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November 3, 2025 • 60 mins
KCAA: I Love San Bernardino County with Robert Porter on Mon, 3 Nov, 2025
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ah NBC News Radio, I'm Jim Roop. The Trump administration
plans to use contingency funds to partially pay SNAP benefits
as the shutdown continues. In accord filing, the administration said
the money would cover fifty percent of eligible household's current allotments.

(00:20):
It comes after two separate rulings last week ordering the
administration to tap emergency funds to fund the program. President Trump, meantime,
says New Yorkers must vote for Andrew Cuomo in the
New York City mayoral race. Trump said in a truth
Social post, if zorn Mam Donnie one, it would be
highly unlikely he would contribute federal funds beyond the minimum required.

(00:41):
Trump went on to call Mam Donnie a communist who
gives New York a zero chance of success. NBC Sam
Brock reports, ma'am Donnie's alleging Cuomo's a puppet for Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
He's received millions and millions of dollars from billionaire donors
MAGA aligned Trump aligned donors, and has said from the beginning,
you're the people speaking say, you know many working class
families and diverse communities all over New York City. You
want to vote for one representative and then you're seeing intervention.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Cuomo denies the puppet allegation. A major study out of
Sweden shows that some hormonal contraceptives are linked to a
slightly higher risk of breast cancer.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
It involved two million women in teenagers ages thirteen to
forty nine and is the largest study of its kind.
Researchers at of Soli University found that some progestins, particularly desogestral,
pose an elevated breast cancer risk, but the study's lead
author says she does not encourage women to stop using
hormonal contraceptives. She says they provide important health benefits, which

(01:40):
include relief of mestraal pain and heavy bleeding. She's advising
women to consult their doctors. I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
The storm system moving up the East Coast is set
to bring areas of the Northeast and mid Atlantic rain
to start the week. Impacts from the rain are expected
to be minimal, but it could result in travel delays
around the I ninety five corridor. Jim Roope, NBC News Radio.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
Right now, there are young people across the world facing
a tough choice continue their dream of education or drop
out to help their family. Put food on the table.
You can help change their future in a single moment.
See how far your support can go at unbound dot
org ok c A A.

Speaker 5 (02:25):
Let me tell you something about a bully. The only
thing they understand is strength. The Democratic Party were furious
at me for organizing the need to impeach campaign, but
we saw the frat. Millions joined the movement. Trump tried
to steal one election. He's trying again. Now it's Texas
versus California. You want to beat Trump. Democrats can't keep

(02:46):
playing by the old rules. Vote yes on Prop fifty
and let's stick it to Trump.

Speaker 6 (02:53):
Salute and support our troops and veterans. This message from
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(03:14):
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Visit Millennium metalfab dot com. Millennium Metal Fabrication Thanks our
heroes in uniform.

Speaker 7 (03:27):
This important time sensitive message is brought to you by
this station's generous 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 8 (03:47):
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 zero zero zero
five nine five one seven six nine zero zero zero five.
A popular and local Medicare plan is improving. Others are

(04:11):
raising copays and adding deductibles, biggest changes in the Medicare
drug program in fifteen years.

Speaker 7 (04:18):
We thank George Letzfield and let's Field Insurance for their
generous support of this radio station.

Speaker 6 (04:30):
Redlands Auto Electric reminds everyone that the blood you donate
gives someone another chance at life. Somedate that someone might
be a friend, a loved one, or even you, So
please give blood and give the gift of life. This
message courtesy of Redlands Auto Electric at one one sixty
five West Park Avenue in Redlands known for quality, integrity
and knowledgeable service. Call nine oh nine seven ninety two

(04:52):
four seven seven six Redlands Auto Electric on the air
because they care.

