoughts, I agree, and I think they need to
do another populace to see what our numbers are exactly.
Because you have beautiful homes being built on the outsides
of Elk Grove, North n Thomas, where I live. They're
building all the way out to the airport. It's not
a long drive anymore. You've got neighborhoods and stores and
shops all the way there. You've got two major casinos
(31:07):
on each of the highway ends. So I just don't
know why this is a difficult thing to think about.
I think you've got to put a certain structure in
place first of all, so it's sustainable.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Once you do that, it'll be a lot easier to
bring in nil money. It'll be a lot.
Speaker 8 (31:24):
Easier to sell some of these kids to lead some
of their hometowns and come.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
To Sacramento State. We don't have to get the Division
three and four kids.
Speaker 8 (31:34):
We should be able to get the Division one high
school kids to come because, like I already said, basketball
team has had years of success.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
Football has won three Big Sky Championships.
Speaker 8 (31:44):
I don't want them to go to another pseudo subdivision,
Mountain West or something else that has playoffs. I want
them to go in there and they're going to take
their lumps. Going Division one doesn't mean that everyone is successful.
There's a whole lot of teams in the SEC that
don't have a winning record.
Speaker 2 (32:02):
No one talks about.
Speaker 8 (32:03):
There's a whole lot of teams in the Big twelve
or the Big tens that aren't successful. But guess what
they're in that arena, their game and they're ready to play,
which gives you a platform to recruit on. So when
you're thinking about a student body, you're not just talking
about the amount of students that you have. Every student
(32:24):
channeled other athletes, other students. That's how you get more
money to certain schools. That's why you're able to add
more majors, more disciplines. There's already programs that they have
set up with the junior college.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
To where they get automatic admission. Do you see Davis
in the cal State system?
Speaker 8 (32:42):
With is cal State, Sacramento, cal State, Sanverdino, all of
the cal State.
Speaker 2 (32:46):
So you can ear market to any of those schools.
Speaker 8 (32:49):
Therefore, if you have top tier athletes that are coming
out of the state of California from high school or
junior college, you're already on an academic plan to go
from being a sex State coach, right and I coach
that's here at college and sax City. So just understanding
how they implement these things so students can.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
Have a smooth transition to a UC like you see
LA or a state school.
Speaker 8 (33:13):
So there is no reason why Sack State can't be competitive,
can't be robust, can't bring in the donors, can't bring
in the alumni, the sponsorship and TV revenues. I just
would like to see their business plan and marketing ideas
around it. Because Sacramento is not a small market. We
wouldn't have an international airport, but we are at the
(33:35):
capital of California.
Speaker 2 (33:36):
This isn't before when it was San Jose. This isn't
years ago. Now Sacramento is the capital.
Speaker 8 (33:43):
Movies are getting made here, so many things and businesses
coming in and it's a prime location if you sit and.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
Look at it.
Speaker 8 (33:50):
Geographically speaking, you're with a two hour window. You can
get to Reno, you can get to Lake Tahoe, you
can get to nap Book, you.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Can get to sand Cisco. Excuse me, those are all
vacation destinations.
Speaker 8 (34:04):
Sahoy and what Sacramento being the capital, so they are
primed to have that. Can you imagine a family weekend
where you have families coming in, seeing their kids, looking
at some sports and then spending the rest of their
week seeing with the beautiy beauty of northern California or
that two hour radius around Sacramento has to offer, and
(34:29):
it's a year round around in the winter, you can
go to Reno, the biggest little city in the world. Hello,
I didn't name of that, that's.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
What they're name is.
Speaker 8 (34:37):
You could go to Lake Tahoe, that is, Lake Tahoe
is beautiful. When there's fires or.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
Any issues, people go to Lake Tahoe to escape that,
to get clean air.
Speaker 8 (34:45):
People go to San Francisco Silicon Valley for all kinds
of reasons. Outside of Stanford for business, for intituity, or
for marketing. I mean, there's so many things that the
Bay has to offer, and any drop right into NAPA.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
I mean you can find Napple wine.
Speaker 8 (35:02):
I've been in multiple countries around the world and found
mapple wine and just smiles.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
Yes, I'm like, look at it, and they're and they're like, well,
domestic is cheaper. That's foreign.
Speaker 8 (35:12):
And I've been like, actually, to me, that's domestic and
you guys are foreign.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
But I can just hold on August. I'm trying to
I'm trying to build up for the donation I got
all talking about in the National Wine Tasty and somebodys
are trying to get a beer. Okay, it's all level.
Speaker 7 (35:29):
My bad.
Speaker 8 (35:32):
Just say you can find the imprint of Northern California
all around the world, and like you already talked about
the marketability and financially how they are the fourth largest
economy earth. Yeah, we're talking about here. So just by proxy,
you got the schools that bring in top tier athletes,
(35:52):
you got the professional team, Sofi Stadium in La Hello,
the Rams.
Speaker 2 (35:58):
That's supposed to beautiful.
Speaker 8 (35:59):
I was just talking to when it lives in La
We had lunch yesterday and he said you could.
Speaker 2 (36:03):
Literally eat off the ground. He said, it's.
Speaker 8 (36:05):
Absolutely beautiful stadium. So the amount of money that California
teams are pouring into these schools, I just don't d
professional teams. I don't understand power Why we're still talking
about documental state.
Speaker 2 (36:21):
Not being able to take that step. And like you
said already, don't.
Speaker 8 (36:25):
Take a baby step, don't go up to the don't
go to the batter's box and look to butt and
just be happy because you're there. Swing away. Let's go
ahead and go after it because you're going to bring
in athletes. You got Mike Bibby as a coach right there.
You're talking about a list coach with a great background,
(36:45):
great family. His father was a pro as well.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
You're talking about a great family in.
Speaker 8 (36:50):
Pedigree, and he stayed in this area after he played
professionally when Sacramento was doing major things. He hold you
to cut his fingers after it after what the second
quarters down there, So you got to sit there and
really think about the notoriety and how people want to
come and play for a professional.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
Athlete because they understand how to navigate the financial education
and the process to become a pro.
Speaker 8 (37:19):
So if you already have that in line for basketball,
baseball's gone wonder. Sack State and baseball even their club
programs very competitive. So when I sit and look at the.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Hornets, why not, why not? Why not take that step?
Speaker 8 (37:34):
I can tell you when I was coaching here and
I talked to my athletic director and we were gonna
welcome in UCLA's wrestling team.
Speaker 2 (37:41):
He said, let me know.
Speaker 8 (37:42):
When they're gonna come, we're gonna we're gonna do some
things and make sure they feel very comfortable. And I said,
waited a second, we're sach State. When they come here,
we're gonna treat them just like they would treat us. Well,
we're not gonna treat them any better or any worse
because we're gonna kick their butt when they come here,
and we're gonna send them back on.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
Y'are not feeling good about myself.
Speaker 8 (38:02):
So he was just kind of like, oh, but you
know what UCLA and I and I said, I know,
but that's.
Speaker 2 (38:09):
Just our expectation. That's what our goals are, that's what
we plant to achieve.
Speaker 5 (38:15):
And we did.
Speaker 2 (38:15):
We were very successful.
Speaker 8 (38:16):
Yeah, So I'm just saying it has to come from
within Charlton.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
You have to look at them as a Division one program.
