Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
New Mexico to Louisiana. New York Attorney General Letitia James
is leading a coalition of nineteen other attorneys general ensuing
to block the Trump administration from dismantling the US Department
of Health and Human Services.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
And since taking office, this administration has fired scientists, close labs,
shuttered life saving programs without rhyme reason or any legal authority.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
She called the mass firings illegal, dangerous, and cruel. A
firefighter paramedics says she heard Karen Reid say I hit
him the night John O'Keeffe was found dead. Lisa Taylor
has more.
Speaker 3 (00:39):
There was a woman next to us who told her
to calm down, stop talking, Calm down your hysterical so
she repeated, I hit him.
Speaker 4 (00:48):
In her murder retrial, Read is accused of killing her
Boston cop boyfriend O'Keeffe by hitting him with a car
after a night of drinking in twenty twenty two. On Monday,
Katie McLoughlin testified she heard Reid say I hit him
three times times. The defense pointed out a nearby officer
didn't hear it, and claim McLaughlin had a close relationship
with a family that owned the home in which O'Keefe
(01:08):
was found in front of Read's defense team claims she's
the victim of a cover up. I'mly Steeler.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Climate change is causing wildfires to be deadlier and costlier.
You're listening to the latest from NBC News Radio.
Speaker 5 (01:23):
Okay, C A A.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
Would you like to know the new value of your
home in today's market or what it would sell for
Get a simple text message with your home's value by
texting your address to eight five five six hundred six thousand.
Get no phone call, just a text. Jim Ptrell has
the buyer's text your address to eight five five six
hundred six thousand right now.
Speaker 6 (01:43):
Find a great selection of new Toyota, Tundra and Tacoma
trucks at Toyota Carlsbad say with lee specials or low
APR financing and to prove credit not all buyers qualify.
Details at Twyacarlsbad dot com or visit twittert Carlsbad today.
Speaker 5 (01:58):
To hebelt Club's original pureput. The rcosuper t helps build
red corpuscles in the blood, which carry oxygen to our
organs and cells. Our organs and cells need oxygen to
regenerate themselves. The immune system needs oxygen to develop, and
cancer dies in oxygen, So the T is great for
healthy people because it helps build the immune system, and
it can truly be miraculous for someone fighting a potentially
(02:20):
life threatening disease due to an infection, diabetes, or cancer.
The T is also organic and naturally caffeine free. A
one pound package of T is forty nine ninety five,
which includes shipping. To order, please visit to Hebot club
dot com. To hebo is spelled T like tom, a
h ee b like boy. Oh. Then continue with the
word T and then the word club. The complete website
(02:43):
is to Hebot club dot com or call us at
eight one eight sixty one zero eight zero eight eight
Monday through Saturday nine am to five pm California time.
That's eight one eight sixty one zero eight zero eight
eight to ebot club dot com.
Speaker 7 (02:58):
This program sponsored in part by Absolute Custom Painting. Custom
Painting you can trust. It's time to clean up and
spiff up your home and add some curb appeal to
your life. Absolute Custom Painting covers the hole in an
empire with a brighter shade of color. No job is
too small and perfection is their goal. Absolute Custom Paint
specializes in affordable residential paint makeovers for a no cost
(03:21):
estament and to dream a little called nine five one
seven ninety seven zero five zero eight. That's nine five
one seven ninety seven oh fiveh eight for Absolute Custom Painting.
Ask about their seasonal paint specials where you can save money.
They're proud to make our world in communities more bright,
colorful and clean. Absolute Custom Painting with painters you can trust, licensed,
(03:43):
bonded and assured California Contractor number eight zero eight nine
three to one.
Speaker 8 (03:55):
Our sponsor. Applied Earthworks serves the Inland Valley in southern
California for over time twenty four years, specializing in cultural
resource management and expert in archaeology, paleontology, architectural history and
historic preservation, making it possible to build for the future
without sacrificing our cultural heritage. Learn more and see employment
opportunities at Applied earthworks dot com. Progress and Preservation. Applied
(04:18):
Earthworks supports our veterans.
Speaker 9 (04:21):
Kcaa FOREAR Life's much better, so download the app in
your smart device today. Listen everywhere and anywhere, whether you're
in Southern California, Texas for sailing on the Gulf of Mexico.
Life Sabreeze with KCAA download the app in your smart
device today.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
Ah.
Speaker 10 (04:42):
Yesterday and the dup BAXICAKCAA.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Miss your favorite show download the podcasting k c A
Radio dot Com.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Casey a A.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
List.
Speaker 11 (05:20):
You know, no matter what it is life that you want,
you gotta go out there and get this.
Speaker 7 (05:25):
Don't let sleep dream, never give a p your ghost.
Speaker 11 (05:29):
They focused on your focus on your succeed because I'm
hoping you do. Keep climbing up the letter because the
key to success, go hard and go home. Never settle
for less. Life dispress, but we gotta deal with it.
Home to the prayer, to the man who put his
sheet on. Only what goring for what you get, to
appreciate what you've got.
Speaker 8 (05:45):
You can no way of proof.
Speaker 12 (05:47):
Just don't stop going when your drinks what see what
your team?
Speaker 13 (05:51):
This is Robert Porter and Antonio Miles with the I
Love Shamer you know County Radio show, missing it beyondy
Locker today, but he will be back next week. We'll
have a great show next week interviewing Joe Baka our supervisor.
So that should be an interesting and very informative show.
I spoke with her, with not her, but but his assistant,
(06:13):
and she is ready. They're making sure that I wouldn't
have some gotcha questions or anything like that. But no, no,
it'll be totally positive and we're gonna have a great time.
But today's show is gonna be all seek goo of
Mina and talking about podcasting, radio and just having a
good time. We were gonna have counselwoman Kim Kanas on
(06:35):
the show tonight, but she was a little bit under
the weather and I really didn't want her to have
to come on here when she's not feeling good. Our
our politicians and council people and anyone involved in the
community works very hard and when they're under the weather,
they should get a chance to rest. So enjoy your
resting time off. Thank you Antonio Moss for coming to
(06:56):
join me today as a co host. We appreciate you
very much.
Speaker 14 (06:58):
Sure, thanks for inviting me. Glad to be here, Glad
to support Janni. We miss you. But take take care
of this.
Speaker 13 (07:04):
Yeah, he's always working so hard. I'd like to mention
our sponsors Golden Pizza and Wings on Golden in Highland
or Olive and Watermen. They have their seven fifty five
sands plus tax deal on there a large pizza. So
it's basically you get a large pepperoni or cheese pizza
(07:28):
and you pay seven fifty five plus tax. So if
you need to get something cheap for your kids on Friday,
that's really good and we'll fill them up. Go get
some pizza and a feed your kids something fun for
the weekend and and all those other days. Make them
a salad.
Speaker 14 (07:43):
Yeah, yes, take a ten dollars bill, you'd be good
to go.