Speaker 9 (04:58):
In dese demolition in a Huntington par reminds area employers
that our local veterans possess outstanding leadership skills, valuable technical abilities,
and focused work ethics. Bring Uncle Sam approved performance, precision
a mission dedication to your organization, Hire smart and higher vets.
That patriotic reminder is courtesy of Indy's Demolition in Huntington Park.
INDI's Demolition is on the air and support of our

(05:20):
area veterans, active duty military personnel, and all military families.
Thank you for your service, Thank you for your sacrifice.

Speaker 10 (05:29):
Miss your favorite show. Download the podcast at KCAA radio
dot com.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
KSEYAA.

Speaker 11 (06:00):
Never give a pu your go stay focused on your
focus of your succeed because I'm hoping you do. Keep
climbing up the letter because to keep the success, go
hard and go home. Never settled for less life express,
but we gotta deal with it home and to the
prayer to the man to put the shield. Only working
for what you get, to appreciate what you've got. You
can no ways to proof. Just don't stop going. When

(06:21):
you bring to achieving your life, gotta take a chance,
like grothing the dice. It won't come to you, so
you gotta go get it. At the end of the
day and of theus this price used to say, if
there's a will, there's a waste. So I live by
until this very day. I kept bone mashing and I
never gave up me believing in myself as the.

Speaker 4 (06:39):
Way I came up your dream.

Speaker 10 (06:51):
You gotta keep.

Speaker 11 (07:05):
Family.

Speaker 10 (07:07):
This is Robert Porter, Miss Nippiani Locker with the I
Love Samer Nadino County Radio Show on Casey NBC one
O six point five f M. Ten fifty am, when
we will talk politics, coach in history. Right now I'm
setting up the show, so, oh, you don't need those, right,
We'll probably use those for later, but uh yeah, we've

(07:27):
had a great day to We had a great weekend.
We celebrated Halloween and Dia Dillos wear tills for two days. Man,
it was incredible. Eric, did you have a good time
and how do we find out how to find more
information about casey aa?

Speaker 6 (07:41):
Thanks for asking. I had a great time spending with
the family and stuff. Went to go visit the sema.

Speaker 10 (07:45):
Why are you still wearing your mask?

Speaker 6 (07:47):
Ouch?

Speaker 12 (07:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (07:48):
By the way, first thing I first, he says to
me today when he sees me, you look tired. Never
a niceness year.

Speaker 10 (07:56):
But also you didn't say like vampire time.

Speaker 6 (08:00):
Yeah, now you're saying it.

Speaker 10 (08:02):
You could also tone zombie time.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
Yes, yes, Off k c A app, off the Google
play Store and the Apple app. Go ahead and just
type in k C A A and you can listen
to Paris, France or Paris, California. Ah wee wee.

Speaker 10 (08:14):
And uh, don't you have a show on k c A.

Speaker 6 (08:17):
Uh, yes, I appreciate the plug man. Yeah, don't forget
to turn to tune into Palm Trees and Progress Presents
every Tuesday from seven to nine and on all streaming platforms,
Palm Trees and Progress Presents.

Speaker 10 (08:27):
Thanks Brada, right on, right on, Thank you Eric for that.
We appreciate you and k c a A and the
manager Mark Westwood and all they do here at k
c A. And if you are interested in a show,
hit the general manager Mark Westward up and uh he
can get your show. We've uh, we've done that with
several people and they've got their own show going on
and you know, like, you know, I really love to

(08:49):
see people making movement with the tools that they have
at their that are available to them. The radio, especially
AM radio and FM RAO like this where you can
actually have your own show is a very rare occurrence,
something very special here at KCAA, So you know, take
advantage of this possibility. Right, Most places like k CAL

(09:10):
and stuff, you know, they have very set programming, so
you know, you can't really have your own show. In fact,
you know, Jesse Durant can't even come on here, right,
that's how strict the rules are, right, And I listened
to Jesse Durant almost every day. I'm the biggest fan here, right.
I love him and Jeff Pope. They are awesomeness like
X one Z three point nine and you know, ninety

(09:33):
nine nine and then you know, you know, Jesse Durant
moved around a little bit, but we've always followed them
as a family, right, So they're really cool stuff to
you know, you know, talk about another radio station here
on ZASH, right, but they can't do the theme. It's
kind of weird. So that's why it's a special thing
you can do here. And you know, I do love

(09:53):
Ka and I have fun here. It's been over ten years.