They have to act like a Division one program.
Speaker 8 (38:26):
They got to spend like a Division one program. Yes,
and they need to market in fundraise like a Division
one program.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
Where it was it has to be like that, It
was said talking to the great August Leslie head coach
Kate Birdie, an international Olympic coach, not a guy that
just coaches at the local YMCA. But I want to
say this to Shaquille O'Neill, maybe the biggest personality in sports,
even to retired about a decade and a half ago,
still one of the biggest personalities on the planet Earth.
(38:55):
And then have him coming out to be kind of
a liaison to money and fundraising. That on a fundraising
at the Sayer Hotel on Wednesday, and they're asking for
seats between thirteen hundred and fifty thousand dollars to help
get money to fund raise at Sack stage, I say,
stop stop thinking small, go down to billion dollar corporations
in Silicon Valley and as someone to give you a
(39:17):
billion dollars to invest in infrastructure. Will that mean cut
the cheese quick tank, the small bites, cut the whole
cheese because, in my opinion, as big as Shaq is
as a personality, Shaq went to LSU, played in the
NBA for Orlando. We know it's run with the Miami Heat,
also with the Lakers and then Boughton. Shaquill o' niell
(39:38):
is not coming here to eat cheese. He wants the
whole cake. Go down to Silicon Valley, ask for a
billion dollars to build a stadium that you can name
Silicon Valley, our Silicon Valley. We are in the valley,
Silicon Valley Stadium. If you don't get BA Bay or
Wells Fargo at Chase Stadium, Silicon Valley Stadium. Put up
billion dollars not just into a stadium, but in build
(39:59):
up the region, jobs and infrastructure. We know AI is
going big.
Speaker 5 (40:03):
Stop thinking small. I want to just say this too.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
If I'm a fan and I love sports as a
profession and also as a fan of sports. If you
have Sacamore State taking off against Oregon, are Sacramento State
hosting USC the Trojans, Sacamento of State taking under UCLA
Bruins are the University of Washington are gods for Beard?
Notre Dame comes to town. Why would you not want
(40:26):
to think that way? Stop thinking twenty five thousand seed
state and go fifty thousand and bigger your thoughts.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
Yeah, okay, I'm gonna go back to Shaquille O'Neil.
Speaker 8 (40:34):
So, not only is he a big deal in the
world of basketball, but he is a great business mind.
Speaker 2 (40:39):
As he is owner in J. C. Petty's, the General Insurance, YEP,
and many other entities that he is the face of,
speaks to and has a series on TV. So Shaquille
O'Neil does a lot of things the right way. Great
business fan.
Speaker 1 (40:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
That said, the fact that they are having fifty thou.
Speaker 8 (41:00):
Down opportunity to sit with him, have a casual talk
and all that other kind of stuff. What I don't
understand is why isn't some of that taking place on
the campus. Why aren't we selling what the whole process is.
Why aren't they in the well taking pictures. Why aren't
they over in the student union taking pictures. Why an't
they in the academic areas taking pictures. I just don't
(41:23):
understand why that's not going.
Speaker 2 (41:25):
On, because to me, I'm just a little confused that
you're trying to raise money for a certain program. But
you need people to have their eyes.
Speaker 8 (41:33):
On the prize fort to really see what's going on.
Pull out the draft of what the stadium's going to
look like off campus, pull out what it's going to
look like.
Speaker 2 (41:43):
To upgrade the well that fields right adjacent from the well.
What are we doing with that area?
Speaker 8 (41:49):
So I just really think that we could do a
little bit more. Maybe sax State needs to purchase a
little bit more area to do some more things. Maybe
that can be where some of the money's going, y'all
and all. I just wonder the big plan. And that's
I guess what I'm thirsty for, because that is a
selling point.
Speaker 2 (42:07):
Not with the people you're.
Speaker 8 (42:08):
Recruiting today, but we're talking about the kids that are
in age grade, yes, that are then going to go
through high school, and they're gonna be little hornets throughout
their thought process.
Speaker 2 (42:17):
I want to go to sax State.
Speaker 1 (42:18):
I want to go to sax State and.
Speaker 8 (42:19):
They're going to graduate and say thank you these other institutions.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
But guess what, I'm a hornet. I'm green and gold.
I can't change that.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
I praise God for that because and I want to
say this, it's important to me. I as Big C
Sports Corporation. I'm an employer of people. I'm not just
looking to give someone, Hey, come watch our football program
and watch boys and girls run up been down the field.
I'm an employer. I'm not just saying come here in
play sports. There's so much money that can come into
Sacamono State and put money into infrastructure and create jobs.
(42:51):
I'm creating jobs all over this country and in Canada.
I hope, and I hope and I hope they're not
trying to turn Sacamoono State into another quote unquote exploit
chasing university for black boys. All these Obviously, when you
get a college scholarship, the world opens up to you.
But a lot of players that I saw when I played,
(43:12):
if they didn't go pro, they were just working as
a janitor someplace, or trying to get a job at
the mall. And nothing wrong with that, but that's not
why you go to school to get a job as
a janitor. No offense to any janitor, I know you
have a chance of higher education. I hate seeing the
black exploit chasing of athletes, and I hope and with
my voice, I will not let that happen. So whenever
they want fifty thousand dollars or something. Is that going
(43:33):
to create scholarship for kids to go to school, to
have food, shelter and clothing. Don't just give me a
bigger gym to get bigger, strong, running faster. But that's
my responsibility. And when someone brings in fifty thousand dollars
with Big C Sports, I'm giving you a job so
you can make fifty thousand dollars. I think that's what
sets me apart from everybody. And I would love to
work with Shaquille O'Neil with his business acumen and help
(43:56):
me crute another thousand men and women to go to
work and two twenty five. I'm not asking for any money.
I don't ask for one penny. I'm saying I want
to help with the Sex twelve project, this project, but
I want to do it as an employer. You don't
have to bring money out of your pocket when you
come and work with my company. You don't have to
say do I buy food. I'll give fifty thousand dollars
(44:17):
to an organization you've worked with Big Seed Sports. You'll
get money by going to work, and that's how I
separate myself. But I want to be a part of
what they're doing too. But I'm not asking for any
money unless from a corporation that makes sense.
Speaker 8 (44:27):
Your thoughts, yes, and specifically what you talked about being
the institution of higher learning.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
How is it going to affect the academic programs? How
is it going to affect So.
Speaker 8 (44:37):
We're not losing any teachers because that's happened, We've had
to look at that.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
At sex State, more teachers will get laid off.
Speaker 8 (44:43):
There was questions about teachers having job security, and we
just don't want that feeling there in Sacramento. People want
to feel good about the choices that they made. The
process to get a job is difficult. You're got to
go through multiple interviews with panels, with the president, background checks,
driving record checks, credit checks, and then all of a
(45:04):
sudden you're worried about having the job tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (45:06):
We can't have that.
Speaker 8 (45:07):
So I like what you said about the academic and
the infrastructure.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
Let's make sure we're going to have the professors that
we need. Let's make sure we're going to have the
location that we need. The students will come, like you said,
if you build it, they will come. They will come.
Speaker 8 (45:22):
In Sack State, we can't talk about this year, Right,
we got to talk about a bigger plan. And in
college you're talking about four year increments, usually two even numbers.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Usually it's two four six year increment.
