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September 15, 2025 • 60 mins
KCAA: I Love San Bernardino County with Robert Porter on Mon, 15 Sep, 2025
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:23):
This important, time sensitive message is brought to you by
this station's generous sponsor, George Let's Field Associates, who has
important Medicare information for all current and future Medicare recipients
about some big changes happening Medicare Clarified. Medicare is a
nonprofit consumer service organization.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
It's more important than ever to review your Medicare plan
for twenty twenty five from October fifteenth through December seventh
to find out if you're in the right plan for you.
People are calling nine five one seven six nine zero
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Others are raising copays and adding deductibles. Biggest changes in
the Medicare drug program.

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Speaker 5 (01:31):
NBC News Radio, I'm Lisa Carton. FBI Director Cash Pattel
says Charlie Cook's shooter sent text messages about a plan
to take out the conservative activist.

Speaker 6 (01:41):
He had a text message exchange he is suspect with
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When asked why the person who received the text didn't
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The president's thirty day takeover expired last week, but Trump
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Dreasury Secretary Scott Bessen made the announcement today while in

(02:36):
Madrid following trade talks between the US and China.

Speaker 7 (02:40):
President Trump and party chair she will speak on Friday
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President Trump appeared to be referring to the matter in
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the US. Serena and Venus Williams are teaming up once again,

(03:13):
but this time off the tennis court. The sisters will
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Speaker 10 (03:47):
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Speaker 10 (04:17):
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Speaker 2 (04:55):
This important, time sensitive message is brought to you by
this station's general sponsor, George Letsfield Associates, who has important
Medicare information for all current and future Medicare recipients about
some big changes happening. Medicare Clarified. Medicare is a nonprofit
consumer service organization.

Speaker 3 (05:15):
It's more important than ever to review your Medicare plan
for twenty twenty five from October fifteenth through December seventh
to find out if you're in the right plan for you.
People are calling nine to five one seven six nine
zero zero zero five nine five one seven six nine
zero zero zero five. A popular and local Medicare plan

(05:38):
is improving. Others are raising copays and adding deductibles, biggest
changes in the Medicare drug program in fifteen years.

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generous support of this radio station.

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Speaker 9 (06:56):
Miss your favorite show, download the podcast at CASEAA radio
dot com.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
Casey A A.

Speaker 5 (07:13):
Listen.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
Never, no matter what it is that you want, you
gotta go get.

Speaker 7 (07:25):
Sleep.

Speaker 4 (07:26):
The dreamer.

Speaker 12 (07:27):
Never give your focused on you, focused on your success
because I'm hoping you do.

Speaker 4 (07:32):
She's climbing up the letter because the key to success
go on and go home. Never police.

Speaker 13 (07:37):
What's up Team, It's Rubbert Porter and at the Ony
Locker with the I Love Sammerdatino Gouddy Radio show on
Casey NBC one oh six point five FM, ten fifty am,
when we will talk politics, culture in history.

Speaker 9 (07:49):
What's up and how you doing?

Speaker 4 (07:50):
Dude?

Speaker 9 (07:51):
I'm doing great. What you got there is?

Speaker 6 (07:54):
That?

Speaker 9 (07:54):
Is that a tie tea?

Speaker 13 (07:55):
You're out and out?

Speaker 4 (07:56):
Where I got it from you?

Speaker 9 (07:58):
We gotta love all. And they got their new spot
over on State Street in Redlands, so.

Speaker 4 (08:06):
You know what's special about them? Shout out to David
intends to they allowed. I was part of the Redlands
leadership twenty twenty four and that is our project. Is
the logo on the building on the Viva Loboba building
in Redlands.

Speaker 9 (08:20):
So cool.

Speaker 4 (08:20):
That was our project.

Speaker 9 (08:21):
And it's a it's a little girl with a drink.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
Right no, no, no, no. The mural, the mural, the mirror,
I said, logo, I led you a straight. The mural
on the back of the building as you get off
going down on Orange Street, that mural that says like
welcome to Redlands. That was our project. Cool and we
had the artists on here we had Frank, I don't
know if you remember, Yes, yes I did. Yeah, that
was the Muror lists that did that. So shout out

(08:46):
to Frank, and shout out to Redlands Leadership Class of
twenty twenty four and class of twenty twenty five. They
have a project where they're doing kind of like a
community guarden, and we kind of flirted with that idea
as well, but they actually were able to get a
spot to make it happen.

Speaker 9 (09:00):
So wish I did get his card, Frank's card to
the Parks and rec but unfortunately that Parks and Recks
directors gone, Yeah, so we had to start over with Yeah,
I'd like to mention our sponsors, Golden Pizza and Wings
over on all of the watermen are Highland and Golden
and they got a spot in Colton and Fontana. I mean,

(09:21):
it's some good stuff. Their deal is seven fifty five
plus tax all day, every day for a large pepperoni
or cheese pizza. But you have to order in so
you have to go pick it up and uh you
can get some Wings and they this special is over,
but they did have this great special just recently Wings.
So like Ted calls me up, be like Robert. We
got an order some wings and we got to get

(09:43):
him out in two days. So he calls me up,
go and make the video.

Speaker 4 (09:47):
You get it.

Speaker 9 (09:48):
So like we're getting the views, we're getting.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
There, you're getting the views. Help me out, help me out, team, Well.

Speaker 9 (09:55):
Let's get let's get this uh this uh this pizza
spot bumping and get some good business in there, good
locals and you'll you'll understand why because it's good pizza
and it's not too expensive.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
Right definitely. You know, have you been over speaking on
the restaurant tip, have you went to the soul food place?
Pat's place? Have you been theres oh man? I I
told people that I would do give reveal my review
of the food on tonight's show, and it was delicious.
I had the meat loaf with the mashed potatoes. I
got the mac and cheese and the cabbage, and they

(10:28):
give you enough food that you can get two meals
out of your one plate. What I loved about it.

Speaker 9 (10:34):
Wait a second, it didn't make two meals for me.

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Set and I try to be able to work consciously.
I'm not as rich as you eat a Roberts.

Speaker 9 (10:46):
So those tails were so crumptious. That anything that was
left amy God, So you know that's why you got
all those because of because it ox only has one tail, buddy,
I hear you.

Speaker 4 (11:02):
And it's crazy how that kind of happens in this
culture where the food that often was the scraps or
really oxtail, chitp lins and stuff we're given to the slaves,
where the lesser cuts and now these are the cuts
that are prize cuts now. So it's crazy how the
word the world goes full circle.