Speaker 13 (07:45):
Yeah, give him a give them a cheat day and uh,
but the rest of the days, make sure they're eating
healthy and then growing strong. We also would like to
mention pal Charter Academy. Oh, there are doing.
Speaker 14 (07:59):
So pain they're doing I was gonna do that.
Speaker 13 (08:02):
They're doing incredible stuff in the community. They do have
the middle school, the high school, and they're going to
have summer school this year. They're located off of Blake Street,
but they're also their middle school is located on uh
I forget the street, but it's a it's on a
different campus. They are going to have a food bank
(08:25):
this Tuesday, so that's that's tomorrow from ten to twelve,
and you just go over there to the Blake Street.
If you need look on I Love Salmeronnadino or look
on Robert Porter and you'll see the flyer there. Go
to the instagram I Love Samernadino. The flyer will be
there for the food bank. If you're in need of
(08:46):
some food or you have a friend or neighbor who
needs some food, have them go on down there and
it's first come through serve. So make sure you get
there early. Uh definitely check out my flyer online. Uh
and uh pal provides the high quality instruction every child deserves.
They provide a real foundation for their kids, and they
(09:08):
have some really interesting uh uh like uh a school
and classes for the kids, including cooking, like auto shop, mechanics,
robotics stuff, uh, stuff with audio, video, cool stuff that
we really get into a lot, right, So I think
(09:28):
that's awesome. And you know with uh, with cell phones
in the way they are today, shoot, you know, cameras
on everything. Man, pretty soon I have a feeling our
whole lives will be recorded. Its recorded, Yes, it pretty
much very much. Yeah, and and thank god some of
those early years for me. Yeah, yuh, all right, Well,
(09:50):
if you'd like more information, call nine O nine eight
eight seven seven zero zero two. Like, if your kid
meets summer school or you're just uh, you're not real
fitting in at another school, you might want to try
Palell Charter Academy. So, uh, good McCall or I get
more info at info at Palcenter dot org. And uh,
(10:13):
I'd also like to mention Miok Josh Shaboo Shaboo right
across the street from Uh. I want to say the
Price Club, man, I think the Price I was gonna
say the Price Club. I don't know, is that the
Price Club too old for you?
Speaker 14 (10:30):
I think we're on the same age.
Speaker 13 (10:31):
Yeah, right, right right, all right? So the Price Club
was basically like no, it was like the old like
the the Costco the old way, right, So the Costco
the old way, so you have to I remember you
travel to it and do the same kind of thing
where they have a bulk items and everything. So but anyways,
(10:53):
it's right across the street from Costco on Hospitality Lane,
and uh me and Amy went there for for a
date last Friday. We had the hot pot. We took
the vegetables put them in there and we had some
incredible meat. We dipped it in the in the hot pot,
put it in the sauce, right on the rice there, vegetables.
(11:13):
You know, it's just really really healthy, really good for you.
And you gotta be careful because it will burn your
tongue because you can turn that. You're basically cooking your
food right in front of you, right, so you can
it's boiling there. You can turn it down, of course,
and then eventually you you turn it off and you
pull it off there and then you have the bone
broth and everything. It's so yummy.
Speaker 14 (11:31):
Yeah, you're basically paying to cook yourself, cook for yourself.
Speaker 13 (11:34):
Yeah, oh kind of. But you're you're actually paying. Uh,
you're paying. You're paying for some good food, is what
you're doing, right, So expect to pay good for good food.
Speaker 14 (11:44):
Yeah, but you're not cleaned up, no clean up.
Speaker 13 (11:45):
Yeah yeah yeah, the clean up I was looking at.
It's like, man, I'm glad I'm not cleaning up after
me either, that part. But uh, Like they're our sponsor
for I Love Salmonino Standout of the Week and this
week I Love Salmonio Standout is the Assistance League of
Sam Bernardino, and I want to give them some props
for the Headdress Ball so they throw on this event
(12:09):
called the Headdress Ball, and the local organizations and non
for profits from around the city and area all fund
the building of these headdresses that they wear based off
of different themes. And I'm sure they have all the
different themes here in this little booklet here, but I
(12:31):
just wanted to thank them for all their hard work.
And I mean, dang pass ball chairs goes all the way.
This is a history tidbit all the way to nineteen
fifty two. That's Helen Gibson, the Arrowhead Springs Hotel Starlet Ball. Wow.
Speaker 14 (12:48):
Do men wear headdresses too?
Speaker 13 (12:50):
I have not seen a man wear a headdress. There's
men dresses fancy. There might have been one sometime, but
it just seems like one that's big. But I'm not
sure about the man thing. That's interesting. I haven't been
to enough of them to know all that, but but
I was very like challenged as a photographer to get
(13:11):
these huge headdresses into the photography with the lady and
sometimes with the whole crew, the dance crew too. Like
so I mean it's like the headdress is so tall,
like you have to really pan out a little bit
and then they get small so like, but if you
get too close to you don't even get the headdress in.
(13:32):
So I tried to do my best and I think
I really did a good job. Harder doing dark lighting
as well, but a lot of fun. And I was
there with Amy as a chaperone because she was backup
singer for Lou Dowdy and and her band and Lou
uh and Lou Productions had got them a job over
(13:54):
there at the ball. And at the end of the
night they sang and you know, we had a good time.
We're all dancing. It was. It was awesome, dude. We
really enjoyed it and had.
Speaker 14 (14:03):
Some cheesecake cheesecake and the main.
Speaker 13 (14:06):
Thing, let me, I should actually mention what the main reason.
Speaker 14 (14:10):
You know, cheese can have the gram cracker crust.
Speaker 13 (14:13):
They had chocolate cheesecake too, dude. So basically they are
a philanthropic programs that they that they help as a
doctor Earl R. Crane Children's Dental Health Center, and it
says the doctor Earl R. Crane Children's Dell Center, established
in nineteen forty nine, provides complete professional dental services to
(14:35):
children in the community who families need a helping hand.
These services include dental screening and Sermonnadino Elementary schools, Oral
hygiene instruction, general dentistry, and orthodonics. The dental center serves
approximately three four hundred patients a year and screens over
five thousand students in the Samernandino Unified School District. I
(14:58):
just when I read that, I thought that was awesome. Now,
they put a lot of work into this book here team.
I mean it's pretty you know, pretty thick for their
planmphlet for their event. But they also do so this event,
they they actually have these of these challenges with with
or contest with raffles, and all the money that that's
(15:20):
put together goes to these different organizations. But it's, uh,
it's very competitive, but very community orientated. Like you can
tell that they're happy when they win the hop okay right,
but uh still, you know, they're all working together to
try to make an incredible event.
Speaker 14 (15:36):
So a competition with the headdresses, yeah wow.