Speaker 3 (45:34):
Right.
Speaker 2 (45:35):
They come in from another school, usually they transferred in.
Typically it's two years. They start from scratch.
Speaker 8 (45:39):
Typically it's four Most kids need a little bit more
than that because they kind of find.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
Themselves and take a bad class and take something.
Speaker 8 (45:46):
Else and change a major and all that good stuff.
But at the end of the day, you've got to
look at that that structure of keeping those students. And
a lot of kids go to certain schools because of
the sports programs, even if they're not an athlete themselves,
because positive energy runs off onto other people. So when
there's Big James, when your team's ranked, when your team's
(46:07):
on ESPN, when your team is in the rankings, when
the news is at your school, when high scouted recruits
are coming on campus, when your coach is being talked about,
all of these things make people excited and gives positive energy,
which is why certain kids go to certain schools and
they don't have to be an athlete, but by proxy,
I was at that school when so and so for instance,
(46:30):
I coached a kid and we traveled to Russia and
he went to school with Lebron James.
Speaker 2 (46:34):
So they was in the same Saint Vincent Saint Mary.
I think that's the name of the school. I tried
on his letterman's jacket.
Speaker 8 (46:40):
He talked about how Lebron didn't have to wear the
same dress code as everybody, and Lebron hadn't wasn't Lebron yet,
he hadn't graduated yet. They was just about to graduate.
But it was the energy, regardless of how he did
as a wrestler. His claimed the famous I went to
school with Lebron James. I'm likening that to people in
(47:02):
their experience at Sacramental State.
Speaker 1 (47:03):
Yeah, and I agree with you. August And something I
want to say. I met a gentleman by the name
of Ray Gallo and he's part of the Sacopall program
and as a graduate at Sacramon of State, I want
to put my imprint. I want to also, I have
a proposal that I'm making for a president Luke Wood
for employment. I'm not asking anyone for one Kenny keeping money,
(47:23):
keep it wallet at home. When you work with a
Big C team with the Big C Sports corporation, and
I mean that, and I want to reach out to
professional athletes because a lot of them, once they're not
playing sports within ten years, a lot of them are
having hard times. There's some athletes that maybe made a
hundred million and up, they're probably going to do okay.
But there are a lot of guys that made ten
to fifteen million dollars in their career. And I see
(47:44):
some of these guys. I saw. Not to drop anybody's name,
but I saw a famous basketball player from the region.
I was at a Sacramento A's game, and I was
always called them the Sacramento A's, not just the athletics.
He was having a hard time walking up the stairs.
No one said can I get your autographs? No one
said hey, hey, hey, that's a guy that played in
the NBA. He was having a hard time walking up
the stairs. I didn't say anything to him because I'm
(48:06):
not gonna act like a masiic offense. But at the
same time, I know that big seas corporations can offer
him a job that's embolding into me. I understand when
I went to when I went to school in college,
me and a couple of my black teammates could not
even rent an apartment. I'm talking about right around the
corner from Sakamona State. They told us, no, we'll have
(48:27):
no openings. Oh but we came out here because it
says vacancy on your sign. Oh yeah, we forgot to
change the sign. The next day, several white guys came
back and said they rented their places the same place
we were turned away from. So I'm not a sick
offense to saying, unlet's bring some pro athletes and suck
some money out of the community to give to major
white institution, and a lot of black kids are struggling.
(48:49):
I will not be a part of that garbage. I'm
telling everybody, if you want work, you call eight hundred
seven seven two eight six two four of US eight
hundred seven seven two eighty six twenty four. You can
go to work immediately with my team. And I mean
that for everybody in the United States and Canada. As
a sex State graduate, tell me if someone has more
than that to offer to make, I want to shake
(49:10):
cans with them. Your thoughts.
Speaker 2 (49:13):
Wow, that's phenomenal.
Speaker 8 (49:15):
It's sad that you had to see some of that
reality at that time, but hopefully let's just hope that
the Sacramento region has grown and does a little bit
better by their their.
Speaker 2 (49:24):
Student athletes and their students period.
Speaker 8 (49:27):
But I like the fact that you are creating a
grassroots program where people can work em better themselves.
Speaker 2 (49:35):
So kudos to you.
Speaker 1 (49:36):
Yes, And that's in the banking industry. Everybody needs a loan.
We help business owners get loans, and we do if
they planning and get living trust for a class. I
guess we have about two more minutes. I know that
you're big in the area and you've done a lot
for the area, and I know that there's a lot
of things and people that you know from the area.
Tell me if you can to any corporate sponsor why
(49:58):
they should look at this region to not only maybe
put money into a university, but also employment opportunities into
this reason your thought, well, not just black man looking
at sports, your thoughts.
Speaker 8 (50:11):
I think that the region is robust, and I think
that there's opportunities to grow.
Speaker 26 (50:15):
I think that it's the headshift, not not just somebody
having an idea, but it's the consistent guidange that's going
to help people Like you just mentioned about the person.
Speaker 20 (50:25):
That had made money and now maybe struggling financially after
those Hey days are over.
Speaker 27 (50:31):
I really would like to see more programs that expressed
money management and how to let it work for you
through out for a longer period of time, not just
in the now, not just the glid and glamour of
getting the new Mercedes, but how you can get get
a car that may maybe not a Mercedes and have
it for a long period of time.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
Or buy a house, or startup business you have a
commer with make these sports. That's what I want to
say to so many people that are looking. I want
to be a part of the sacophobe movement. I'm not
asking for any money. I'm creating employment and I want
to work with other men of color and women of color,
and all people for that matter, if you have opportunities
for work. Eight hundred seven seven two eight sixty two
(51:12):
four eight hundred seven seven two eight sixty two four.
There's no way that they wouldn't benefit from having someone
as a graduate of sax States that can come back
and offer someone and I say, give me gin to
give me in the last thirty seconds, August Wesley, I
know you find around.
Speaker 5 (51:25):
On that startship enterprise. Where can you find you.
Speaker 3 (51:28):
What are you doing?
Speaker 1 (51:29):
We're skind of going to beat you up next year. Thoughts, August,
your thoughts. That's funny.
Speaker 8 (51:35):
You know you got a great air signal because being
in the black Hole and the starship enterprises hard find me.
But what I can say is that we have our
athletes out doing big things, training hard.
Speaker 2 (51:48):
We got an athlete right now in California training.
Speaker 8 (51:51):
We got an athlete in Germany training, but they'll be
changing those locations as it's getting closer to the World Championships.
It's an exciting time, just hoping for our athletes to
be injury free and very focused.
Speaker 1 (52:03):
Yes, yes, that's so appreciated, August. I always appreciate talking
to you. It just goes by too fast. And that's
that's why I like broadcasting from the black Oh there's
no time for that.
Speaker 5 (52:13):
One day.
Speaker 1 (52:14):
I have my own time.
Speaker 5 (52:16):
That's the real It's called BEP time, Okay, not CEB times.
Speaker 1 (52:19):
But I do want to say when it comes to opportunity,
I want to I want to lock hands with you
on the airwaves. There's some things I'm waiting for to happen.