Speaker 9 (11:20):
And oxtail is so good and in the way Pats
makes it very succulent, like it falls right off the
bone in your mouth and then you I always like
to get a like a fork full of macaroni and
cheese and some of the gravy.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I hear it. Because they had
to brown with the meat loaf. They had the brown
gravy and the red gravy. I gotta try to red
the next time. But I just tried to brown this time.
But next time I'm gonna get the red gravy.

Speaker 9 (11:44):
Yeah, Like I told them, I said, hey, dude, you
goten viral. I think that last time I looked at
a seventy five thousand.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
Views awesome, bro, I'm like, whoa man.

Speaker 9 (11:53):
I was like, I can't even give that on my
incredible Yeah yeah, like literally I made twenty eight dollars
on that post paid.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Yeah, so he ti, I see, I know when you
got opp sales. Now, I'm like, oh, he just did
a reel over there.

Speaker 9 (12:16):
Yeah, well that can actually afford it, you.

Speaker 4 (12:20):
Know, definitely, yo eat money. Could you tell our audience
how they could tune into to the I Love Sammordino
County Radio Show.

Speaker 10 (12:27):
Of course, you guys can tune in via KA Radio app.
Just go ahead and download that app off of the
Apple App Store the Google play Store. Or you could
also just time tune in via ka radio dot com
watch your guys's beautiful faces and sick fits via the
live stream, or if they want to just go the
audio route, go hey, playing live now and they just
go click that and tune in.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
Awesome foomage foo foomage for all. Thank you brother, and
you are too kind. Then.

Speaker 9 (12:58):
I also like to mention pal Charter Academy, one of
our great sponsors. They just had their open house over
there and h a football game, but they did lose unfortunately,
But you have a great team and they're gonna look
forward to some more incredible win So I'm gonna try
to make it over there to a couple of their
games and watching. It's been a long time since I've
been to like a high school football team, Cardinal p Yeah,

(13:19):
like a Pacific Pirates rule. But I didn't go to
a lot of games, and I wasn't on the football team,
but my brother was. My brother was, so Uh.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
I didn't play a lot, but I was on the team.

Speaker 9 (13:29):
Did you get a seven touchdowns in one game?

Speaker 4 (13:34):
I was on special teams and defense.

Speaker 10 (13:36):
I figured Rob. I figured Rob is one of the
people who would be underneath the bleachers hanging out at football.

Speaker 9 (13:42):
Like you don't even get last and drugs spoken, don't
even get last pick. You're under there with the reefer,
all right, And uh.

Speaker 4 (13:57):
It's a good place.

Speaker 10 (13:58):
It was a cool place to be.

Speaker 9 (14:00):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, while we're talking about Pole. Charter pal
Charter Academy is a drug free campus and they will
take care of your kids. They will show your kids
what to do right and how to do it, and
they have some great programs over there. When it comes
to a three D printing, videography, weight training, sports, everything

(14:26):
you can imagine. So please, if your kid needs some
special attention when it comes to school, or maybe you
just want to send them to an incredible school, please
check out pal Charter Academy at info at palcenter dot
org or call nine O nine eight eight seven seven
zero zero two and we will be in a future
show coming up here. We'll be having a PAL on again.

(14:49):
I'm talking about some of their new stuff coming up
here and their I E Live Market, so that's be interesting.
I'm gonna head over to that. I wanted to get
now before we get I think you power for everything,
But you went to the Black Chamber of Commerces Market
Night or.

Speaker 4 (15:07):
No, that was actually Sunshine Party Rentals fifth year anniversary,
but it was housed in the parking lot where the
Southern California Black Chamber of Commerce and Youth build are located.

Speaker 9 (15:19):
At least they're there market Night there.

Speaker 4 (15:22):
Yes, they they initially were doing that during the summer.
As Lou said last week, that is no longer happening,
but they said they're going to be bringing it back
in the in the near future. But I know what's
on the radar at least, and we both know and
we talked about it last show is a hot hot
mills and socks. You know that's going to be coming around.
But on on what happened there this past Saturday with

(15:44):
Sunshine Party Rentals fifth year anniversary. It was a wonderful,
wonderful event. You know, a lot of great vendors, a
lot of great people. Ran into some people that I
haven't seen in a while that I used to work
with back in the day. Shout out to McKay. Michelle
McKay is I worked with three different but Schell's but
Michelle y Kay and then Laurence Sanders. We were some

(16:04):
of the first, the first cohort of mental health outreach
workers with the African American Health Coalition. So it was
nice to see them in the flesh and and and
get some pictures together. So it was a good time.

Speaker 9 (16:15):
And if you're a business owner, five years is a
threshold that you always tried to reach and oftentimes there's
a good chance you're gonna make it as a restaurant
or whatever if you made it for the five years.

Speaker 4 (16:29):
Definitely three to five, that three year mark is a
big milestone. But like you said, that five year market.

Speaker 9 (16:35):
And and deserves celebration. Definitely. I mean, that is a
lot of hard freaking work business going and in the green,
you know.

Speaker 4 (16:42):
Yes, yes, And in the green that's because I mean
that's the whole point of running the business is to
get some green. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (16:50):
Well, as long as you can pay yourself, right, that's
the thing. Oh well, and I like to thank Tter
Academy and they're over there in Muscoyah. Yeah, like they
got their market night. We got to market night. So
you know, there's a farmer's market downtown Salmon and gine
On too.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Man that I stopped over there like a couple of
weeks ago, and I got some papoosas and they were delicious,
and there's so many beautiful offerings. I even got the lemonade,
the what is it, the cucumber lemonade. I love the
you know, I'm not really supposed to be drinking that stuff,
but I treated myself as a diabetic it was and
theirs wasn't super sweet. So I love that because initially,

(17:27):
if they're super sweet, I'll go and cut it with water,
you know, I'll pour them out and and it I'll
pour them in another container and didn't cut it with
what I'm not pouring out nothing I don't be wasting nobody,
but it was. It was delicious, man, and I'm good vibes.
So many different food offerings, so I definitely look forward
to make my way back there one of these Fridays
or Saturdays when I'm in the area and grabbing some more.

Speaker 9 (17:48):
Food from and they have some fruit vendors. There are
some really good stuff.

Speaker 4 (17:53):
Yeah, they got people selling hats, clothing supplies. There was
a variet idea of offerings there, but I was there
for the food.