Speaker 12 (09:56):
You know, it's funny.

Speaker 6 (09:57):
My mom loves Jesse Durant as well and never misses
one of his shows. But uh, missus mine all the time.

Speaker 10 (10:03):
Yeah, it hurts a little bit, like I often wonder
if maybe one time he might have clicked on, you know,
because he's a real superstar, you know, like you might
have clicked on a video here that, And occasionally he
does talk on something here or there. I know he's busy,
so but that's still cool to me. You know, I
always love seeing him around town too. He's a hard worker.

(10:24):
I'd like to mention our sponsor, Golden Pizza and Wings
over on Olive Them Waterman or Golden in Highland. You
can get a large cheese or pepperoni pizza for right
now take out only five fifty five tax. Five fifty
five plus tax for a large pepperoni or cheese pizza.
That is a sweet deal. But uh, you know, who

(10:47):
knows how long it will last. And the normal is
seven to fifty five plus tax. But that's still a
good deal. So yeah, So you want to feed your
family on a Friday night, you know, come down to
the pizza place. Hit up Golden Pizza and Wings and
get some pizza for your kids. And then you know
you want to sell for yourself, get that too, right, Yeah, yeah,
that's what my madre gets. She'd be getting that chicken

(11:09):
salad over there, real good stuff, all right. I'd like
to also mention Pal Charter Academy over at twenty four
fifty Blake Street Chat. Pal Charter Academy helps give your
kids a foundation when they're starting the school system. And
here in the city of Sanma, do you know if
you're just coming here or if your kids are needing

(11:30):
a little bit more special attention and you want them
to be in a school with with an automotive program,
maybe a video, video and audio programs. They have cooking, uh,
all kinds of sports teams, so you know, uh can yeah,
consider a Pal Charter Academy for your kid. Yeah. If

(11:52):
you'd like more information, go to info at palcenter dot
org or call nine O nine eight eight seven dash
seven zero zero two for more information over there at
Pal Charter Academy. You know, we just did their Halloween
event and that was incredible. Every single person who came
there and got a pumpkin. You know, I know, the

(12:12):
pumpkins are only five bucks, you know, or sometimes ten
or it's the fancy ones, but that could go towards
candy for the kids and stuff, and a lot of
families have to choose between that and decorations and everything.

Speaker 7 (12:24):
So but.

Speaker 10 (12:27):
Oh yeah, and like we carved and I got a
free pumpkin. I did not carve my free pumpkin, though
I carved another pumpkin. But my free pumpkin is still alive.
It's out with my scarecrows for harvest right now. So
I change the decorations. You take down the Halloween and
now I put up the scarecrows and things like that.

(12:47):
And the reason I do this is because if we
participate in these these cultural things, dadlos Martos, Like I
had some of those decorations up as well, and then
I took them down. Like I don't know what mixed
salmon need a little bit more fun, Yeah, it does, right,
Like so when you go buy a house and you
see that they spend all this money on decorations and everything,

(13:09):
I'm just like, wow, they must have a storage but like,
but if they don't, I feel sorry for her, right
but still, you know, like you guys got a Halloween decorations?
Did you do it this year.

Speaker 13 (13:20):
Or not this year? The kids, the kids, so it's
kind of even hard to put them up with them
right now. And then we have a little terrible one,
so yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:31):
Ready he ends up in the spider webs exactly. Yeah,
the spider webs end up all over the house.

Speaker 13 (13:37):
Oh yeah, that's the problem we had.