There's no reason that we cannot be the vanguards of
change and opportunity and hope, not just for African Americans
but for all people. But no more leaving black people
behind and just going after a kids and play football,
(52:40):
basketball and baseball. Those days are over, and I don't
want to see sex State do that. I know a
lot of schools in the SEC they've done that. Kids
are not graduating. There's no black head coaches in the SEC,
but one one, just one. I think there's two in
the Big ten. So I don't want to hear this
talk about they have one hundred thousand seats and they
have one hundred thousand people watching games.
Speaker 5 (52:59):
They don't get outs of black people. So why you
had there your thoughts?
Speaker 2 (53:03):
I can comment on that a little bit.
Speaker 8 (53:05):
First of all, when I was coaching at Division two
school Wheeling University, I was one of only seven colored
coaches period between Division one and Division two. So it
was really an eye opener to have people call me
upset in a good way, to people to call me
(53:26):
and really express their excitement to have a man of
color at the headship of a program.
Speaker 2 (53:32):
When I was a head coach at Sacramento.
Speaker 8 (53:34):
State, it was great to be there and to be
able to talk to kids and give them an opportunity
to wrestle at the next level, because you just didn't.
Speaker 2 (53:44):
See that with men of colors. Here at college had
Ken Warry who was there, and.
Speaker 8 (53:49):
Now you have Don Martinez who is the head coach,
and they've been coaches there and I've coached there with them.
We've won state championships and they kept that going on
as I moved on. But at the end of the day,
you don't see a lot of.
Speaker 2 (54:00):
Men of color head coaching.
Speaker 8 (54:04):
In college like that, and that's just really a beautiful
thing because you would ideally think that someone is going
to take care of your son that looks like your son.
Speaker 2 (54:13):
That said, I've recruited everybody. It didn't matter to me.
Speaker 8 (54:17):
If you can get into the school academically, we're going
to get the work out of you and we're going
to push you hard and keep you academically eligible. But
at the end of the day, it really turns into
the administration of that school who wants to buy in
to a coach's philosophy in the direction he wants to
go and don't put his color up front, but really
put his resume up front. And that Sex state, we
(54:39):
had a lot of success. We won two state championships
while I was there. I was there four years. I
was coaching the Year twice, we were Team of the
Year once, and we had an Athlete of the Year.
Speaker 2 (54:48):
So in that small amount of time.
Speaker 8 (54:50):
We were very successful when maybe the football and basketball
programs were not successful.
Speaker 2 (54:54):
So we were given kids that were going to elk
Row or coming from another.
Speaker 8 (54:59):
Junior Santa Anna or different school, Chapo Merch're at Delta.
You're right, all these schools in our area an opportunity
to come and wrestle at the four year level, and
I took pride in that.
Speaker 1 (55:13):
Yeah, well, August, I can say what I love about
you as area that as you are, even though you're
fire around on the USS starts at the enterprise, if
you're a college and you're not hiring black men and women,
I don't want black kids going to your school. I
just I'm gonna I'm going to fight against it. I
refuse to sit there and go, yeah, let's go team
and you can't get a freaking job. Those days are
(55:35):
embarrassing and they're over. I would not let any organization
that I'm a part of be about that. I'm multi culture,
but I'm pro black. It doesn't mean anti anybody, but
there's so many times growing up that were anti me.
I'm in tell me, let me push.
Speaker 2 (55:49):
Back on you.
Speaker 8 (55:50):
I'm multicultural as well, but I'm also inclusive. And you
can't be an inclusive institution that's accepting federal money if
you're not willing to give all people, people of color
or know an opportunity. And it just seems like too
many times people of color don't get second and third opportunities.
(56:11):
It just seems like they're watching a little bit more
closer sometimes. And I would like to think after you
went through your rigorous process to bring in a coach,
that you would give him the same amount of latitude
and wrote to grow and learn as a head coach,
because there's a lot going on more than just coaching.
Not only are you being an uncle or a step dad,
(56:33):
or helping their parents understand what's going on in college,
or helping that student athlete navigate the college life, which
is very challenging to all kids getting out of their
house at eighteen, suddenly having responsibilities and thinking that they're
grown and that they're assuming some financial debt. Would a
subsidized or unsubsidized loan, not to mention if the more
(56:55):
classes you don't pass, you then add time on to
your graduation timeline. So it's a bigger picture that's there
that a coach is responsible for, not just practice, not
just shelling out Nike or Adidas gear, but also making
sure kids go to study sessions, kids don't do something
on social media that's going to embarrass themselves, the institution,
or the coach. So Charlton, it's really layered when you
(57:18):
think about what it takes to be a head coach,
and once you get to all of those processes and
then you get that job to be ushered out the
door because your team isn't producing in year one or
ask to step down or take less money like they
did John Harball at Michigan.
Speaker 2 (57:33):
Like, if they ask you to do that because you're.
Speaker 8 (57:35):
Not being as successful, that's not fair because it takes
some time to build culture, it takes some time to build.
Speaker 2 (57:40):
Consistency, it takes some time to.
Speaker 8 (57:42):
Get buy in from the alumni and boosters who wasn't
in your interview process for the most part.
Speaker 2 (57:48):
So it's really a deeper level than just being a coach.
Speaker 8 (57:52):
And I'm not saying that because you don't know because
you're a former college athlete and pro athletes, so I
know you know.
Speaker 2 (57:58):
But I'm just speaking to our life listeners that just
think all coaches grow on trees. But that's really far,
far and away not accurate.
Speaker 8 (58:06):
You have so many coaches that don't get a second
opportunity as they're learning their craft. From a head coach perspective,
you also have budget and finance you're got to worry
about because you're allotted certain amount.
Speaker 2 (58:15):
Of money that you can use on the student athletes.
Speaker 8 (58:18):
You got trips, You've got planning, you've got a peril,
you got food money. There's so many things that go
into it, and then you have to fundraise.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
Food.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
You got to eat too, and tell us, man, you
grew up big time off top rubbin and tees. Baby,
that was my day night. But I did what I say.
I got talked to forever, but but cut up on
a heart clause.
Speaker 8 (58:43):
I want to say, oh, come on, Trompton, you know
you get me going, and then you're talking about a
heart park.
Speaker 2 (58:49):
Then you're gonna talk about the big Sea Burger and
I'm hungry. So all I'm saying is that it takes
a lot. It takes a lot to be a.
Speaker 8 (58:57):
Coach, and I really would like the platform to be
leveled so all coaches can get in there, because there's
a lot of high school coaches that look very different
than the college coaches. But then you have a lot
of professional coaches and coordinators that don't look like a
whole lot of the college coaches.
Speaker 2 (59:13):
So to me, there's a drop off.
Speaker 8 (59:15):
You have a lot of men of color that are
coordinating positions, not head coaches, are not owners, but coordinators,
right because they've played the game.
Speaker 2 (59:23):
And they've done the game. But yet you don't have
them at the college level. So excuse me.
Speaker 8 (59:28):
If you can be an offensive or defensive coordinator, if
you can be a position coach as a professional, but
you're not good enough to.
Speaker 2 (59:36):
Be a head college coach, am I missing something?
Speaker 8 (59:39):
So you do have a different bureaucracy going on when
you're looking at some of these schools that are in
some of these areas SEC let's just say.
Speaker 2 (59:47):
Where that is.
Speaker 8 (59:48):
We're talking about a lot of former slave areas, a
lot of Jim Crow areas that are profiting, that are
profiting off of the backs of these young black men
that go on and they become professionals. But yet while
they're there are some of those opportunities, the same people
wouldn't talk to them if.
Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
They didn't have that uniform on. And that's a sad
that's a sad state of affairs.
Speaker 28 (01:00:12):
And you know that some states have I can tell
you that students in Clemson pushed back about some of
the buildings Buchanans and some of these other names that
was on those buildings that weren't going to get changed
and said they always felt some kind of way when
they was going to do their academic work in those
buildings because they knew the history of that region.
Speaker 2 (01:00:32):
So I'm just saying that it is there. But when
you take an athletic scholarship, that is a.
Speaker 8 (01:00:36):
Business decision that is going to help you and your family,
because there's many kids that are the first time going
to college and their family and that just sets up
their children.
Speaker 2 (01:00:47):
So I understand, you got to do what you got
to do. But from a.
Speaker 29 (01:00:49):
Business perspective, also, it's hard to just shut up and
dance sometimes, Charleston, And it's hard to get passed off
on jobs that you know that you're capable of, passed
up on jobs that I knew I went back and
looked at who they hired after I got didn't get
the job, and I'm like, wait a minute, this guy
was a good high school coach.
Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
I've now coached at multiple institutions and have had a
certain level of success there, so it is tough. But
at the end of the day, I would just hope that.
Speaker 8 (01:01:20):
They saw something in that man that they didn't seeing me,
and he was best for the program.
Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
But I can't help to look at reality, so.
Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
You know the true you're too smart to but ten
like everything's even and not even as a blotty. And
I gotta say it in enclosing that we're on iHeart rated,
were on thirty two platform as a black man, I
guarantee you there's no other program today talking about the
lack of black coaches as they're praising one hundred thousand
fans in the stadium and ninety percent black kids and
hardly any black coaches in the SEC are the Big
(01:01:48):
ten and they celebrate that garbage. That's why our products
like State we got to think bigger. And that's my
story of taking with it. I'm gonna let's go horn it.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
Yes that thing with my first head college coature position.
Speaker 8 (01:02:01):
I get a lot of love and respect and admiration
from my time at Sacramento State.
Speaker 1 (01:02:06):
Let's go horn it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
Let's do a hornship bring, let's go horn it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Let's go horn it. But they can mix it off.
I'll be back into the moment from the black hole.
Greatness isn't something that happens overnight. Please, it takes years
(01:02:33):
of hard work, training, setbacks, and determination.
Speaker 7 (01:02:40):
To teach me one of the greatest of all time.
Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
The work you do in the darkness is what prepares
you for the spot fight.
Speaker 30 (01:03:00):
It's fine, it's free history. Please lucome you were seatbelts,
ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
The moment is a pos.
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
Yes it was bank check me out.
Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
Steal the best tired. It's good written all over them,
Steal the big bang.
Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
Steal to him than because I'm not way too much change.
Speaker 7 (01:04:01):
And even when I was close to the feet.
Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
Came across it.
Speaker 11 (01:04:18):
For seventy years, we've known that anything is possible the
moment we enter our happy place. As long as elephants
still fly.
Speaker 2 (01:04:39):
Hey, the bubbles carry your woods across the.
Speaker 11 (01:04:41):
Last and the hero's symbol.
Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
This is how memories are made.
Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
As long as the.
Speaker 24 (01:04:52):
Night shines bright with joy.
Speaker 2 (01:04:58):
And hungs warm our heart.
Speaker 24 (01:05:04):
So small area, as long as we have for each other,
we have everything that makes this place.
Speaker 2 (01:05:23):
The happiest.
Speaker 10 (01:05:26):
Great thanks, Oh well, I'm a gonna a bet.
Speaker 11 (01:05:40):
Join us for the seventieth celebration that the Happiest place
on Earth.
Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
In twenty twenty five.
Speaker 6 (01:05:48):
One fifty is a part of four series The Best
So in Trucklin. One fifty has max available to tell
the capacity of thirteen thousand, five hundred pounds and the
max avaible to pay a lot capacity of two thousand,
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Pro power on board. Let you power the.
Speaker 6 (01:06:01):
Twos you need and hip We're done almost anywhere with
the tailgate work service Highway. Take your hands off the
real Ford Blue Chris technology and keep your eyes on
the road with a head up. The splay tough. This
s mark can only be called F one fifteen.
Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
All right, I'm back when that Big Z pause off.
Unknown as the Big Ze Time album. You can follow
The Big Sea Sports twenty four hours a day, seven
days a week from thirty two podcasting platform Rondo Bah the.
Speaker 7 (01:06:30):
Black Hole till the Water.
Speaker 1 (01:06:33):
I want to say, what a great day when big
s is ports, where the new a freak in the
name that happened in the world that big sports. What
a great day has a great August leslie coming from
the starship and applies on this pensions far. It's a
crazy new world and you be got see got new
lass and new civilizations, and the boy go where no
man has gone been far. I want to say the
(01:06:55):
great August West day, mon this doctor the prize. What
a great day with the bugsis more? As I tell you,
I'm all upon the movement for the the back toward
back club, whatever it is that creates equal opportunity for
all people. That's my story and I'm taken with it.
But I'm creating job with the big Cteam. I have
(01:07:17):
a guy to take preserved and sat for Wealth, Resource
Development and fault and eque in conjunction with the law
Office of Attorneys, Packed the bed and rayel the crews
the missing link long term care solutions by the Cook
over three decades of experience, top and seniors get that
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Your family is about can't avoid this band down for
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Speaker 5 (01:07:56):
That's my story and I have taken with it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
We special a lot to navigate, maximize long term care
and benefits, protection of your assets without those bend down,
all paperwork and communication with all the government agencies are.
Speaker 5 (01:08:11):
Handled last daft of an titam.
Speaker 1 (01:08:13):
As specialists, we have ongoing consulting to proply updates as
necessary by any means necessary, by any means necessary, benefits, covery,
skilled nursing facilities, Let's give it to medication, medical equipment
costs and more. But not only that. You need asset protection,
protection of your assets, including your home, thereby allowing you
(01:08:35):
to leave a legacy for your family, avoiding the nightmare
of debt right whether the government's estate recovery program called probate.
I had a phone call for the lawyers as the
ring brings, Hey this PC YBC. What's up? He said,
this is get the new law firm. I said, get
the Dole law firm. He said, yeah, some of that
for people's access. He said, would you believe that seven
(01:08:56):
out of ten Americans refuse to have a will or
a trust? I said, oh, man, you must be out
of that walking mind. He says, seriously, because Bunk was
a punking even was Fuck had a trust. Seven out
of ten Americans that they believe in going on planes,
trains and automobiles. They believe in in the Gucci watch
us real Nicks watches, diamonds and coffs, new cars, new
(01:09:20):
tennis shoes, new vacations. But they've excuse to have a trust.
If you don't have a trust at the end of life,
you know, appropriate takes up to forty percent of girth teath.
It could take up the three years. You know, you
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seven two eighty six twenty four and tell them Big
(01:09:43):
Ce sent you.
Speaker 7 (01:09:43):
They give me some praise, because a praise it's.
Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
A teple team to wat. I gotta tell you a
one time processing b FIRSTSS monthly is here his premius
for the rest of your life. When I was at
sax Stone, I ran the immediate department under Bill Seemster,
another the intelligend black man. I was the only black
man in the immediate class of about twenty five people.