Speaker 9 (18:05):
Well. I'd also like to mention, uh or I love
Sam Barnardino. Standout of the week is the Sam Bernardino
County Museum and their staff. I'd like to give them
some actual props because they're the repository for most of
the history in the Salmeronnadino area. Now we do have
the Samrnadino Historical Society and the Native Sons of the

(18:26):
Golden West and a few other historical groups. But there
usually when an entity is backed by government tax dollars,
there's a good chance it's gonna stick around. Yeah, and
then when uh, that same entity is supported by a
very rich casino up there at Sam and weel the

(18:46):
Jave Thomas Saundwell then also that's a good chance that
they're gonna survive too. So I want our I want
our artifacts where they're gonna survive.

Speaker 4 (18:54):
I'm just gonna put this out in the atmosphere. I
would love the the casino. Yeah, you have a tan
Ya Javiaton casino. We would love to do I love
Samardino County live show with a live audience and interview
some of the tribal leaders and and and leadership within

(19:14):
the casino reach out to us. We would love to
make that happen. We won't charge you at all. We'll
do it for free.

Speaker 9 (19:20):
Come on, come on, and the Sambernardino On. The museum
has an incredible collection of the Jjavia Tom's artifacts and
some of the Koia and some of the other local
groups of Mojave. And they're all set up to where
you and the kids can go to the museum, walk

(19:43):
through these, uh these exhibits, and it's kid friendly, so
it it helps them kind of understand where that stuff
is coming from, you know. Yeah, yeah, and then like
in between the exhibits, there's kid friendly things to do. Definitely.

Speaker 4 (20:00):
You know, I'm a sole believer that we need to
tell our history of this nation in full truth and transparency,
one so we don't repeat the mistakes of the past,
and two to show that atrocities have happened, genocides have
happened here on this land, but yet we can still

(20:20):
come together as humanity, because that's what we're always gonna
be first and forema and never forget and build better
from those those tragic experiences.

Speaker 9 (20:30):
We repeat that.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
Yes, indeed, stuff it was. One thing I want to
say is I have a I have a huge hunch
where I expect to see you this weekend either Friday, Saturday,
or Sunday. Do you know where that's.

Speaker 9 (20:41):
Gonna be at?

Speaker 4 (20:43):
You know it? You know it? You're go, oh my god.
If I if I'm because I'm bro I literally have
to work from today to the twenty eighth. I have
things on the schedule, so I'm hoping to get there
maybe Sunday if if, if I can.

Speaker 9 (21:00):
I find the best day to go is Friday night,
because that's the night when everyone's energety. I don't I
don't know about that, but I just know that it
feels like the energy is really strong with the singing
and everything else. The Saturday is too it's it's it's Sunday.

(21:22):
You can feel that they're getting ready to.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
Hear.

Speaker 9 (21:27):
Saturday is to me the most fun day because they
you know, it's dancing all day, lost, all the competition,
grand opening you. But but Friday is like I kind
of feel like it's more local. A lot more people
show up that are from sann know areas the evening thing,

(21:49):
and I.

Speaker 4 (21:50):
Really I'm going to see. I'm going to see if
I ain't making no promises, but I'll try to get
out there for a Friday because normally I'll go on Saturdays,
and I'm definitely gonna try to come out on Friday.
And you know, I'm definitely bringing the camera because I
got some great shots last year and that's when I
was using my Canon R fifty with just my simple

(22:10):
e F lenses. But I'm gonna bring out the big.

Speaker 9 (22:12):
Gun on that fun.

Speaker 11 (22:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
Yeah, it gets try to you know, try to knock
it out the party.

Speaker 9 (22:17):
You want some fry bread, which is you know, everybody's
got to get some fried You might want to come early, right,
you know, get there a little early because I'm serious
that an hour or two yo.

Speaker 4 (22:28):
Yeah, was so long that I ended up going to
the one vendor that was doing Polynesian food and I
got some what is it the spam with the seaweed
and the rice. I forget the name of it, but
it's it's part of like oh no cells in Yeah, yeah,
that's it. Yeah, it's delicious though. My dad loved My

(22:52):
dad loves spam. I don't know if you ever had masou,
but you might have. You know, I haven't tried it
with eggs. My dad used to cooking with eggs, mam
with eggs. But you know that spam just has so
much damn sodium off.

Speaker 9 (23:07):
You can't have too much of it, something I craved
once in the one.

Speaker 4 (23:10):
Unless you're trying to get up out of here quick,
then go ahead and.

Speaker 9 (23:12):
Have But like I do have five cans in in
the cupboard because that stuff, if you look at the
expiration data, yeah yeah man, So like if you may
need that someday, you know, I feel it's a good thing,
a good way to keep some good protein on hand.

Speaker 4 (23:31):
Or maybe not good protein, but protein.

Speaker 9 (23:34):
I like spam and eggs once a while, I craving
occasion or with some hash brands.

Speaker 4 (23:40):
On that tip. What is what is for all? All
three of us. What is one of your favorite breakfast meals?
Is it? Is it that that spam and eggs? Is
that one of your Now.

Speaker 9 (23:49):
You want to go for my practice? If I'm getting
over the Baseline Burger or Jenny's Island or wherever right
or DJs. I like pancake and egg with bacon. And
why because for some reason I liked it with eggs
so easy because I like to take the yolk and
mix it with the pancakes and the bacon and then

(24:10):
take a bite.

Speaker 4 (24:10):
And sounds disgusting. My dad likes his eggs over over
easy with running with the yolk. Yeah, I ate him
like that sometimes to eat money or easy e How
about yourself?

Speaker 10 (24:25):
Uh? I, you know what, I think a breakfast burrito.
Can't go wrong with a breakfast burrito with some bacon,
extra crispy bacon in there. And uh or like I'm
a sucker for a breakfast sandwich too, like Grand slangwich
from Denny's basically any kind of variation of that out
of the park.

Speaker 4 (24:40):
You're a happy camp. Yeah. Do you where do you
go for your breakfast burritos in Riverside County?

Speaker 9 (24:44):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (24:44):
Uh, there's this spot around the corner called Amy's.