Speaker 13 (15:39):
Yes, so very cool stuff. And they work hard on
that stuff. They're there for a ton of rehearsals and
you know the most genuine part for me of the
whole event is the smiles on the participants that are
actually the ones wearing the ball the head. Yeah. They
(16:02):
their smiles when they're balancing it on their heads so
genuine that it is impossible to fake. And it's great
for photography. So yeah, yeah, like so, like, you know,
most of the time they're they're a little bit serious
because they've got to remember their whole number and everything.
But once in a while you'll catch it when they're
just got to catch their balance and they just smile
(16:24):
because you know, these things are so huge. I mean
one of them was like a boat literally, like a
look a like a new type boat thing. I mean
it's huge, man. Yeah. So they had some really fun
ideas and they also support Operation School Bell. Operation School Bell,
adopted in nineteen eighty three, provides clothing, shoes, and personal
(16:47):
hygiene products to children who do not have adequate school clothing.
We clothe approximately three hundred children each year. They say, wow,
So I just think that's super cool. I mean, uh,
there was a lot of kids when I was growing
up that couldn't afford clothes and sometimes not even afford
(17:09):
a place to wash them. So to be able to
get some new clothes sometimes is a lifesaver for a
kid who had to come to school in their dirty
clothes and and and if you've never had to do that,
then like you probably won't understand how it's so important
for for for these kids to have a set, but
it is. And uh, things like this really touched my heart, man,
(17:34):
because like you think of food and things like that,
but like like a lot of times, like the kids
get teased because they they don't have, you know, clothes,
and that that's just hard, and they don't want to
tell their mama either, you know.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
You know.
Speaker 13 (17:49):
So it's just this is just a great thing, and
I really appreciate them, and uh, all these different groups
that donate and all these hard working members of the
Assistance League just doing all this incredible work. I also
would being remiss if I didn't mention the people that
(18:09):
I saw there, Felicia and Damon Alexander. Yeah, Felicia was
actually uh president of the ball or the chair of
the Ball and run in this year and I believe
last year, and uh I think that that position changes.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (18:29):
And then there was the Harrisons, of course, a Gloria
Harrison and her son William and Lisa and her daughter
in law. They're great friends of mine, and William Harrison
was an attorney brother with me at Kelsey Sammernardino which
fraternity Sigma fy Epsilon. Yeah. So then at the same event,
(18:51):
I saw my other fraternity brother, Alan Kay, a local
works for the Ceremony Unified School District, and he was
there as well. So it was just really cool. And
you know, see the superintendent Ariano and you know, sitting
down and actually talking with Damon Alexander when he's not
a council member. You know, guess what, you didn't change
(19:13):
the same as that dude, same guy. Yeah, he just
actually has more time to help the community way, yeah,
his way. Yeah, and he doesn't have to help the
whole he can actually focus a little so good for him. Yeah,
And it was an awesome event overall. To be able
to go over to the Orange Show and enjoy yourself
(19:34):
besides a fair or a cannabis event, you know, that's
kind of cool.
Speaker 14 (19:39):
You know.
Speaker 13 (19:40):
So they put a lot of time and effort into
this is the whole production. So if you are interested
next year around the same time, they'll have this again
and you can rent a table, or your organization can
rent a table, or you could just order a seat
for yourself and your family. Yeah, yeah, go and support man.
(20:00):
And I'm definitely gonna try to be there next year
and help support because I was impressed at the hard
work they did. So it's a yearly event, yeah, annual Yeah,
and I mean to be doing it for this long
since the nineteen fifties. WHOA, Yeah, that's that's serious. That's
a that's a great organization. So thank you very much.
And that is brought to you by I Love Sanmornio
(20:21):
stand Out of the Week, I love Sarardino Show and
Mioak Josh Shaboo Shaboo Shabo. Right across the stream from Costco.
All right, te, well you know it is uh oh,
there's some pizza over here. So this is a segment like, well,
we're gonna we're gonna get into a little bit of
history here in a second. But but before we get
into that, like I want to hit up my my
(20:42):
engineer Eric the demand over here, and could you please
let us know how you listen to KCAH.
Speaker 15 (20:49):
You could also you can tune into k c AA
on KCAA radio dot com, watch the live stream or
even on YouTube live stream now or also download the
app casey A Radio on the Apple App Store or
the Google Play Store. Just type in k c A
A will pop right up and you can listen in Uh, Paris,
California to.
Speaker 12 (21:07):
Paris, France. You get you're getting text over there. Yeah, yeah,
soone's popular.
Speaker 13 (21:11):
He wait waite, no see, I told my please remind
me to put the do not disturb on my phone.
Speaker 12 (21:19):
I know.
Speaker 13 (21:20):
Thank you for the It happened when you're on the air.
Speaker 12 (21:23):
Yeah, it was almost like it was planning supposed to happen.
Speaker 15 (21:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (21:27):
Hey, well before you leave, how do they uh, how
do they listen to your show?
Speaker 15 (21:31):
I can leave right now. Uh, you guys can tune
in on Tuesdays.
Speaker 13 (21:35):
So yeah, okay, no, no, please.
Speaker 12 (21:37):
At seven pm.
Speaker 15 (21:38):
Palm Trees and Progress also on all streaming platforms. Just
go ahead and type in Palm Trees and Progress Presents
or Palm Trees and Progress dot Com.
Speaker 12 (21:45):
Check us out.
Speaker 13 (21:46):
Yeah, go on to YouTube Palm Trees and Progress, press
the subscribe. Then didn't go over to Native Mega Art
and press the subscribe for me, and then uh, go
to Antonio's It's the the Empire.
Speaker 14 (21:59):
Right on your Empire podcast, you'll see a throne for
the king.
Speaker 13 (22:04):
Okay, on on on on YouTube. Ye YouTube and you
pass subscribe on those three and then you're gonna get
some good notifications on your phone. And I always get
notified from both of y'all.
Speaker 12 (22:17):
That's awesome appreciated.
Speaker 13 (22:18):
Yeah, so that's awesome, and I see all the hard
work you're doing, so I do. Do you know? It
inspires me? Inspires me? So uh in a single demayo
and we are eating golding pizza on this kind of
uh created local holiday. It's more American, but there is
(22:40):
some his Oh I'm sorry, there is some history to
the to the actual celebration besides just corona and pizza
and tacos and things like that. So, Antonio, did you
have a little history on this?
Speaker 14 (22:54):
Yeah, you know, I have a I have a good
amount from a good source that people may know called Wikipedia.
Speaker 12 (23:00):
Yes that Hey, that's my homie.
Speaker 14 (23:03):
Okay, you know Wiki, gotcha? I know Pedia. It's pretty
cool the show. So yeah, I'll just start right here
from the top. And so it says that Sinkle Demo
is an annual celebration held on May fifth to celebrate
Mexico's victory over the Second French Empire at the Battle
of Puebla in eighteen sixty two. Led by General Ignacio Zaragoza.