(01:10:08):
I was the only one that did not get a
job after graduating with honors in my class, the only one,
the only one to the new sheriff for town. He
his name is Big C. I got to tell your
sex dam but I want to help create job economic
addition to programs for sex date. I can offer jobs.
(01:10:28):
It's stayed planning, insurance and loans. Not many people can
do that. They're gonna come to you asking for money.
I'm trying to give you the money.
Speaker 5 (01:10:36):
I want to show you the money, like what den
Joel said in the movie He Got Game.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
He said, show me the money. That was then got Game,
Big Seed?
Speaker 7 (01:10:46):
That was That was Jon McGuire in Tom Cruz.
Speaker 5 (01:10:50):
Okay, but they said the same thing.
Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
You know, Tom Hanks with the sax Da brand, Kougler
with the sax Day, Big Seed with the sax Date.
Speaker 7 (01:10:58):
You gotta get that some.
Speaker 1 (01:10:59):
Praise, give it praise, praise, praise. And I'm the only
one coming back to offer jobs, the only one now.
They can join me. But I'm the only one right
now do you have a one time processing b versus
monthly insurance premials for the rest of your life?
Speaker 7 (01:11:14):
You gotta give that some praise, I said, give it
a praise, praise, praise.
Speaker 5 (01:11:18):
What you get with the RDC team, you get.
Speaker 1 (01:11:21):
Asset protection, protection insurance covers are acquired by a law general,
reliability workers, a compensation lawyer specializing in living trust, medicaid
and medical planning for long term care, avoid probate, life
insurance is vetterfics, benefits aid, and a tennis What about
the sex that sis percent? Well, I'm glad you ask,
because we also offer protection for your fixed that sets
(01:11:44):
your bank account, your checking account, your savings account, your
money market account, certificates of deposit, life insurance with casting values.
You're fixed in their communities.
Speaker 5 (01:11:53):
What about the fable as sex percent?
Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
Does a trust protect that bill? I got? You asked
a trust protection your wills? You'll mollified money, your age,
you're full one K your other investments. For example of
great capital games, let's say you.
Speaker 7 (01:12:08):
Buy a house for one hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:12:12):
And one year later that house appreciates to one million dollars.
That's a nine hundred thousand dollars capital game. You avoid
that with the trust. Today, I've just told a real
estate partner I have a real estate lifting coming up
at the end of this month in Silicon Valley. The
listing price sixteen million dollars. You get that with the
(01:12:34):
Big CE team. I also share listing with other other clients.
I do the marketing for a real estate purpose all
over California. Sixteen million dollars is a pretty nice commision
if that makes sense to be your eight hundred and
seven seven two eight sixty two four. That's eight hundred
seven seven two eighty six twenty four, and just tell
them that that Big Cie cension from the black hole were.
Speaker 7 (01:12:54):
Even lifting real estate in the black hole. But you
don't have the toad.
Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
You're not getting in.
Speaker 5 (01:13:00):
You not getting it if you don't have the code
for the black hole.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
It's at they says, Yet, over three decades of experienced
attention business owners. Attention business owners, you gotta find out
your other options to detect. But your insurance does not
cover eight hundred and seven seventy two A sixty four.
That's eight hundred seven seven two eighty six twenty four.
Until them BIXI sent you x two.
Speaker 5 (01:13:24):
You know a lot of people say I got a friend,
can do a trust for seven years.
Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
Why would I trust the artists and team. Well, I'm
glad you asked, because listen up to k O'Neil. I'm
asking the partner with you in helping people go to work.
We have endorsements because facts tell and story sell. We
have endorsements. The late James Comeaz Google him. He advised
(01:13:50):
four California governors and let the change in California nursing homes.
He was also the CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. But not only that, he served on Golden
Ones and Board of the Records for twenty one years.
He told Ray, he said, young man, if you just
show me how to trick off these long term care
(01:14:12):
toonaments out of a dorustia, he showed him. He endorsed them.
He endorsed the RDC team. But not only that, we
have to lead. Robert Carlson Google him. He was the
top legal counsel of cal Currs. You know, cal curR
is one of the world fourth Bard's economy, behind the
(01:14:32):
United States, China, in England. California's number four in the
world calpurr is one of the largest imports in California.
He endorsed the RDAC team. But not only that.
Speaker 5 (01:14:50):
We have President Amos Brown n for the NAACP President
se Francis the chapter.
Speaker 7 (01:15:00):
He's a pastor.
Speaker 12 (01:15:01):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
He gave the amnedation for rights to President Kamala Harris
at the DNC in Chicago. He also had lunch with
Doctor Martin and the King Juja. They were arrested for
trying to have lunch at a white's only restaurant in
the Land of the Free, in the Home of the Brave.
You know. He came on about two months before he
(01:15:22):
gave the ammendation for Vice President Topola Harris. He was
on Big C Sports. He's in Big C you need
asset protection. You gotta protect your assets, I said, I do,
he said, okay. Kamus Brown came out in Big S
Sports and talked about asset protection in the trouble for
civil rights and.
Speaker 7 (01:15:41):
Reparations now reparations whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
I'm mean on the sports show, talking reparations because God
sent me here to do it.
Speaker 5 (01:15:51):
A lot of guys they ain't got the guts. They
ain't got the guts.
Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
I think he got the guts.
Speaker 12 (01:15:57):
Do you.
Speaker 1 (01:16:00):
Reparations that deserves for the center of the table slavery
who've been into the dustacks the Senate of the Holocaust
got preperations. Japan Americans for the German camp got preparations.
Native Americans have their reservations. That he goes Gampalon. Next
up the centers of tatl stavery.
Speaker 5 (01:16:18):
And that's the gods. That's God's eyes, he ays.
Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
A guy.
Speaker 5 (01:16:24):
Whether than amis Brown an acre.
Speaker 1 (01:16:30):
He endorses the r DC team. We have Attorney George
jonest class that he's in German the California Black Chamber
of Commerce also caliborn your Black Chamber of Commerce foundation,
and he endorses the r DC team. But not only that,
we have attornies. Guy, give it. Oh, he's one of
the topest team.
Speaker 5 (01:16:46):
Planets in all of California until he endorses.
Speaker 10 (01:16:50):
The RDC team.
Speaker 1 (01:16:52):
But not only that, we have tap the Leon Woods.
Know only how over twenty five years he works with
media at the top lobbies of the state Capitol of California.
He endorses the RDC team, but not only that. Yeah,
missus Sheel Brown now she's the chair of the California
(01:17:14):
Department of Beijing. You can't get it bigger endorsement than that.
Not only does he endorse the RDC team. She did
a trust with Ray. So whoever you're going to to
get your trust done, ask them ask if whoever did
their trust was got the endorsement of someone who served
four governors in their state. The Artist team does ask
(01:17:37):
him if they have the endorsement at that stage Department
of Beijing, the Artist Team does put it in writing.
But not only that, we have Al dru that he's
the founder of American Veteran Benefits. They get sure how
the vetterments get their benefits. He endorses the RDC team.
(01:17:57):
But not only that, Radio drews that he's the president
or Resource Development Consulting. He been doing the thing over
thirty five years with the highest endorsements in the THEA
in California and by the government's Handleburg.
Speaker 5 (01:18:14):
And he endorses the RDAC team. But not only they
have we have double who that she said, we have
committee for the National Black Call State Project.