Speaker 4 (24:47):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (24:47):
And you know it's funny. I grew up there and
never went to this Amy's restaurant because it's kind of
in like the parking lot of a motel.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (24:56):
But then I was this lady I was dating. She
was on yell like most people are on Yelp and stuff.
I guess She's like, Hey, we were looking for a
spot great ratings, and I said, this spot around the
corner that I would never go to has like five
star and it's pretty inexpensive for like the amount of
food you got, Like you were saying last week, you
get like one meal you could split it.

Speaker 4 (25:17):
Yeah yeah, yeah, once, eat twice poet acting in for
poet or three times and you myself. I love me
some biscuits and gravy. I love some biscuits and gravy
with some I don't like my bacon crispy. I like
it a little flexible on I like it crispy now,

(25:41):
but that's one of my go tos. Throw some hot
sauce on it. I really enjoy it. And I love
when I go to hotels that have it. And you
know what, I'm going to Oakland October tenth through the twelfth,
and I booked the same hotel that I stayed in
last year. Yeah, and it's right by the water, so
and it's super affordable.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
So in that Breakfast edition is brought to you by
motivational realizations, the energy of positive food thoughts. Breakfast, you
better eat your breakfast.

Speaker 10 (26:14):
Support the other day, right.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
Yes, indeed, you know. But I don't even eat breakfast
that often. I'm more of a lunch and dinner guy,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 9 (26:21):
Well, I have a little history kid bit today and
it's on Mill Street. Now. When I think of Mill
Street like it's it's kind of weird. I like to
think of McDonald's.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
No, we used to go to that McDonald's where the
Burger Point is.

Speaker 9 (26:36):
Yeah. Yeah, and now burger right across the street from
a n Os or the Orange Show right there. Yeah,
try Burger Point is great. But like for some reason,
I always that was a McDonald's we would go to. Definitely,
I hear so I always think of them.

Speaker 4 (26:50):
But before you before you go into that speaking of
that exact McDonald's, it's funny because my dad does look
similar to James Earl Jones, right, And we went into
that McDonald's one day and the the young lady, young
Hispanic lady at the register, she just FROs and she
thought my dad was James Old Jones. She just froz.

(27:10):
It was cool and we knew, we knew what was
happening because that's happened to him a few times, because
he does look very similar saying complexion gray, here, where's
his glasses? And so that was just a pleasant memory
thinking about that McDonald's.

Speaker 9 (27:22):
I got one. It's not as cool as that one,
but but like I basically I was afraid I wouldn't
be able to get the deal for two all beef
patty special sauce. So this cheese, pickles, onions on us.
This was z Bone, Remember, Yeah, I was so scared.

Speaker 10 (27:41):
You guys gotta care you guys got you guys gotta
throw me in.

Speaker 4 (27:45):
I don't.

Speaker 10 (27:45):
I don't get that.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
What is it? That's the the use of those are
the ingredients for the big Mac, and and you would
use to One of the marketing campaigns basically was to
come in and sing that song if you wanted to
get a big Mac.

Speaker 9 (27:58):
For cheaper price, for the deal, p oh dude, you'd
be having me.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
Restaurants still did that.

Speaker 10 (28:03):
I'm singing in everywhere.

Speaker 9 (28:05):
I practiced and practice and practice, but I was still
so scared.

Speaker 4 (28:09):
I did it. There you go, how was the big man?

Speaker 9 (28:13):
It was good and without you know. I always didn't
like onions, so I was always blasphemy. Did I have
to put onions on? And or like they? Even my
mom made tricked me back in the day. She's like, oh,
that's rice. So then I'd be like, I'd be.

Speaker 4 (28:30):
Like, no, rice, bro, get this special kid out of here.
I don't remember.

Speaker 9 (28:38):
I would eat it if we said it was rice.

Speaker 4 (28:40):
So I'd be like, what, Oh gosh, the Jedi mind
lie to your children.

Speaker 9 (28:49):
That's Mill Street. This is from a guidepost to History,
Origin and place names of street names and sam Mara,
Nandino County by Elizabeth Richard. Mill Street barely had the
Mormon settlers arrived when they began plowing and planting a
huge grain field. They selected thirteen hundred acres between Little

(29:10):
Mountain and the base of San Bernardino Range. When this grave.
When this grain was harvested, the need for a grist
mill to grind it and produce flour was pressing the
Mormon settlement. Mill rite was George W. Sharene. He and elders.
Lineman and Rich had been looking for quite a while
for a suitable site for a mill. They finally selected

(29:33):
Warm Creek at the intersection of what is now Mill
and Allen Streets on fifth. On the fifth of July
eighteen fifty two, the entire colony gathered to hear a
short but patriotic appeal by the orator of the day,
a postponed Fourth of July celebration, and then all spent
the day harvesting the wheat. Two weeks later, the entire

(29:55):
group turned out to build a dam on Warm Creek
for the new gristmill. After a few hours work and
the tire stream was running through the mill race, and
on August seventh, eighteen fifty two, the Mormon clerk wrote,
our mill now does good work making flour. The mill
had been built for two runs of stones, but only
one side had been used to grind flour. The other

(30:17):
side was set up first for a circular saw to
cut up trees brought into the valley from the surrounding mountains.
Pictured at right is a Mormon gristmill. So it's just
like a big like looks like a two story square
building with a big hole where the water had run
through and they'd had a little like water wheel there

(30:38):
to catch the water. So basically teamy, you're like, oh,
you don't just go down to the store and buy
some Weaber's bread and eat it. No, you go and
you take your whole family. You harvest the wheat and
then you take it to the local mill and have
them grind it up on local stones, right, and then

(31:01):
you have flour that you can turn into things like
bread or cookies or or I don't know, maybe not beer,
but they probably just through the grain.

Speaker 4 (31:09):
Well yeah, yeah, you wouldn't grind it if they were
going to make the beer or the meat out of it.

Speaker 9 (31:14):
But like we take a lot of things for grounded
nowadays that like we don't harvest our own grain at all.
We don't even we probably don't even know what grain
looks like.

Speaker 4 (31:24):
Well I know, I know some do. And you have
a green thumb as well, so you'll you'll be fine.
But I really encourage more of our community to learn
how to grow to be self sufficient and self sustaining,
because you know, it only take a few things happening
for the food chain to be disrupted, and those that
are in urban areas are really going to be the

(31:45):
first people that are really going to struggle the most
because they don't know. Many of them don't have the
skills of growing your own food. So people such as
you and other people that know how to grow grow
their food, and other people that have prepared, prepared for
times like this. Because I say all that to say,
remember in elementary school how we used to put our
earthquake packs together every every year, And it's like, why

(32:07):
did we stop doing that? So I encourage my family.
We keep multiple cases of water we've.