(23:26):
Zaragoza died months after the battle from an illness, however,
and a large French and a larger French force ultimately
defeated the Mexican army at the Second Battle of Puebla
and then occupied Mexico City. Following the end of the
American Civil War in eighteen sixty five, the United States
began lending money and guns to the Mexican liberals, pushing
(23:46):
France and Mexican conservatives to the edge of defeat. At
the opening of the French Chambers in January eighteen sixty six,
Napoleon the Third announced that he would withdraw French troops
from Mexico in reply to a French request from American
neutral The American Secretary of State, William H. Seward replied
that French withdraw from Mexico should be unconditional. More popular
(24:09):
in the United States than in Mexico, single domile has
become associated with the celebration of Mexican American culture. Celebrations
began in Colombia California, where they have been observed annually
since eighteen sixty two.
Speaker 13 (24:22):
Interesting, Yeah, the.
Speaker 14 (24:24):
Day gang, excuse me, the day gained nationwide popularity beyond
those of Mexican American heritage in the nineteen eighties due
to advertising campaigns by beer, wine, and tequila companies.
Speaker 13 (24:38):
What of those bea corona?
Speaker 14 (24:40):
I would think, So, what about the tailgate? That's football?
Speaker 13 (24:45):
No, no, it's tekate. I don't know. I guess that's
a white boy joke. I guess.
Speaker 14 (24:53):
Yeah. Single Demo generates beer cells on par with the
Super Bowl.
Speaker 13 (25:00):
Yes, it does. Wow.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (25:03):
I worked at a liquor store and there was always
a line, of course with Super Bowl. But like also
for single to Mayo, you would have to order extra
corona and everything.
Speaker 14 (25:13):
It's already out.
Speaker 13 (25:14):
Yep.
Speaker 16 (25:14):
Wow.
Speaker 13 (25:15):
Beer is definitely you know what, it's kind of interesting.
Tomorrow everybody's got to work.
Speaker 14 (25:20):
Yeah, call it either coming hungover, call in sick. Probably hungover.
Speaker 13 (25:25):
I wonder if there's like a uh not be a
safe de Mayo like rest.
Speaker 12 (25:33):
Yeah, and if there's nothing, definitely should.
Speaker 13 (25:35):
Be yesterday Mayo yesterday. I like that.
Speaker 14 (25:39):
Bring a little Spain, bring a little Spain into it,
I like.
Speaker 13 (25:43):
But actually in sample La Bay, we practiced Esta in
Baja California up to the nineteen eighties. Cool, so it
actually had a little spot, you know. It just you know,
Americanism drove Yesta away. Unfortunate work work, work, work work.
If you guys don't know, Yesta is Esta was a
traditional time, right, kind of h at lunchtime where you
(26:08):
take a nap and you just rest and then you
come back afterwards and and you just you eat a
later dinner and things like that. Yeah, and it's a
if you go to San Felive back in the day,
you couldn't even eat lunch during those times, right, So
it really conflicted with American culture. And eventually American culture
(26:30):
over won one and none of them closed at lunchtime anymore.
And yeah, work work, work, yea. It was always when
I was a kid, it was like ah manyon h manyona.
Everything was like that. My grandpa always said it, like minyon,
give me a servesa, you know, and that was what
(26:51):
I was taught. And then all of a sudden everything
became like American eyed quick quick, quick, quick quick quick
everything make money, make money, make money. So that happened
down there, so you know, like I think that's what
we did to the holiday itself. We tried to make
money on syncro De Mayo.
Speaker 14 (27:09):
Oh, making money for sure.
Speaker 13 (27:11):
Yes, yes, And of course, uh you know, if they're
selling more beer and everything like like I think more
the big corporations might be gaining the most from this holiday,
you know, but it does. It does celebrate Mexican culture.
And I love the wonderful dances we get, you know,
(27:31):
the floor for core for gloricay for Glorica there. Yeah,
we get that all the time on Syncle Tom and
I just love those dresses like those loves photographs by
the way, when they're spitting and you get one perfect
like that. I love that. Photography isn't important to me,
(27:52):
so M trying to like focus a little more. I've
been inspired by Ipiani because he's been doing all that
extra work and I really see the improvements in his photography.
Speaker 14 (28:03):
Definitely.
Speaker 13 (28:03):
Yeah. Man, his company, Engaging Engaging Captures. Yes, thank you,
thank you. And we'd like to say that this segment
is brought to you by Motivational Realizations, the energy a
positive thought. Thank you Bianni for all you do.
Speaker 14 (28:24):
We got.
Speaker 13 (28:26):
An interesting show for you today. We've got to have
a half an hour left, and I wanted to talk
a little bit about the radio industry and podcasting and
what what what My engineer Eric and what Antonio, another
podcaster has been very successful here locally thinks the future
(28:47):
holds for what what's going down. So before we start that,
let's let's hear what you're starting. What are you involved
in with media? Antonio?
Speaker 14 (28:57):
Uh? For media, I guess the thing I like is video.
I think audio, and then capturing things with images, so
photography and stuff like that. And then lastly, and probably
the most important is is books. Right, books and things
that are written down because books have been around before
(29:17):
all of those things, and it there's something special about
books that gets in people's minds and transfers them. But yeah,
that's kind of my involvement in media.
Speaker 13 (29:29):
And they are cool. So tell us about your books.
What's the new books you got out right now?
Speaker 14 (29:35):
Yeah? So I have a series it's called Ten Things
that Your Parents should Have taught you but didn't. It's
people call like a self help book, a really easy
to read book that has things in it like integrity,
Circle of seven Fools, which says like, if you hang
around six fools, and most likely you're the seventh. If
(29:56):
you hang around six millionaires, most likely you're the seventh.
Root for yourself. Everybody in your life could probably root
for you to be successful, but if you don't root
for yourself, then it doesn't matter.
Speaker 13 (30:07):
YEA good for yourself.
Speaker 14 (30:10):
Well, you have to believe in yourself and you order
to be successful. People can believe in you, but if
you don't believe in yourself, then it doesn't successful. So
as chapters like that, another chapter like travel because you
need to travel to experience and learn more cultures to
learn about yourself better. So that's what those are in
these books. And this is the yellow one is part one,
and the black one, orange one is Part two, and
(30:31):
then part three hopefully comes out, uh the rest this year.
Speaker 13 (30:34):
I'd like to add to that travel because a lot
of people they have to spend a lot of money
to travel. You don't. You can actually travel right here
in our own community and experience different things that you've
never experienced before. Oh I leave, I left the mic off.
That's because I was chomping on that pizza right there. Yeah,
(30:56):
like you you like so me and Amy, we don't
have a lot of money, but we like to experience things, right,
so we make we take it upon ourselves to try
new things and go into different environments. The desert, the forests,
the lakes, the the hiking trails all around our city,
the urban ones on like for example over there at
(31:21):
oh what's a park, Blair Park, the hiking trail there,
all these different things. It's not traveling as sense as
I going on a cruise, ship or anything, but you
can like go and relax your mind in a different
way and experience the local stuff here. Now, it's very
good to go into another country and experience that. You
(31:41):
know that that is definitely will teach you about your
own culture right when you experience life within another one.