Speaker 10 (13:38):
Yeah, well for us, it's also my Madre making sure
that she has some fun, you know, like especially since
I thought I was gonna lose her in last January.
Like we're gonna make it to Christmas. Team like I was, like,
we made Halloween, We're gonna make Thanksgiving, you know, like
each time it's like a milestone for me, and I
will make ten of them. But you know, like going

(14:01):
through all that craziness in the beginning of the year,
now it feels like my life is, you know, finally
getting kind of a little bit more and more normal. Course, right,
not easy, but it's still I'm rolling with it, and
it feels good to know that my mom.

Speaker 12 (14:15):
Was okay, yes you know, yes, yes, yes.

Speaker 10 (14:18):
I'd also like to mention our standout of the week.
So our Standouts of the week is the San Bernino
City Parks and Rec Department. I just want to give
them a shout out over there, under the leadership of
Vanessa and our team. Wow, they really went all out
for Halloween and all summer. I mean those events are hot, man,

(14:40):
I didn't even know almost like they still make it happen,
you know, and then like two days of the Delis
Wuertos this year. Thank you. Yeah, just that we deserve
that in our town, right, Yes, you know, a lot
of towns they you know, make it one day and
it's you know, it's all about the companies or selling

(15:01):
things or whatever. But but it shouldn't be. It's about
it's about our ancestors. It's about remembering the past and
the people that that we held deer. So the fact
that they did that for two days in their ferenda
had you know, locals from you know, all walks of life.
Some I recognized and I really you know, that really

(15:22):
touched my heart. So I got my mom out there.
We got to watch the wonderful Aztec dancers and Michika
dancers and the florical florical. Yeah, but I had a
great time. Did you guys have a good weekend?

Speaker 13 (15:40):
Sure did we did a lot.

Speaker 10 (15:43):
Any trick or treating.

Speaker 13 (15:44):
Yeah, we went to Redlands. We took the kits to Redlands,
a lot of hunted houses. We actually did a couple
of hunted houses here in San Bernardino. And nobody really
talks about it, but there's so many hunted houses out
here during Halloween out here.

Speaker 10 (15:56):
Well you you guys talked about it in all your videos.

Speaker 12 (15:58):
Oh yeah, you were.

Speaker 10 (16:00):
Definitely making sure we all knew about the cool hunted houses.
And so you went over to was it Olive Street
the famous trick or treating spot in Redlands or you
just went all over.

Speaker 12 (16:11):
No, there's a certain spot we go to every year.
I forgot the address, but it is in Redlands. But
they always have a haunted house there that's free and
it's free for the community. Anybody can go. And also
there's one on H Street and that one's very known
and it's right down on my vernon H Street and

(16:33):
they man, the stuff that they have is like they
go all out, all out, Oh my god, all out.

Speaker 10 (16:39):
Those those are my kind of people, right.

Speaker 12 (16:41):
Yeah, And then there was another one on Valencia, but
I guess she moved from there and now she's in
rialto so we actually went to four hundred houses excuse me, Redlands, Sambordino,
and Rialto and we went to the one you went
to the carnival.

Speaker 13 (16:59):
Okay, oh yeah, really nice.

Speaker 10 (17:01):
Yeah, we had we had a we had it's at
least five. That's good. Like Sammernandino always inspires me, man,
Like I'm serious, Like when the bankruptcy was around, like
there was like one or two and like you name them, right,
So that's cool that we were starting to expand and
like you know, like maybe the city someday we'll have

(17:22):
a super super hardcore all in the house, right.

Speaker 13 (17:26):
Well, that's something we kind of want to do. We
kind of want to push for that off for next year.
We want to try to see we can get you know,
the community together and we can actually see we can
actually do something big for Sanbordino, Like if you.

Speaker 10 (17:39):
Could get Court Street square, maybe incredible.

Speaker 13 (17:42):
That's what we're pushing for. We're trying to push for that,
but you know, it's a little hard.