Speaker 1 (01:18:21):
She bothered chas with C Jack and Corl listen for
just invo of California making sure the sinners.
Speaker 5 (01:18:26):
Are tell us state to get out reparations.
Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
But not only that She's a business development consultant, but
the RDAs team in best mind business funding. She has
a own economics to runner talk so called let's eat
you can google it on excess second round of dot
org It can't you be unaty point five by them?
And I probably do that. And she endorses the RDC team,
But not only they.
Speaker 2 (01:18:48):
Have we have big C.
Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Can't you? They say I'm big C when they have
my cake? And I'm the only four shoe talking reparations
now reparations.
Speaker 7 (01:18:59):
Forever in the universe, the only one.
Speaker 1 (01:19:04):
Like Moses, God to move us go down in the
detail and tell Pharaoh to let my people go. It's
exit as ten ten and and Moses said that God, well,
who do I tell? Don't sit me? And God said,
tell him, I am sent you. I am coming to
tell you we need reparations and be deserving me. God
took me to take you. And I'm the coach chef
(01:19:27):
of the National the Black Quality Project. I'm a business
development assaulted with the artists he team, and that's not
business funny. I volunteer for the Sea Jack the cool
listen for Justin and a telephone making sure they sit
doesn't challenge baby need our reparations. And I'm gonna make
sure that you understand it too, because I speak about
it every day for ten years. Give ten years of praise, you,
(01:19:48):
Jordan Payne, Sunshine and Ring, given ten years of praise.
That's important, and Ruman hasn't. I'm the onlyest person Tucker's
sports careers, jobs, employment, insurance, loans and asset protection.
Speaker 7 (01:20:06):
From the universe. You gotta get that some praise.
Speaker 1 (01:20:09):
Do you one that broadcasts lives from the black hole?
You gotta get the ball and make seed get the whole.
Speaker 5 (01:20:16):
Well, that's five story and I sick it with it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:19):
You got to have my whole, the whole way of
saying things I love coming to your lives from the
World Games on the continit of Amasaca. I gotta tell
you it's a fact. Do you have one hundred thousands
wrong from the contit of Africa for the hundred met
to dash and lay run Olympic chapin?
Speaker 7 (01:20:40):
Jesse? Oh yeh, Jesse, Oh, it's some praise.
Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
You wanna praise, praise, praise and lay number two Olympic
chapin You saying Brokiff, you Sam Bol some praise, you
will praise, praise praise and lay them increase. Olympic chapin,
how Lewis, give Carlewis some praise, he won, praise, praise,
(01:21:03):
praise and lame. Number four Olympic chappin, No Noles, give
nord lawd some praise, Give won, praise, praise, praise. Name
Number five road chapin, Dude, see yeah, pig, see some praise,
he won, praise, praise, praise and lead. Number six we
(01:21:25):
have Jesus Christ. Give Jesus Christ some praise, Give Christ praise.
Speaker 7 (01:21:30):
Praise, praise.
Speaker 5 (01:21:31):
Then catch yourself, Dix.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
You cut it with a knife, one hundred thousand drunk
from the godin of the afacar runners to your mark.
I can't wait to see this. Reas get sick to
oli bucks fast as Lewis, oh Nles they see Jesus Christ.
Speaker 7 (01:21:52):
As Oh Jesus Christ, Lewis, they say, Jesus Christ.
Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
They brought the finish.
Speaker 7 (01:21:56):
Line at a record drop of the point nine nine.
That's the fastest time running in the history of the
black hole.
Speaker 1 (01:22:05):
If you don't like that, you know, like behind of
me the dash, well, that's spot story and I'm thinking
with it.
Speaker 7 (01:22:10):
You can't get lost of praise Jesse owns you, Saint
both Carl Lewis that allows Big C.
Speaker 5 (01:22:16):
In Jesus Christ, they all had a neck and neck tie.
Speaker 1 (01:22:20):
So some people say Jesus won, Jesus always rand not
Jesus always wins.
Speaker 5 (01:22:25):
I bet I tell you, if you're looking for work,
you don't have to bring me any money.
Speaker 1 (01:22:30):
We got unsecured working capital, E business loans, alternative company,
best line business funding. Have needed to qualify four months
big statements. You need five thousand dollars a mindle a
month de revenue to your business checking account. You gotta
have at least six months in business best line business funding.
(01:22:51):
We specialize in unsecure working capital up to five million dollars,
no collateral, no a praiso, no TAXI turn of w two.
It's revenue based funding. We have heard the payoff discounts
and we remport your payment to get done. And Bras
Street and we can fund.
Speaker 7 (01:23:07):
Him one day.
Speaker 1 (01:23:08):
You gotta give that some praise. Yet they say some
praise because a praise is a troubled in the ways
and I don't want to waste no praises. That's my threat.
That's what's different about Big C. I'm offering work and
pushing for reparations through good people. You know few people.
That's my thor I'm digging with it all. I gotta
tell you on every Basic sports podcast, I'm say I'm
(01:23:29):
it's my beautiful family negative by my mother's side, I
great grandparents, Mama and Pump.
Speaker 5 (01:23:33):
They've been beautiful, loving time.
Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
People always think it's You're lots of love the family
and that of food in the valley. I love them
with all my mind, body and soul. My grandparents' money
and as the guy they were sears. They can off
the time, look at a person and tell you a
lot about their past, dead, present, in their future. They
still help me to this day. I love them with
all my mind, body and soul. Then I can always
entertain them. My mama, the more beautiful mama that God
(01:23:58):
ever maid with his own hands, get the history cother
the universe, go to the history program, a food program,
and also coached an all boys Little league baseball team
to the championship. O the Universe always said God, He said,
for all the land that thou seeest, will I give
you and last sea forever? And I love your guy
(01:24:21):
and I trusted the guy, My dear mama the best mama,
the best person ever knowing in my life that all
my my body and soul. On my father's side, my grandparents,
Albert and I Burda Curry, they were pastors. They had
three churches. They're on two gas stations. They also owned
forty eight as the land. I was eight years old,
(01:24:42):
walk up through the hallway in open about till nick
like a knight. I told somebody had touched me in
my forehead. She said, what are you doing, young man?
Speaker 5 (01:24:49):
Against the cookies?
Speaker 7 (01:24:50):
I said, well, what are you doing?
Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Brother?
Speaker 7 (01:24:53):
Is tick like a knight?
Speaker 1 (01:24:54):
You never go to bed at eight thirty?
Speaker 5 (01:24:56):
Said what are you doing?
Speaker 3 (01:24:57):
Man?
Speaker 5 (01:24:57):
Going against the cookies?
Speaker 1 (01:24:59):
I said, cook is a baby.
Speaker 7 (01:25:00):
After what I'm doing, I'm a I'm gonna get my reparations.
Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
And you know those beautiful and telling their grandmothers, they've
been to a whole lot for us, it's been a
long wait. She said, there's something about your voice. I
love him you speak, and that makes the sports is
all over, the UNIFOR is broadcasting lives from the black hole.
Speaker 5 (01:25:18):
Love them with all about my body and soul.
Speaker 1 (01:25:20):
And then my beautiful father formed the United States Air
Force to fight applied the Chief p Kanick, always making
sure that planes come fight high so we get all
say safe fornight, always saying, son, develop your mind to
the highest extent. My dad the first one. So tell
me about the SR seventy one black birdies as son,
that play was so fast they get fled from.