Speaker 9 (32:13):
Always had, but like, why don't they teach the kids that.

Speaker 4 (32:16):
I have no idea and we need to do it.
Even once you're out of school, you need to do
that at your house. Half of your medicine at least
for a couple of weeks, or at least a week
of medicine, having multiple cases of water, having some food,
some like canned food, some dry food, some jerky things
that would last a while, spam, spam, spam, tuna, you
know what I mean, but things to survive because.

Speaker 9 (32:38):
Especially for like at least a week period if you
want to survive.

Speaker 4 (32:41):
You know, when Katrina happened, most people besides the people
that initially were killed by the storm. The others that
succume were lack of water. They didn't have water for
four or five days. If you don't drink water for
four or five days, you'll leave this planet.

Speaker 9 (32:56):
Yeah, and how are you gonna, you know, drink contaminated
water if you don't boil it. So you need some
way to light a fire, and so you know, things
like a lighter and matches.

Speaker 4 (33:07):
Flint matches, waterproof lighters, fly flashlights. They do sell those
straws now that have like multiple filters in them that
you could pull from pretty much and all these things.

Speaker 9 (33:18):
Like if you're with my family, like I have a
whole closet filled with survival stuff, I'm gonna be able
to help the whole dang neighborhood, you know, form an army.

Speaker 4 (33:28):
And God bless you. I don't think you should be
telling people that now we're going to Roberts House.

Speaker 9 (33:35):
They can come because my neighbors are fully armed and
they can join our army, or they can succumb. But
that like my father would do things like teach us
how to enclose the neighborhood and guard all entrances and exit.
So you build the cars up, you have a checkpoint.
You don't allow anybody into your neighborhood. You have to

(33:56):
go through multiple layers before they get to the food
and stuff because you have to be protective during these times.
People are going to be raiding the supermarket. Then there
won't be anything left or they might start all on fire.
The worst thing and everything's gone right, So the first
thing you do is your have food and then you
also make sure that food is accessible and that's and

(34:17):
those medical things are accessible, so like you don't want
to leave them in your car if all the time,
if you're not in your car all the time, but
you want one in your.

Speaker 4 (34:27):
Car, Yeah, especially if it's like an EpiPen or things
like that you might need.

Speaker 9 (34:32):
So you think outside the box with this stuff. But
you know, don't go overbearing, but like make sure that
you're safe for a week.

Speaker 4 (34:39):
Sorry, and I'm not I'm not like a doomsday prepper,
but things can happen. So if you want to give
your chance the best chance for survival, you need to
be preparing and have some food stored away, have some
water stort to way, have some medicine.

Speaker 9 (34:55):
Do you ever need something like that? Well, if someone
were to detonate like an E, E N P or
in our atmosphere, we wouldn't have electricity for probably a
few weeks at least.

Speaker 4 (35:06):
I mean, and that's if if they detonated E and P,
we would be the technology would be down for months
in nine years, because everything in our world nowadays runs
off of circuits.

Speaker 9 (35:18):
We just we'd see the military stuff moving around and
we'd be trying to figure out all our stuff getting Yeah, on.

Speaker 4 (35:24):
That tip, it's like I do want to I do
want to get an old school whip that is carbureted
right straight straight analog vehicle because those were still running.
But all our cars there they were going to be
you know, turns off. Yeah, just paper weights.

Speaker 9 (35:40):
But then that's where spam and tuna and your your
your medical supplies that if you know, maybe someone does
get sick and you need some ass.

Speaker 4 (35:49):
Brint, I could see in the like Mad Max, Robert
Porter's King Spam, King Spam, King Spam, can you please?

Speaker 9 (35:58):
I have always had at least one can of spam
in my Yeah. We're definitely a survival family, and I've
I've learned that, you know, I you know, I just
threw away a lot of that survival stuff that I
had when I was a kid. Like so, but so
you have to keep it, Yeah, yeah, you gotta, but

(36:20):
like this is it's a it's kind of like a
way of life you need to do, but don't let
it take over like extremeists.

Speaker 4 (36:29):
And and I'm not even opposed to having the the
bug out bags because you know how certain some of
them will go to specific locations and dig up some whole,
dig a hole and put certain supplies the radios and
things like that. I'm not even opposed to that because
to me, it's just it's better safe than sorry.

Speaker 9 (36:47):
You know, if you want to know how to protect
your food and everything, just watch them dance with wolves.

Speaker 4 (36:52):
It all because you're going to be dancing with the
human wolves and they're worse. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (36:56):
Yeah, Like human wolves will take your food. If you've
if you've saved things, you got to be able to
hide it quick too. So like whatever you have saved,
make sure it's protected in the spot that Like, like
I take this all for granted.

Speaker 4 (37:10):
My dad taught me how your no not a crazy,
so I will do a very wise intelligence.

Speaker 9 (37:16):
I'd come home and I'd be like, there's a fire,
what do you do? Where are you running? Right? Or
there's an earthquake, what's the first thing you do? And
like you make you run out to the freaking gas
line and turn it off.

Speaker 4 (37:29):
I hear you, Like, No, that's that's smart.

Speaker 9 (37:32):
Because where's the nearest knife in this where's the nearest
weapon in the house?

Speaker 4 (37:35):
I hear you.

Speaker 9 (37:36):
Maybe you run to grab it as quickly as possible.

Speaker 4 (37:38):
Because if an intruder comes in, you have to defend
your home. You like, you know, uh, and and that
that's just wise. This is the world we live in.
So if you're if you're that naive to think nothing's
going to happen to you, God bless you.

Speaker 9 (37:50):
And upon you, and hopefully it never happens. Even you
don't have to be you're prepared, but you don't have
to use.

Speaker 4 (37:58):
Yes, yeah, better I better have it and not need
it than need it and not have it.

Speaker 9 (38:04):
Or I have my club, I have my knife, and
I have my flash light, so I can choose what
I want to take outside with me as a walking down.
But if those those tools aren't there and available for
you when you need them, then you know you probably
should grab the flashlight. But like sometimes you might need
to grab that club, and my club is made of ironwood.
You don't want to get hit with his baseball.

Speaker 4 (38:26):
Well, I have a forty five, so you know when
you hit with that one either.

Speaker 10 (38:30):
Thirty eight specially.