Speaker 12 (17:47):
But we've been trying to take steps also to the
Boys and Girls Club in the West Side Shembergino. It's
been close and that's something that we grew up with
where we used to go to the summer, they had
to pull Halloween, Thanksgiving, they would do something so everybody
from the community would go to the Boys and Girls Club.
So now that being gone, you know, there's nothing there

(18:09):
for the kids to go to. So when you see
haunting houses and stuff like that, I mean, the community
comes out, man, and I love that man, because we
had the Boys and Girls Club. They don't have that,
So you know, that's something I was trying to see,
what can we do to at least get the community
going to talk about it, Like, hey, listen, So we're.

Speaker 10 (18:30):
You know, we kind of slid into the interview, but
introduce yourselves. My name is Henry.

Speaker 12 (18:38):
I'm from Family Seat Food, the CEO. This is my wife.

Speaker 13 (18:43):
I'm Nina. I'm known as Imagine. I guess creator.

Speaker 10 (18:48):
Family right hand woman. Yeah, yeah, she's they're both the
creators of a great business. Yes, and also do a
lot of marketing. So we're gonna get into that stuff.
I wanted to make sure and mentioned you guys name
before me, But I'd like to mention that the standout

(19:11):
of the week, the Seminary of Parts of rec is
brought to you by a Chubsey Smashberger, our new sponsor,
a Victor and Justin. We're supposed to come today, but
unfortunately businesses that do not follow live radio schedules. Yeah,
so we we love you and we'll get you back on.

(19:31):
We're gonna I'm trying to make a show with sky
Tie as well. Daniel over there, he's just expanded his business.
They're not sky Tye. I always say that Tie Place
type My first sky my first tye food that I
really like started promoting with sky Tie. It was on
fortieth Street, but they moved to U kaipa. Oh wow,

(19:54):
so like yeah, like, but my first type food I
ever ate was Tie Place. Okay, pod cu Have you
tried that before? It's a noodle dish that is so yummy,
It's like really good, right, So I like I always
liked typhood from that point on, And so that's why
type type Place was like a like I don't know,

(20:15):
like a place that you would go when you had
that craving, right, And then sky Tie I found something
similar there, right, So I would do both of them forever,
But then Skytie moves, so now I just do typelas
Orchid Tie pretty good over on Baseline. Yes, tie Food
there too, So you know, I don't just go to

(20:37):
one place, but I do like to showcase places that
are expanding.

Speaker 12 (20:42):
Right.

Speaker 10 (20:42):
So, like you have a business like sky Talk, I
mean a type place that's been there for how long
since I was eighteen or earlier, right, And they had
that same area and they could only produce a certain
amount of profit with that area because they had a
certain amount of tables, yes, and at certain hours you're open, right,

(21:06):
So like businesses that have a small area to eat
are limited in the amount of profit that they can make.
These are the types of things you have to look
at team before you start a business. You have to
understand what a unit is. You have to understand how
you're gonna sell that unit, and then you have to

(21:27):
understand is that gonna make a profit within the five
year term of your business to be successful. So my
dad always told me, if your business makes it five years,
then you can consider yourself that it's probably gonna make it.
It's kind of similar with restaurants and things like that.
You make it five years, you understand the system pretty good.

(21:48):
Now now with inflation and everything, recently, all these businesses
have had.

Speaker 12 (21:52):
To change, right, and.

Speaker 10 (21:55):
What's really interesting about this is the places that I
used to think were expensive aren't changing their prices. Why
aren't they changing their prices because they might own the
property that they're on and they can keep it the same, right,
But everywhere else it's hit with inflation and they still
gotta pay rent. They got to raise all the prices.

(22:16):
So it's weird, like like a few years ago, places
that I thought were expensive, I'm going to now and realizing, well,
they didn't raise their prices that much. But you go
to Standard Brothers and you can barely get out of
there with live things.

Speaker 13 (22:30):
Man.