Speaker 5 (01:25:40):
Los Angeles to Washington, DC and one hour.
Speaker 1 (01:25:43):
And four minutes. That play was fast like lightning. That
players go fast. And now I've been trying museums. My
dad always said, go forward, son. I love my dad
with all my body and soul. And to my beautiful
brother Todd, I'm back to voest. Always talking sports of
product chics times was like thunder and lightly matal with me.
(01:26:04):
If a Racis leader always said go forward, that I
love it with all my heart, my body and soul.
And then my beautiful Daddy, the beautiful darter that God
ever made with his own hands in the history of
the universe. Thylas graduate very smart. Garyan dyed two degrees
(01:26:24):
with honors in freely have years from a major university,
a major university. Graduated Similton Lade. Daisy, you can be
anything you want to be, Daisy setup the very first
interview for Maysy Sports that stayed the media. It became
the first time of the history of the United States
of America that NFL Monther that football thought of broadcast
(01:26:45):
reliable on the wall Free Business Network. It had never
happened before until two Beautiful and tell the black men
of the crew. Daisy made that happen. Daisy, always trust God,
the brother of Jesus. Always lead on God. I pray
Isaiah fifty four to seventeen. I pray that no them
to get to a crock pot. These is a great
athlete in high school. She scored six goals in the
soccer game. It was Daisy with the dribble, Daisy with the.
Speaker 7 (01:27:08):
Kick days even the goal, go go, go go, and
the team won.
Speaker 1 (01:27:16):
Of the games. You can always win in life. Always
trust God, always lit on God, the blood of Jesus.
I love it all, my my body and soul. And
then my beautiful hasbles to unknock him. They must have
some son that God ever me with his own hands
into history hell the universe.
Speaker 5 (01:27:34):
Collins graduated very smart. Gabriel Dyke a good man.
Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
Macolm help me save trees. You can always do anything
you want to do. The Blood of Jesus. Always pray
Isaiah fifty four and seventeen. I pray that no forming
to give me to a crossbar. He helped me save trees.
I used to always get the newspapers. You know how
a lot of guys do to look up that of
players in and teams with Basi sports. One thing I
go said, Dad, whyt' me just google it in a
(01:27:59):
light of enough. I think lucone ever since and now
my shirt that's all all over the universe.
Speaker 5 (01:28:06):
Look at black Hole lock On. One day hitting up
the high school, he said he was about sixteen years old.
Speaker 1 (01:28:11):
He's in Dad.
Speaker 5 (01:28:12):
I said, yes, son. He said, you want to see
Big Sea Sports on the TV.
Speaker 1 (01:28:14):
I said sure. He said, figure out the remote. Aiming
at the TV. They say playing Big C Sports. He said,
your show come up. That's before it was even on
the air. And about two months later you can find
this stream in Xfinity, Comcast TV, Apple TV, Vocal TV,
Amazon Fire TV, now at the Zone TV, CD three
TV coming soon to delimit of TV. He's perking into existence. Fucka.
(01:28:37):
You could always touch God, always lead on God the
blood of Jesus. I pray Isaiah fifty four to seventeen.
That know what the fucker gets Top five. I love
it with all my body and soul. And then Big
C with all that was the Nomas over the years,
like my great grand parents coming out of that bar
and where their church buddies always saying, you gotta believe,
(01:28:57):
you gotta believe, you gotta believe. Say let's get ready
to rumble. I love saying welcome to the show. It's phenominated.
Pix supports a podcast scy have those scripts. I have
no dream other puntors.
Speaker 7 (01:29:10):
I have no producer in my ears.
Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
All I have was this gland in the brain called
the predeal gland. He ain't just called it the dirt eye.
They said, that's how you taught to God. And that's
why I skims a out because God, you know.
Speaker 7 (01:29:23):
My dreams, you know my prayers, and I give you
the praise the butter of Jesus.
Speaker 1 (01:29:28):
I pray that.
Speaker 5 (01:29:29):
No from Nigga Swim and Closs B.
Speaker 7 (01:29:31):
You said, for all the land that thou seeest when
I give you and my Sexama. Nobody praises God on
his person like BIGX Sports. You gotta get that some praise.
Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
That's pot story. I'm ticket with it. I always play
I'm the best fighter they ever wong the planet. Back
in the day, there's a man known by the name
of Drewboudine. Brown is knowing this. Muhammad al leaves right
hand man. He would always tell our lead. He said,
you flow like a butterfly, and you sping like a bee. Rumble,
young man, rumble. He said, well all you got to use,
(01:30:04):
how can you lose? Ally said, I'm sold pretty and
I can't possibly be beaten. And every time I listened
to the big seat sports, I want to.
Speaker 7 (01:30:10):
Shout reparations now, reparations forever.
Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
And then I told like a butterfly, and I seen
like a beat. There was no fight a greater.
Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
Than Muhammad a lead. And you know that I always
think I'm to the inimital about the Martin Lilligan Jr.
In America's sixteenth President Abram Nick doctor King said the
arm of the.
Speaker 7 (01:30:31):
More universe is long, but it bears towards.
Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
Justice, and President Abraham Lincoln was the only American president
with the decency the past reparations in God's signs. If
they talk to Converce today, they say, you want to
pass that big beautiful bill, how about past reparations.
Speaker 7 (01:30:50):
Now, the just act reparations whatever. Say it again. They've
been saying past reparations.
Speaker 1 (01:30:56):
Now the just acts, past reparations forever, say it again,
maybe say it fast references. Now it's just that fat reparences.
Whatever I beg you, I appreciate you, can.
Speaker 7 (01:31:12):
I hope that you have your super fact that today
praise God.
Speaker 1 (01:31:38):
Cornelius, age eight.
Speaker 6 (01:31:40):
A discovery bring strangers together, saying those names and humanized
it for me.
Speaker 14 (01:31:47):
Every time I say I'm the fifth generation of Zeke Quarterman,
an enslaved man.
Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
Part of me dies on.
Speaker 16 (01:31:55):
The journey across the years field article number fifteen forty
acres on mule and two hundred dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:32:02):
Abraham Lincoln is assassinated. The enslaved got nothing.
Speaker 8 (01:32:05):
Congress passes the Homesteady social Security, the gi build the Faha.
Speaker 5 (01:32:10):
When we come to Washington, we are coming to get
our check.
Speaker 2 (01:32:16):
Oh my love looks all.
Speaker 25 (01:32:20):
Connected by a common cause.
Speaker 2 (01:32:21):
Harm happens locally, so re pair has to happen locally.
Speaker 6 (01:32:25):
Do the work.
Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
Look at your own history. What was your family's role
seeking justice and peace?
Speaker 10 (01:32:33):
The Cost of.
Speaker 25 (01:32:34):
Inheritance a special edition of America reframed looking for a unique.
Speaker 13 (01:32:39):
Point of view on pro sports game analysis. The Dude
in a Big Z Sports podcast on iHeartRadio, Get Real
Sports Talk Worldwide. Mister Live episode replay it going to
May on the iHeartRadio app. Join Big c for an
NFL plays, a long time award winning radio broadcaster covering
low sports including NFL, NBA, email, UFC, n Cuba, USL,
(01:33:03):
and move to their live or on demand on iHeart
Radio podcast Today