The other thing is is other states very interesting to
go to other states and see the same things that
are It's pretty much a lot of the cities are
the same wherever you go. But you don't have to
(32:03):
be rich to travel. And if you follow people like
Jason Lola, he takes the train to many different places.
Like you can take the train and save a lot
of money, or you can take the bus to the beach,
all these different things. So I just want you to
don't think that traveling is just about getting on a
(32:24):
plane and or a cruise or traveling all day long
in your car. You know, it's it's about experiencing the
world around you.
Speaker 4 (32:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (32:34):
Sometimes it's just going to the beach or touching snow
if you never touch the snow.
Speaker 13 (32:38):
Yeah, touching the water at the beach, yeah, like a reset,
or even just listening to the sounds there.
Speaker 14 (32:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (32:44):
Yeah, oh man, we just did that recently. That was
that was really good for me. I just putting my
feet in the sand. And it's been over a year,
But some kind of reset happens when you hear the
sound of the oceans.
Speaker 14 (32:57):
Nature is powerful.
Speaker 13 (32:58):
So take your kids to the ocean. Team take a
look at how much it costs on the train.
Speaker 14 (33:03):
Yeah right, I think some kids go for free.
Speaker 13 (33:05):
I think, yeah, figure this out and take your kids
to the museums. Really, I mean you can travel to
a museum and then in that museum you can go
all over the world. You can actually travel on Google Earth.
What Yeah, I travel on Google Earth all the time.
You don't think I will ever get a chance to
(33:26):
get to North Korea? Do you think I will?
Speaker 14 (33:29):
Yes? I do.
Speaker 13 (33:30):
Maybe it might you.
Speaker 14 (33:31):
Never know, but remember root for yourself.
Speaker 13 (33:33):
Yeah, okay, I'll wrote root for myself. I won't probably
be trying too hard. But if it does happen, it
does happen. But the reason I don't want to go
to more North Korea is because it's not really safe
for us to go. But on Google Earth, I can
go to North Korea. I can zoom in on little
villages with the North Korea kind of look at their
basketball court and or are their baseball field yes, or
(33:58):
their cemetery area, or or a look at some of
their pictures that they post on there, and it's amazing.
A lot of them have hidden Christianity in them in
the crosses like in the pictures to shoot people outside
in the world, like a hidden way that they're still there.
(34:21):
Interesting stuff. But you could also go I mean the
other day someone told me about some countries in Africa
that I wasn't fully aware of or knew anything about them.
So I went over there, went down and deep into
some of those spots and just started looking at these
different villages and things. And like some of the villages
(34:43):
the cities were just normal cities like you'd find anywhere
in the world, but as you got deeper into there,
you could actually start seeing round huts and round ways
of building, similar to like I experienced in Mexico. So
when we moved first down there. Our houses are built
around like the old huts were, like the old circular
(35:04):
and Native American dwellings, because they stand up well to
wind and storms.
Speaker 14 (35:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (35:09):
So I'm wondering if that was something that happened in
Africa too, because why they have a lot of those
or maybe just a superior way to build a hut.
I'm not sure.
Speaker 14 (35:18):
There are people called the Omes. There are sources that
say that the there is a connection between Africa, East
Africa into the Americas, that there is a current that
brings it naturally into Americas. So there's been studies that
there's connections between Africans and the natives here.
Speaker 13 (35:34):
Yeah. I love that kind of stuff. Yeah, I love
following like the Polynesians and the Austria Australians two or
the Austro Polynesians to South America. You know, to try
to figure out on Google Earth, like how way we
go from island to island to get there? You could
(35:55):
do something similar with the currents to Africa to South America.
Speaker 14 (36:00):
It's already been documented, Like it's already been documented.
Speaker 13 (36:03):
Oh yeah, it's been documented there on rafts and things
like that. But like archaeologically and archaeologically, it could be
some really cool stuff coming up here.
Speaker 14 (36:11):
It's already it's already been done.
Speaker 13 (36:13):
And I've not seen the DNA evidence yet of any
African uh exchange yet of DNA. But if once we do,
I I'm down.
Speaker 14 (36:22):
I'll send you all right, we will, well, I'll send
you link.
Speaker 13 (36:24):
We will, we will challenge out And that's what archaeology
is all about, debating what's going on with some of
this stuff for a while, so to to be on
Antonio side a little bit. They didn't They thought there
was Polynesian incursions into South America, but they couldn't prove it,
(36:46):
and all the old anthropology like, no, that never happened,
never happened. Well, now they're finding DNA evidence of it.
And and of course there's things like the bottle gourd
and the gord.
Speaker 14 (36:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (37:00):
So uh, when you're when you're dealing with this kind
of stuff, it's uh, it's it's it's cool to like
jump on the Google Earth and travel there and actually
see what it's like. Every time I read about a
country in a newspaper article, Uh, and I don't know
what that city is, I go there Google. Yeah, all
you have to do is call you know, highlight it
(37:21):
and the little thing says map right there, you press it,
it takes you right.
Speaker 14 (37:25):
To it Google.
Speaker 13 (37:25):
Yeah. So, uh, this is your chance to learn about
the world and then maybe you will find a spot
where you really will literally physically travel there. But uh,
it's so cool to be able to see through people's
eyes their photographs of all these different places all around
the world.
Speaker 14 (37:40):
Yeah, but I strongly encouraged leave the virtual reality world
and go to the real world. Yes, yes, yes, yes,
way it's intended.
Speaker 13 (37:48):
But uh but you can do both and and and
you can check one out to see.
Speaker 14 (37:51):
The other, right yeah.
Speaker 13 (37:53):
So uh, and you can't go to North Korea. It's hard.
I don't know how I could do it. But like,
you may not want to go to it right now either.
Speaker 14 (38:01):
You never know, you know, you know, you might be
like Rodman. They love Rodman, so you know.
Speaker 13 (38:06):
Yeah, like I haven't seen him go over there lately.
So man, I mean, I guess there has to be
some serious national thing. He like he really saved the
day that time.
Speaker 14 (38:17):
Yeah, I think I remember when Bill Clinton like saved
two journalists from North Korea. That was pretty interesting.
Speaker 13 (38:24):
And uh was it was? It? Al Sharpton or did
Jesse Jackson went over there too.
Speaker 14 (38:30):
I have no idea. Yeah, I just remember Bill Clinton.
They're like, yeah, we have two journalists and then Bill
Clinton was the one that was got him out something
along those lines. Send Bill Clinton to save two women.
Speaker 13 (38:40):
I love it, oh Man. So we got on this
talking about Antonio Miles's book It's Ten Things that your
parents should have taught you but did, And we're just
talking about traveling and how you can actually do it
uh online, but he would rather you do it in
person and get out there and do it. The reason
(39:02):
that I do even bring this up is because a
lot oftentimes it's easy for some people to get out
there and and like some of my friends have a
lot of money and they can just travel wherever they want,
and they're like, you know, hey, Robert, you want to
go with us to Hawaii? Yeah?