Speaker 10 (22:32):
Yeah, yeah, it's one hundred dollars. Oh yeah, that's craziness.
So businesses are having a hard time now. So that's
why you got to think through these things before you
just jump into them. Now, what I wanted to talk
about today? Wait? Wait, I have one Oh man, I
got one more announcement that I need to make. We

(22:52):
have the Turkey Trot coming up here in Sama Bernandino
and the Turkey Trot New day is Saturday, November twenty second. Now,
we used to have the turkey I've been the MC
for over ten years. We used to have it on
Turkey Day on Thanksgiving. We've changed because to be able
to do it at cal State, you can't do it

(23:14):
on that day. So we're going to do it on
a Saturday before Thanksgiving, which would be kind of interesting
because oh, I have a Thanksgiving off for once. Wow, man,
it's been ten years, Like I don't know, like like
we still get out of there, put plenty of time
to eat and everything, but to like sleeping on Thanksgiving days.

Speaker 12 (23:32):
Like whoa right.

Speaker 10 (23:34):
But it's the new Turkey Trot. If you'd like to register,
go to run sign up dot com, slash race, slash
c A slash San Bernardino slash s B t T
sb t T and that's a semonyo Turkey Trot. So
basically you can go there and sign up and register

(23:54):
for it and then you know, go to the day.
We'll have a grand old time, you know, yelling out,
doing the turkeys, d I, loving samon Adino and getting healthy,
all the all the same. Yanni should be there of
course today, Yanni at Bianni Lockhart and our sponsor Motivational Realization,

(24:15):
the Energy a Positive Thought is over at Redland's Photography
Club right now, learning to be an incredible photographer, which
he already is, but he's getting good skill sets and
he will be back next week. So we do miss you, Yanni,
and we're looking forward to seeing you back. The Turkey
Trot will be on. I will be there on November

(24:35):
twenty second. I just talked to Felicia Alexander and our
local school board member as well, and also Hern Damon
run the Turkey Trot and it will be a great time.
We're trying to figure out the coffee right now. We
always have free coffee out there and stuff like that
and I usually pick it up. So should be a
fun time. And please register at run sign up dot com,

(24:56):
slash Race, slash CA, slash Samonardino, slash b t T
all right, team, Well, that is all I have for
that today, and we'd like to talk this show a
little bit. We're gonna focus on entrepreneurs today, right so
we want to, uh, you know, talk a little bit
about how you guys got into being entrepreneurs.

Speaker 12 (25:17):
We were gonna talk.

Speaker 10 (25:18):
About that with Chubbsy's and stuff like that, but unfortunately
they couldn't make it today, so we're just gonna just
we're with three business orders.

Speaker 6 (25:25):
He Eric, you own a business man, yes, sir, yes,
he's so weed right not anymore?

Speaker 12 (25:33):
Not no more, like he's.

Speaker 10 (25:41):
Like, man, I don't pay tax, buddy, that's but no. No,
Eric has a business well with his radio. Right, so
he's got you know, Palm Trees and Progress, which is
also a shirt company.

Speaker 6 (25:54):
Yeah, well it's a skate brand. Uh so yeah we do.
We have skateboards, we have a shirts, socks, all that
kind of merchandise. We have a cool little skate team too,
so cool people who uh shred and you know, put
on for the company Palm Trees in Progress dot com.

Speaker 12 (26:08):
Check it out.

Speaker 10 (26:09):
So, like, we have entrepreneurs all around us. A lot
of times in today's world, you can't make it with
just a job. Yeah, like you're thinking, what, I'm working
at Walmart, but you need snap benefits to make it?

Speaker 12 (26:25):
Right?

Speaker 13 (26:26):
Wow?