Speaker 9 (38:32):
The one thing with weapons that with firearms, yes they
are great, but you have to be able to access
them in that instant, right, So if you're trying to
protect them, the firearm from your kids or whatever, sometimes
you have them in a box and everything, or like
you don't want to always just leave.

Speaker 4 (38:47):
It on under this yeah yeah, especially yeah, kids.

Speaker 9 (38:50):
So that that's why I like my dad always had
the arsenal, but that was like he wanted me to
use the club for right or the bowie first because.

Speaker 4 (39:01):
Yeah, you know you it's so much assessment that you
have to do in a split second. Right, if it's
someone that's unhoused and they're just looking for something, you know,
you might not want to shoot that, yeah, right.

Speaker 9 (39:13):
And you might get in trouble with the firearms.

Speaker 4 (39:15):
You can, you potentially can, because I know in certain
states they have like you know, King of the Castle
rules and stuff like that person does.

Speaker 9 (39:23):
Let off a firearm, it don't matter where you're at,
they're gonna come.

Speaker 4 (39:26):
Well they're gonna come. But you know, if the circumstances,
if someone really is breaking to you in their threat, Yeah,
you have the full right to protect your family, protect
your house.

Speaker 9 (39:35):
But like for instance, you can't just like if someone
steals your transmission out of your truck and they're running
out there, you start shooting at them or not. You
gotta use your brain, you.

Speaker 4 (39:47):
Know, definitely, definitely or or or never mind. I'm not
even leave that alone. Family Free Act. But we're just we're.

Speaker 9 (39:56):
Just trying to make sure you guys understand that, like
we come from a military family. Listen, we are prepared
for possibilities that could occur.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
Yeah, you gotta prepare for everything now. And we'd, like
you said, we don't wish any of this stuff happened.

Speaker 9 (40:08):
We're ready just in case.

Speaker 4 (40:10):
Just you got it. I mean, we from the Dino too.
Like you have to have your head on a swivel
out here, you know, because stuff happens, sadly, you know,
stuff really does happen.

Speaker 9 (40:19):
The other thing is also my dad would teach me,
is about trade. Literally, money is worth nothing when you
need food and stuff, but people always like jewelry. Yeah,
so if you got something that you could keep in
your emergency thing for a bartering tool that will really
catch someone's eyes, that might get you that water or

(40:39):
food that you need during that really crazy time.

Speaker 4 (40:42):
So that fuel, that gas you may need to exit,
you know, like for real. And I'm big on that too,
having you know, like a couple of like five, like
four or five different five gallon gas containers around just
to just to have some gas. I used to well,
once I get my own home, I'll definitely have a
shed in the back, and I definitely want to keep

(41:03):
a fifty fifty gallon drum of fuel. You know what
I mean. Well, yeah, demand shed and just you know,
really have it separated from the house. But I just
I just think you need to have these things. I
encourage people to have generators as well, you know, s's
as to your house because we sadly sometimes I see
a lot on the art on I Love Samarino County

(41:25):
page by Robert Porter, I always see people talking about
blackouts in their in their area, and if those things
last too long, you could lose three four hundred dollars
worth of food, right, It's like easy, yeah, over the
course of a day or two. Right, So It's like
if you had that generator and then often not that expensive,
you know, two three, four thousand dollars, but you could
have power where everyone else doesn't have anything, but you

(41:47):
still are able to utilize, you know, charge up your stuff,
keep your food. Most important to keep your food. Preserve
your food because that's the most and keep and water.
Those are the most important things that we need, is
water and food. For water and food, right, so yep.

Speaker 9 (41:59):
And if you wait till the last second to try
to get these.

Speaker 4 (42:02):
Things, oh man, you're gonna pay if there's any left,
it's gonna or you're gonna pay a huge premium because
sadly degreed kick saying every time you see these things.

Speaker 9 (42:12):
And you can live in an apartment and still have
an earthquake kit. You can uh be uh renting one
room out of somebody's home and still have a little
kit on the side for you and if you need.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
It, right not word up. I encourage you. I encourage you, man.

Speaker 9 (42:31):
And you might want to put something aside for your landlord.

Speaker 4 (42:34):
Too, or for for for those that already yes, totally.

Speaker 9 (42:39):
Yeah, your neighbors will be very important if something like
that does occur. Of you really will rely on that.

Speaker 4 (42:44):
That's why it's so important to know your neighbors.

Speaker 9 (42:47):
Now, do you know your neighbors' names? Do you do
you have their phone number to contact them?

Speaker 4 (42:51):
If there is at least three of the three on
the closest to me, and I'm blessed. We're we're in
the north end of Fontana, and we have a good
neighborhood where and I walk every day, right so I
know everybody. Yeah, so and they see me and so
good good neighbors. They have conversations all the time. What
I'm trying to institute is I'm trying to do like

(43:12):
a community block party where everyone kind of just cook
something in their front yard and we just kind of
walk up and down the block, get to talk to
one another, trade some food and stuff, you know. And
so I'm trying to organize that between the two streets,
oh man, because we have it's such great diversity over
there as well from We have Asians from different you know,

(43:33):
like some are from China, a few are from Japan.
We have some Guatemalans, we have some Mexicans. We have
a couple of blacks that are Ecuadorians, right, but they're
you know, Afro Latinos, you know what I mean.

Speaker 9 (43:49):
So inihood, i'd be eating good.

Speaker 4 (43:53):
I mean, they probably be knocking on the door, bro,
like for real, and it's all good because.

Speaker 9 (43:58):
That's one good thing FU does is good trade.

Speaker 4 (44:00):
Definitely, definitely, no, it is good trade. That's a bartering tool.
But you know one thing I wanted to shout out
because I know we probably got about fifteen minutes or
so left.

Speaker 14 (44:10):
It's flying by because we're so cool, people wanted to
listen to us a little bit, so we're not a
show about us and.

Speaker 4 (44:21):
And E buddy of course you know we can't do it.
You know, one thing and shout it out of E
money because he also is the navigator for Working within
the Margins with Z, and I have the pleasure of
being a guest host on her show. It seems like
it's going to be the fourth Thursday of each month,
so I'm proud of that. And thank you Uzze for
WelCom me on to your show as a co host.

(44:43):
So I got the Yeah, it's pretty pretty.

Speaker 10 (44:45):
Every Thursday at two pm. Every Thursday at two pm.