Speaker 7 (39:22):
I do for.
Speaker 13 (39:23):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So you get what I'm saying,
Like in Sana Manadino, sometimes it's hard to get to
that spot. So you know, don't hold your you can
still you know, a book or social media or whatever
you can. Your friends can show you a little bit
about it and then maybe you can save your money
and get that trip because you're gonna go there to
(39:44):
North Korea.
Speaker 14 (39:45):
Someday, roberta go to the beach or go to the mountains,
you know, like get out of the house.
Speaker 13 (39:49):
Get a regime change in North Korea, it opens up,
it becomes where everyone can go to visit.
Speaker 14 (39:56):
You never know, Robert's obsessed with North Korea.
Speaker 13 (39:59):
It's so yeah, it's it's because as an anthropologist, I'm
very interested about closed societies, right because it's it's it's
like a way to keep your culture from being influenced
from the outside.
Speaker 14 (40:14):
Closed for the majority of it.
Speaker 13 (40:17):
For a long time. Yes, yes, but they're they're much
more open now. But that that that changed after World
War you know, they were closed and then World War
two happened, they were forced to open. Yeah, that might
I guess that could happen, and I don't know. We'll
see what happens with Korea. I just hope some days
there's not like this constant nuclear banter there, or you know,
(40:38):
just something that's more calm and peaceful and maybe some
of those families could be reunited and stuff like happened
in Germany a long time ago.
Speaker 14 (40:46):
Are you interested in Dubai yes, I am.
Speaker 13 (40:48):
What do you want to know about Dubai.
Speaker 8 (40:51):
I don't know.
Speaker 14 (40:51):
It is so interesting traveling to Dubai.
Speaker 13 (40:53):
Oh, just just going there and seeing the tallest buildings
in the world.
Speaker 14 (40:56):
And yeah, I guess they have a seven star restaurant.
I heard not even four, but seven.
Speaker 13 (41:01):
Yeah, Like you go in there and those like gold
plated table or something.
Speaker 14 (41:05):
Yeah, basically yeah, Oh my gosh, I think they have
dogs click your feet when you walk in.
Speaker 4 (41:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (41:09):
Yeah, like you're like you put your feet in. It's
just like those fish that like nibble on it to
clean them.
Speaker 14 (41:13):
Uh huh, I mean nice. Yeah, it's only like one
hundred thousand dollars a night. Yeah, something like that.
Speaker 13 (41:18):
Oh man. Well, you know once you get once you're
on your way to being famous. Dude, you're gonna get
those big checks and you'll start heading there.
Speaker 14 (41:25):
Like like Tupac said, all I want is money after fame.
I'm a simple man.
Speaker 13 (41:29):
Yeah, and maybe you can, like I'll ride in your
luggage and I'll be able to get over there myself, gotcha.
Speaker 14 (41:38):
It's like you'll be able to be by mule or
something like that.
Speaker 13 (41:42):
Oh man. So uh so let's talk about the future.
Radio here man. So I've been here about ten years
or over ten years, and I've been involved in a
lot of media. I've been author of course, social media
TV on BBS, I did that for a little bit.
(42:03):
So I've been involved in And what I what I've
seen throughout this whole time is that social media and
what's taking place on Instagram and YouTube and Facebook and
TikTok is actually almost becoming superior to cable TV and
(42:25):
the movies and all these other platforms of media.
Speaker 14 (42:30):
Books.
Speaker 13 (42:32):
Books still have their spot right and their way of
like stimulating your mind and things. Yeah, but that's what
I that's the perfect term. I'm finding that these different
medias are becoming way more niche right. So, so as
a podcaster, Eric like like, would you ever consider, you know,
(42:56):
going to a TV with your podcast and radio?
Speaker 4 (43:00):
Uh?
Speaker 15 (43:01):
You know, I'd probably rather have a streaming service reach
out nowadays before like a cable company. Uh you know,
But I'm in a position where I probably would say yeah.
But but I mean if I had a cable company
or a streaming service reach out, I'd probably as long
as it was an Amazon Prime, I'd probably take it.
Speaker 14 (43:23):
Uh why not Amazon?
Speaker 12 (43:25):
I don't know. I'm just taking a shot at right
to the jungular.
Speaker 13 (43:29):
Yeah, like actually that my friend Eddie Eddie who is
on here has a has a Cannabis and Cancer. I
believe it's called Cannabis and Cancer on Amazon Prime. Oh okay,
yeah yeah, and uh it did all right, you did,
all right. But I see what you're saying, like it
might be nice to, you know, have him give you
(43:49):
some big cash before.
Speaker 15 (43:51):
You right, yeah, And I mean from what you're talking
about the future of radio or podcasting. Uh, I think
radio is always gonna be there, you know.
Speaker 7 (43:59):
Uh.
Speaker 15 (43:59):
But when my niece and nephew who are in middle school,
you know, and I tell them what I do, I'm like,
you know, it's kind of like a.
Speaker 12 (44:06):
Podcast, you know what I mean. Yeah, I'm like, I
work kind of like at a podcast dudio. It's a
radio station.
Speaker 13 (44:12):
But it's hard to separate them. Yeah.
Speaker 12 (44:15):
Yeah, they are aware of the radio. But I think
I sound cooler to them.
Speaker 13 (44:19):
But there's age that's different, Like it's like it is podcast.
Speaker 12 (44:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (44:24):
Yeah, it was almost like the first podcast really, like
you know, like are the news right, that's the first
podcast And it's just it's just because the technology is
in our hands now in everybody's hands, Like anybody can
have a podcast.
Speaker 14 (44:39):
And I guess the big question probably most people have
is what's the difference between radio and podcasting? That's probably
a big question.
Speaker 13 (44:45):
People are like, yeah, yeah, so so do you would
you ever just do podcasting and not radio? Uh?
Speaker 14 (44:52):
You know what, Well, what's the difference. Let's try to
explain the difference for people.
Speaker 15 (44:55):
You know, it's funny, I could say that I've looked
it up multiple times and I can tell you.
Speaker 13 (45:04):
I honestly believe the difference is is the way that
the public look at you if you're on the radio
for some reason, there's this kind of glamorous thing that
even really there there is no glamor over here, like
i'd be paying for this show man, in fact, you
want to be a sponsor, let me know. But but
(45:26):
but when it comes to like, uh, podcasting, that's all
that stuff's free, and like I get like I could
actually do it over free. But then like everybody's got
a podcast too, so you're kind of like, unless you've
got a super quality one and you and everyone's drawn
to it. This gives me another avenue to catch people's
(45:47):
eye when they see the NBC logo. Right, they're like,
what is that? You know? It gives me one extra look,
I think, But I mean really, I think you could
do different things on each platform. So they both have
a place, right, they have a place.