Speaker 10 (26:26):
Why why you should? Like you always complain, well, you
guys gotta work. Well if you don't, you can't make it. Like,
so you gotta work within this system that's really not
fair as it is. So getting a side business is
very important. It will provide you with that extra cash
that you might be able to take a vacation someday

(26:47):
with Now, I understand if you work salary and you
work your butt off all day, But do you come
home and have a beer. Do you come home and
have a beer. Well, maybe one day, don't come home
have a beer. Maybe one day come home and work
on your business.

Speaker 6 (27:04):
What Robert, Hey, that's beautiful, man is beautiful.

Speaker 10 (27:12):
Yeah, but I make sure that that's proper time for that,
right when I have to write my book, sit down
and write my book. Like I see so many people
come home and the first thing they do they go
to the fridge like I used to do, and grab
their tall can. But once you touch that tall can,

(27:37):
doing things with intentions usually goes by the wayside. So like,
you can still do that. I'm not telling you not to.
I'm saying make one day of the week where you
don't do that. Maybe that one day a week you
you just focus on trying to build this business that
you might want someday. Now, what what do you mean
might want?

Speaker 5 (27:57):
Right?

Speaker 10 (27:57):
Well, a lot of my friends up thinking they had
to go to work. So they thought they had to
go to college, they had to get a degree, they
had to get a job, and they had to go
to work. And if they didn't do that, they had
to go to a trade school and then they had
to go to work and if they didn't do that,
they had to find a job and go to work
at construction or something. Make it that way. They never

(28:19):
were taught like my dad always taught me constantly sticking
it in my head, make your own business, make your
own business. Don't work for the man. Make your own business,
Like we need to tell that to our kids every
single day, like my dad did to me. I would
never even think that I wouldn't be a business owner
when today's kids never even think it's a possibility. Right,

(28:41):
So my kind of thing that I came up with
is that maybe we should, like I know that our
school system does have programs to help the youth do things,
like there may be even one to help them get
into a business. But whatever it is, that system didn't
help me.

Speaker 5 (29:01):
Right.

Speaker 10 (29:01):
I was one of the best salesmen in school, man,
oh man. I was dedicated, Like we had these things
called sportathon's right, where you basically did everything based off
the number of times you did something you would get
money for it. Right, Why passed all that? I just
went and straight asked them for money, Like I went

(29:22):
to every single house in my whole neighborhood. For days
and days and days. I ended up making like a
thousand dollars in donations, won everything one four hundred dollars
and all that stuff. Right, you know, you think they
would have recognized that stuff and I would have left
school with a you know, a business license and selling

(29:42):
things or something. But no one recognized it and it
just went to the wayside. And I'm glad I'm not
a salesman now I have to kind of be one
for the mega art. But like, I just wish that,
like there would have been a way to I always
wanted to make money when I was a kid. I
always had like a side gardening business or whatever. Well,

(30:04):
if we've found a way to give kids like the
tools necessary to achieve the business license, right, you have
to come up with the idea, write the business plan,
all the things necessary. Even get to the point where
you know, you have to figure out how to write
out your budget. Right. So like before we did the

(30:25):
sport athon, we had a whole class on how to
write your book, keep your numbers, how much people gave you,
how much they're because if they pledged per rep or something,
you had to be able to calculate all that stuff
where you're going to keep your money safely, right, Just

(30:50):
these basic things that really helped me, you know, become Yeah,
and I just like I don't see it happening. Maybe
it is happening and I'm not seeing. But if we
could work a way to find that special thing that
each kid has in their brain that they want a
business out of and get them started, maybe they won't

(31:12):
end up with a business license by they graduate, but
get them on the road of thinking of creating that business.

Speaker 5 (31:18):
Yea.

Speaker 10 (31:18):
So, Henry, have you when you were a kid, like, well,
tell us about your childhood. Where'd you grow up? What
tell us about your childhood?