Speaker 4 (44:48):
Yes, thank you brother. Working Working within the Margins with
Ze difference definitely, man, I'm known Zaze for for well
over a decade. You know, when she used to work
for Connie Labor when Connie Label was the Senator. She
was one of her staff. And you know, I met
her via the advocacy with previous song jobs that I work.
But you know, she's a huge hockey fan. She's the

(45:09):
one that got me to go to the Ontario rain
game and I happened to see her there that night
I went, and you know, so really cool. She's starting
to grow her own food. She just showed her corn harvest,
so she's cultivating her green thumb, you know what I mean.
But growing their own definitely. We know you do, brother,

(45:32):
We know you do.

Speaker 9 (45:34):
Is it harvest has time?

Speaker 4 (45:38):
Harvest time. I'm just gonna leave that alone right there.
Harve harvest time, harvest.

Speaker 9 (45:46):
Wait a little bit longer if you think it's ready,
Wait two more weeks. If you think it's ready, wait too, crystals,
I promise you. Let me tell you we're.

Speaker 4 (45:58):
Talking about corn, talking about well definitely. The one thing
I wanted to shout out is the Environmental Education Collaborative.
I wanted to shout them out because they recently had
an art contest with art centered around environmental justice causes.
And I submitted a poetry piece to the contests, and

(46:21):
lo and behold, I end up being the winner of
the adult literary category, so they bless me. I don't
know what you do. Congrats. Is there a title with this, like, no, no,

(46:41):
there's no noble title or anything like missed the missed
the motivational realization. Yeah, that's his new name. That's his
new name. And my phone, Thank you, brother. I feel
like I got some put some respect on my name.
But no, yeah, yeah, I wanted to share the poetry

(47:04):
piece that I submitted. And this piece is called Fearless Creation.
And this piece was written where I used to I
used to tell people all the time that I was
so words to imagery. So it's a beautiful art piece
by an artist by the name of Mario Sanchez Nevado.
And the piece is called Betrayal, and it inspired this piece.
So here we go Fearless Creation. She rises in defense,

(47:28):
unable to endure another atrocity. Her land's molested in rape,
precious purity ripped from soil, her waters polluted and contaminated,
once purified, endless bounty now depleted, her skies polluted and tainted,
pure air, now toxin laden. She rises, spirited soul of
creation in defense, a scourge upon her being, a plague,

(47:51):
upon her being, a menace upon her being, scourging plague,
menacing the age of industry, corporates, greeds of death, forge
and destruction, cold art, the instruments made to steal, respecting
no boundaries, made to kill, valuing no lives, knowing no morality,
knowing no compassion, knowing no balance, knowing only wealth's power. Blinded,

(48:16):
corruption and defouled liberties. Ends in all its methods, ends
in all its approaches. Ends today. She rises Earth's spirited
soul of creation in defense, reclaiming her serenity, her land,
reclaiming her peacefulness, her water, reclaiming her tranquility, her skies.

(48:36):
As she faces man's fallen ambitions, cold still, the thief
of all life, coaxed and aim seeking the silence any
that oppose. She has no fear for her once loved creation,
reminiscing of a time before eating, no confusion, just elation,
no fear, just joy, no loss, just abundance, Scoffing at

(48:57):
man's limited understanding and futile attempts to intimidate its maker,
She is the ages, unlimited time, here long before man,
and we'll be here long after man. Eroding humanity, just
a mix of chafe and dust within the winds, within
the grains, within the space of her time. Setting of
a once beloved sun in view, now the falling of

(49:20):
an abomination. A new sun has risen, unbreakable and unrelently shine,
shattering through clouded darkness, the Sun's reflection upon his first love,
her creation. A balance has been struck. She rises in conquests,
in peace, fearless creation by a pionni locker, motivational realizations,

(49:40):
the energy of positive thought. So, Hey, I love y'all, guys. Man,
y'all maybe feel specially y'all. Gotta bless y'all.

Speaker 9 (49:50):
So what does that mean to you?

Speaker 4 (49:51):
Dude? You know, and I'll show you the peace as
I respond to that question. But what that means to
me is the earth. We will never overpower the power
of the earth itself, the elements, the winds, the waters,
the rains. That we are such a fragile creation upon
this land, and that, thank you, sir, that we need

(50:14):
to learn how to, We need to. We need to
as many of cultures throughout the world unlike the Western
ideals that we live in. There's many cultures respected and
a balance of the earth and the elements, such as
our indigenous culture. Right, they understood the value of balance.
You only take what you need. But we live in

(50:36):
a society, especially when you look at it to a
capital lens, capitalism lens, it's about greed. It's not about
me giving it enough for my family. It's me stockpiling
everything I need and disregard any other one's needs. Right,
So I see this as Earth will always strike a
balance and and hopefully we find our way of respecting

(50:57):
Earth where we're able to reside and continue to live
here for many more generations. But but we must respect
her because or respect the earth or Gaya or however
one sees it. We must respect it because without this
place we have no life. You know, without the air,
we have no life. Without water, we have no life.
Without the elements, we are not alive. So we must

(51:18):
find a respect and a balance to to to give
respect and and and and praise praise the elements as well,
you know what I mean? Not saying like pray to
them and like my Lord is fire right, but but
to have a healthy respect for the elements, because these
are the elements that allow us to live. For the Earth, yeah, definitely.

Speaker 9 (51:39):
Yeah, Like we're so lucky as humans that we even
know what.

Speaker 4 (51:42):
The Earth looks like from space.

Speaker 9 (51:45):
Yeah, most of our ancestors had no idea what the
Earth looked like. They thought it looked like a turtle
because of the way it looks as it's the reflection
offrom the sun.

Speaker 4 (51:56):
Definitely for some indigenous every every culture has their all
to get to.

Speaker 9 (52:01):
Figure out, right, but it's just wow, Like we like
to know that, like we're on the sphere but never
be able to see it.

Speaker 4 (52:08):
You know. One thing that is amazing. There's a tribe
in Africa called the Dogon people and they are still
just like kind of with the pyramids, right when when
Western minds don't believe other cultures were able to achieve
great things, they want to say Aliens did it. But
the Dogon people had star maps that were so accurate

(52:30):
that they still can't figure out how these that tribe
was able to, you know, calculate the stars, mark the stars.
But they had star maps that were so advanced and
it's a lifetime of looking up and observation and observation
you know, you really know it. And many and many
of tribes have looked to the sky and and learned.