Speaker 14 (46:02):
Yeah, so in my opinion, and it's a comes from
two different aspects, and I think I agree with you.
So for radio, since they already have like a market,
they already have a station, they already have a broadcast. Yeah,
Like you can always just like hey, I'm a click
on to ninety nine point one or whatever casey aa,
and you know that there's gonna be something on. You
can go to it and person will be there always.
(46:23):
As opposed to podcasting, you have to like like it's
it's a it's a river, it's an ocean of different people,
and you have to find someone that clicks with you.
And usually celebrities are taking over for this podcasting thing.
And another big difference.
Speaker 13 (46:37):
Everything not even just celebrities, like sports people. Yeah, I
don't even know who they are.
Speaker 14 (46:44):
That part, and so the other thing, who is anyway,
who's that guy? And the other thing that I want
to mention.
Speaker 13 (46:51):
You got a problem, buddy, You got a problem?
Speaker 15 (46:53):
Come on, here, we'll take you to the guy that
hosted your actor.
Speaker 14 (46:57):
Come on, let me finish my thoughts. Let me finish
my thought here. So the other thing about the difference
between radio and podcasting is that usually radio is more
censored than what you can do on podcasting, what you
can say on podcasting. That's usually another big thing. Is
it more censored. Right, But as you guys may know
what's going on with Shannon Sharp, you can also lose
(47:20):
a lot of funding and stuff like that with your
podcasting when you have funding behind you as.
Speaker 13 (47:25):
Well, yes, because you're you are free flowing on a podcast,
Like I actually speak differently when I'm just a live
video podcasting on my own doing videos versus on the
radio because you have to catch yourself because otherwise he
just cuts off four seconds of our of our show
if you say a bad word or whatever. But you
(47:46):
can say things like brain fart, But like there's other
words that you can't.
Speaker 14 (47:50):
Say, right, like fart fart.
Speaker 13 (47:51):
Yeah, well I think you say fart fart right, Yeah,
we can both eight. We love that.
Speaker 14 (47:58):
Just put brain in. Just put brain.
Speaker 13 (48:02):
See that's how radio is like because there's a two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars, fine if you mess around
with it, right, So that's that actually is a good
thing because at schools you have to be the same way. Right,
So when you were teaching your your video, you're teaching video.
Speaker 14 (48:19):
And podcasting right for a coma?
Speaker 13 (48:21):
Yeah, for a coma. And did you you you kind
of check yourself how you speak with.
Speaker 14 (48:27):
That, right? Yeah. I'm not usually a profanity person, so yeah, yeah.
Speaker 13 (48:30):
But you you really do watch yourself around kids, it's
a lot different how you explain yourself and things.
Speaker 14 (48:35):
Yeah, just in general, you know, I think it's important
to when you have character. I think it's kind of
good to kind of just be like kind of solid
all around, so that way you don't really have to
change so much when you go in different spaces. I
guess when it's like adult or children as opposed, you know,
if that makes any sense, you know, I think sometimes
you know, some I think it's important, like when you
want to say, like a when you're really passionate and
(48:56):
you want to say something, that's fine. But if you
have to like switch these different characters every time you
go somewhere, you might have to check yourself and maybe
start all over.
Speaker 13 (49:05):
Yep, Yes, yes, it's easy to lose yourself.
Speaker 14 (49:10):
Yes, Eminem shout out to Eminem.
Speaker 13 (49:15):
Oh, I found myself being the same person, just altering
some of the words. But sometimes I do find myself
changing with certain friend groups.
Speaker 14 (49:27):
Okay, like how I act. That makes sense, That makes sense.
Speaker 13 (49:29):
But I think that might be the anthropologist in me.
I don't know. But I find also that if I
always tell the truth, then I don't have to remember
any lies.
Speaker 14 (49:37):
Even better, Yeah, like I'm pretty sure you know, like
the stoner friends are different than anthropological friends, and sometimes
they meet in the middle.
Speaker 13 (49:44):
Yeah, and you know, you never know what you told
the stoner friends, So you definitely don't want to lie,
because especially if you're told something of the stoner friends,
you don't they ain't. They ain't gonna keep that no secret.
Speaker 14 (49:52):
Don't forget I might forget.
Speaker 13 (49:55):
Forget.
Speaker 16 (49:56):
Yeah, oh man, So if if if the the radio
needs to reinvent itself, right, and that's what's kind of happening.
Speaker 13 (50:09):
The radio is actually bringing in these stars right right,
that those podcasters in to the radio and doing both. Now,
I guess that's a way to kind of play off
of the success of the Internet and having the app
itself now a one touch and you can go right
(50:30):
to the KAA and listen anywhere in the world. So
it is no longer just tuning it. You know. I
can remember trying to tune in the radio down in
Mexico because we could barely get stations from from Mexicali.
So we were like all night long, just be like,
you know, we became masters of fine hair tuning, you know.
(50:53):
But now it's just like you press a button and
like down there and it comes right to your phone.
Speaker 14 (50:57):
Right there in your house, right there.
Speaker 13 (50:59):
So it's totally different. So I'm glad that radio is
reinventing itself. But what do you what do you see
in the future of radio.
Speaker 14 (51:08):
Well, I think what's interesting when you mentioned radio is
that I think most people nowadays watch radio shows on YouTube.
And that's just my opinion, you know, like even KCA,
they're smart enough to jump onto YouTube. When I think
about the Breakfast Club, I don't listen to them online.
I watched them on YouTube. When I think about what's
another station Sway Sway in the morning, I don't listen
(51:28):
to Sway in the morning. I watch them on YouTube.
So I think the business side of it, they become
smart and they realize, hey, like we need to have
a visual component, or just go to YouTube, right, it's free,
just go on there and get subscribers and have an
extra stream and income. So I think radio's answer to
success is following the Internet phase, like you said, like
(51:49):
following whatever the Internet is doing. Let's just add our
visual component to it and just ride that wave.
Speaker 13 (51:55):
And there's always a place for audio without without visual.
Speaker 14 (52:00):
Well when you're driving, yah, yeah, when you're driving.
Speaker 13 (52:02):
Yeah, just sometimes you just when you're running, like lots
of exercising, you know. So I see that it's hard.
Won't be able to get rid of it, right, Eric,
you won't be able to get rid of radio. It's
just gonna morph.
Speaker 12 (52:16):
D Yeah, yeah, I don't think we can get rid
of it.
Speaker 13 (52:18):
How do you think radio change in the future.
Speaker 15 (52:22):
You know, just like he was saying that, I think it.
It was a funny day when I heard DJ Sour
Milk say, oh, don't forget to check out the podcast too,
I was like, okay, all right, so when you when
I heard the radio stations and my favorite DJ is
like adapting to the time and being like, oh, you
can also check out past episodes and they have like
a bank of it now, so you know, I feel like, yeah,
(52:43):
keeping up with what's going on. I know you're doing
your TikTok dances and that's getting a lot of traction
for you, right hello, So.