(52:52):
I mean all the cultures that navigate, that navigated the oceans.
You have to be able to look at the stars
and identified the north star gave you a heading and
bearing to let you know where you're going.

Speaker 9 (53:02):
And that's also when I have to plant this or
harness this or.

Speaker 4 (53:05):
Definitely des whatever. It makes me think of the Farmer's Almanac,
But there was things. It was knowledge and wisdom prior
to the Farmer's Almanac. All right, you know so, yeah,
there's every culture on this world is a beautiful culture
and a brilliant culture. And I pray that we could
get to a place where we respect all cultures and
there's no dominate or superior, like we're all gonna die,

(53:28):
Like there's no need to live as divided as we
are currently within this country, with this hate festering, and
it's sad, sickness.

Speaker 9 (53:36):
And culture is a human construct. We make it up. Yeah,
we are all a mix of DNA.

Speaker 4 (53:42):
We're all humanity.

Speaker 9 (53:44):
We're humans and a little bit of a couple other
non human ancestors.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
That's all will ever be. It's humans. We're humanity and
this is.

Speaker 9 (53:52):
Something we're just a mix of of of what worked
best on earth, you know.

Speaker 4 (53:58):
And with that being said, we're we're all blessed to
be alive, and why can't we take it, take advantage
of this gift of life given to all creations that live.
We You don't come out the womb hating people. You
don't come out the womb racist these like you said,
these are learned concepts or greedy Yes, these are the
ills of man that we battle in this world. We
have to decolonize our mind and value the gift of

(54:22):
breath itself and recognize that's that's the equal playing field,
that's our equality. Because you take that away, we all leave.
You take away the while we're all going take away,
we're all going. So we are all in the same
experience and it's a beautiful experience. But we can make
it better if we love one another and and love
one another. That's that's what it is. Love, brother, Love

(54:43):
is the key. It's the key.

Speaker 9 (54:45):
And if you focus on money, it's hard to focus
on love. It really is, because it feels like if
you're just focusing on money, you're loving using that money
to love yourself, right, you know, and not and not us.

Speaker 4 (54:58):
And one of the religious texts it talks about for
the men that or men or women or them they
that have a love for money, that is easier for
a camel to get through an eye of a needle
than for those that covert great wealth to get into
the Kingdom of heaven. All right, sure, for those that
ascribe to the Christian philosophy, not everything, No, for real,

(55:23):
it could it could lead you astray. Like I'm an entrepreneur.
I like money, right well, but I like money to
because it gives you opportunity, Like if you have great wealth,
you could really bless and address great things like Bill
Gates is a many others philanthropy people, right, you do
what you have. Some like your Elon Muss and Bezos

(55:44):
where they is covering it for themselves. Others know that
there's no way they could spend these billions of dollars,
so they they're choosing to do positive things for humanity.
And I think if if anyone is blessed with great wealth,
for if you and I are to be blessed with
great monetor care your wealth, that it's to be a
blessing unto humanity, and that's the way I like to

(56:04):
That's how I'm going to do mine, you know.

Speaker 9 (56:06):
But once I get my great wealth, then we're running
you for office presents.

Speaker 4 (56:17):
No brother who knows I I who knows.

Speaker 9 (56:21):
Before before we get done, I'd like to mention that
the new Ceremony of Living Life is out volume five
September December. It's got some really cool stuff for kids
in here. And then also the community dumb dates stuff
about east Side skate Park around bringing a bridge opening.

Speaker 3 (56:37):
Oh.

Speaker 4 (56:37):
I got the drive over the bridge last last Saturday.

Speaker 9 (56:40):
I over nice and smooth.

Speaker 4 (56:42):
It was nice and smooth, and I'm happy. I didn't
see no tagging on it or anything like that.

Speaker 9 (56:46):
So they're keeping up on it. They're stagging here there,
but you know, of course they'll always be. And then
our our Arts and Historical Preservation Commission meeting, my first
one back. I went great. We're talking about our possible
new arts district down arts policy. We're integrating the history
back into the agenda because it got left out a

(57:08):
little bit, and uh, we did not change the time
for the meeting, so we tabled that until next meeting
to see if we're going to change.

Speaker 4 (57:18):
I had the pleasure of being a part of that
think tank that was filding the community's input on the
arts corridor that we're hoping to manifest on E Street.
Shout out to the Arts Connection I'm going to reach
out to and the Garcia Center. Yeah, shout out to
Michael Score. Matter of fact, I'm gonna bring it. Try
to get Alejandro and Michael on at the same time.

(57:38):
I think and Miriam good show. Yeah, totally good show.

Speaker 9 (57:42):
I have asked Michael a few times.

Speaker 4 (57:44):
Yeah, we're going to make it. I'm gonna pull came on.

Speaker 9 (57:47):
But in fact he's supposed to invite me on his
old podcast or.

Speaker 4 (57:52):
I might have to pull out some old Sammardino generation now.

Speaker 9 (57:57):
The shirt.

Speaker 4 (57:59):
Hey brother man, all right.

Speaker 9 (58:02):
If Yanny, it was a great show today. Thank you
for sharing. Like I think, I like these shows about
me and you because we can us and and money,
because we can show what we're learning in the community
and what we've seen and what because we are out
in the community.

Speaker 4 (58:18):
So there's some respect on the community.

Speaker 9 (58:20):
You want to you want to learn more, follow it
Beyoni Locker or Motivational Realizations on Instagram and then also
follow Robert Porter or I Love Sammonadino by Robert Porter
on Facebook group and find out everything. And this is
Robert Porter Locker with I Love Samil Calendar Ray Show
and we all Alan.

Speaker 4 (58:54):
Man those the Blues You're not.

Speaker 15 (59:00):
And the Blues Load them News.

Speaker 12 (59:02):
It Deep dos, a'm all game, a tall game, Live
in the Blues. The Blues logan made from my Joy News.
It makes You War Day, Lose.

Speaker 15 (59:22):
The Blues lovan made NBC News on CACAA Lomola sponsored
by Teamsters Local nineteen thirty two protecting the Future of
Working Families Teamsters nineteen thirty two dot Org.

Speaker 16 (59:51):
I'm Lily in Vasquez with Community Matters. There are many
car clubs and car shows throughout the Illan Empire. I
visited a car show in Yukaipa and spoke with David Auvilo,
president of Past Pleasures car Club. He shared about the club,
its purpose and when it first began.

Speaker 4 (01:00:08):
Well, it's kind of a debate.
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