Speaker 14 (52:51):
You know the Pink Pony Club, all right, Robert's taking
He's making his hustle out hip. Dude.
Speaker 13 (53:00):
I gotta make some money so I get some gas, buddy.
Speaker 14 (53:04):
For Yeah, I got to just take off your shirt, Robert.
Speaker 12 (53:07):
You'll get more, more, more and more juice, think.
Speaker 15 (53:13):
I but like, honestly, like I I you have you
have to make clips now of your episodes. I'm sure
you gentlemen know for your guys shows, when you guys
drop a new episode, uh, you know, you have to
kind of have clips of that episode, exciting parts of
that conversation, uh visually to post on your social media,
and then that gets more fans on your Why this
for me?
Speaker 12 (53:34):
I'm trying to do it for myself. Then I get
too stoned and I'm like, I forgot what.
Speaker 13 (53:39):
Knows because he made me in a bunch of those clips.
Speaker 4 (53:41):
You do?
Speaker 13 (53:42):
You do that great, dude? You really find the real
juicy bits out of your interviews and they and you
turn them into these uh these fifteen second reels or clips.
Speaker 14 (53:53):
Right, yeah, I think at least a minute, you know,
a minute ante you know, And are you uh are
you getting money for these now?
Speaker 7 (54:02):
Or well?
Speaker 13 (54:04):
Uh did you monetize it on pockets? Man?
Speaker 14 (54:07):
I know, right stand in my pockets.
Speaker 13 (54:11):
Have you monetized yeah, Poe, No, no, I don't believe so.
But on Instagram, right you?
Speaker 12 (54:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (54:17):
Yeah? Like so, like I'm just saying, like I went
to Goazzolo's German food restaurant on Highland the other day.
I ate a very incredible sandwich and my mama shared
it with me and we had some German potato salad.
The rubien was incredible. They make their own, uh you know,
(54:40):
incredible stuff over there. But this is the thing is
is that I posted that the pictures up of that,
and it made me five bucks. Yeah yeah, I mean, like,
but I was gonna post those pictures anyway, right to
help people come to there, so that at least made
me get some gas money to be able to do
the next event.
Speaker 15 (54:58):
Hey, five bucks is five you see what I'm saying, Like,
get a golden start, getting golden pizza.
Speaker 12 (55:03):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 13 (55:04):
It just takes a couple couple things to fill out
the paperwork and stuff. But I do tell everyone, join
the business suite, get veterified and and and start monetizing
these different social media streams and eventually the money will
come in Facebook, you know, Instagram contacted me and said it, Hey,
you have five hundred dollars built up you need to
(55:27):
give us. You need okay, this, this and this so
we can send you the money.
Speaker 12 (55:31):
Oh that's awesome, you know.
Speaker 14 (55:32):
Like, oh yeah right that right out call that beautiful,
beautiful problem.
Speaker 4 (55:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (55:39):
I mean, like I don't even know I had that problem.
So so get monetized. Team. I want to thank you
Antonio for for all you do with the Empire. Tell
us more about how to find out about your stuff.
Speaker 14 (55:50):
Well, easiest way I guess you guys can go on
Instagram which is th h E E Underscore Empire Underscore Podcast.
You'll see the Throne in there, and then through that
you can click the link in the bio and follow
the YouTube channel, check out the books stuff like that.
Thank you Robert and Eric.
Speaker 15 (56:07):
Oh just check out us on Instagram as well at
Palm Trees and progress, or just to check out our website.
Palm trees and Progress dot com. We got all the
links on there. Appreciate it, man.
Speaker 13 (56:16):
And uh and and just I love Samonidino by Robert
Porter for a group. I love Samorondino page onstag, on
Instagram and on Facebook page. So I have different platforms.
Just just follow those and or just follow Robert Porter himself.
And I post everything on there, including my diabetic journey
(56:37):
with my mother, So if you're interested in learning about
diabetic foods, I post almost every food that I make
for my mama. And it's like it's like a cookbook
team because they pay me to post these food pictures.
The last one got a dollar ninety nine. That's got
all right, just to post a food picture.
Speaker 14 (56:54):
You post ten, you got.
Speaker 13 (56:56):
Yes, and then over time out though the whole month,
it equals money. That's good, guys, money, So get it,
get it, get it good. And this is Brobart Porter
and Antonio Miles Missing. If you're any locker and arrogant
house and we all.
Speaker 5 (57:27):
Now, I'm the man who loads the blues.
Speaker 12 (57:31):
Hey, you're night. I'm live in the blues.
Speaker 14 (57:35):
Load the us.
Speaker 17 (57:37):
It's deep, that's all I'm walking. They're talking living.
Speaker 12 (57:42):
The blues I'm a.
Speaker 17 (57:44):
Blues loading made from my soul.
Speaker 13 (57:48):
Into your head, music makes you.
Speaker 17 (57:52):
Want a days.
Speaker 11 (57:55):
I'm my blues loving may.
Speaker 13 (58:08):
I'm the sinner. I'm a saint. I'm the preacher.
Speaker 12 (58:14):
Don't really, I'm the blues man.
Speaker 13 (58:18):
Let me cut to you.
Speaker 17 (58:19):
If you want to walk into the blues well, tell
me a sol.
Speaker 12 (58:24):
I'm a blues loving maid.
Speaker 17 (58:28):
From the song into your head, music makes you want
to day.
Speaker 13 (58:36):
I'm the blues.
Speaker 14 (58:40):
Loving me.
Speaker 9 (59:05):
NBC News on CACAA Lomlada sponsored by Teamsters Local nineteen
thirty two, Protecting the Future of Working Families Teamsters nineteen
thirty two, dot org.
Speaker 14 (59:20):
Can Nobody Take My Pride?
Speaker 18 (59:22):
The first day of jury selection and music mobil seandan
He comes as federal sex trafficking case.
Speaker 12 (59:27):
In Lower Manhattan. Jury selection could take at.
Speaker 18 (59:30):
Least a week in this mammoth of a case that
accuses p Diddy a racketeering conspiracy, which includes allegations of kidnapping, drugging,
and coercing women into sexual activities known as freak offs.
People weighing in on if they could be a fair juror.
Speaker 9 (59:44):
I wouldn't want to be, but yeah, I'm pretty fair
with decision making you know, it's like when you deserve
whatever you deserve, you kind of get the consequences.
Speaker 13 (59:52):
Not really, because I'm pretty sure i'd be biased if
it's involving women and trafficking, so I think I have
a little bias.
Speaker 18 (01:00:01):
Diddy has pleaded not guilty and officially rejected a plead deal.
Speaker 12 (01:00:05):
I'm Natalie mcgliori.
Speaker 5 (01:00:06):
Brazilian police say that prevented what could have been a
deadly bumb