Speaker 12 (31:25):
My childhood was really well, it was always just like you.
I always wanting to make money, like somehow, you know,
selling my toys or you know, never thought about selling
candy or none of that stuff that normal okay would do.
I had like little figures and toys, and that was
my way of making money. But right now, what you said,

(31:46):
it was very interesting because we have seven kids and
right now they're they already we're teaching them because I
have my oldest Miel does makeup uh lashes and all
that stuff and he's very good at it. And man,
he's getting the following. He got to he hit a

(32:06):
million in his videos. W Then I have my daughter
Apsody that has her little bouquet business which she does
flowers out of plastics so they look like roses and
she gets orders from people. Then I have my daughter
right here, Kayla, that sells candy wherever pop up we go.
So we're teaching them. And then I got Bella, Bella

(32:28):
my she's in elementary and she sells candy and chips
at her school. And that's the one that I'm trying
to teach because she likes to She wants me to
buy everything but everything. Yeah, And I'm like, Okay, you
gotta you gotta make sure that you save the money
and you gotta buy more stuff in order for you
to Yeah, yeah, Papa's gonna buy anything.

Speaker 14 (32:54):
No, yeah, right, Like I like the way she thinks
because you're a softie, that's yes.

Speaker 12 (33:06):
So that's that's something that I think that it makes
us as parents feel good because they're learning from us
and they want to do the same thing. And you know,
I'm not saying that it's going to be a business
for them, but at least they know they can do
something else besides working a nine to five, you.

Speaker 10 (33:25):
Know, and or go to college or trade school or
what is.

Speaker 12 (33:28):
Act Mie Miel. He has a he has a mind
that wants to go everywhere. He wants to go to college,
and I'm ruined for him. And at the same time,
it's like I know he's going to be successful because
of the way he does things. He's already there. He's
literally work, yes, and he just I just still want

(33:50):
him to finish school though, get that. Give me the
high school diploma and you're good. That's all I wanted.

Speaker 10 (33:55):
You know.

Speaker 12 (33:55):
Then you think about college and if you want to
consider this to be one of your main things, you know.

Speaker 10 (34:02):
And it would be so cool if like like there
was people that looked for that in the school system
and they're like, whoa, Okay, we got this. We have
special class just for entrepreneurs. Come on in. By the
time you're done, you're gonna have a business license. You're
gonna have this idea and you're gonna roll with it,
right right, So, like, as a parent, you're investing in

(34:25):
your kids, you're not really hoping that they'll become a
lawyer and take care of you for the benefit. And
it would be nice if they were a doctor and
made that or had an incredible business and a multi
billionaire eye lash company. So you're investing in hoping for that.

(34:46):
But what if we did that on a large scale
right here in Sam Bernardino where we need it the most.
But invest in our kids to train them to become
business people instead of like waiting for him to go
to col state or whatever, or just ignoring those situations.
And it is if every one of our kids left
school with a business license, not only would the coffers

(35:09):
at city Hall be big because of all those new
business licenses every single year. Some of those businesses will
end up being the Xerox, the McDonald's, these companies that
become billionaires. We could do that here and then have

(35:30):
these same donors later on say, oh, man, I love Sardino.
Now is McDonald's really giving back to Samernadino. Because we
didn't cultivate that relationship. The McDonald's brothers sold it away
and that other guy got it right, so that a
bunch of croc Really we didn't get much out of that,
But we should need McDonald should come here and support

(35:52):
every single thing. Yes, instead of complaining that mcdonald' museums
over there, right, we need to create that new type
of business atmosphere ourselves. We can't rely on the raid
crocs or whether we need to rely on the McDonald's
brother people that we're creating it here like Henry Perez.

(36:13):
Imagine in Chelsey smash Burger right, or Jason Lola with
wax skateboards, or or Eric with the palmfues and progress
whatever it is, like, if we could get every single
kid to try it right now. They're not all gonna
like it and they're all gonna do it, but at

(36:33):
least they know they could have an idea and work
through it maybe once they get out of school. Dead's
wait a second, I hate working for Subway. It's twenty
dollars an hour, but it still sucks. Or oh my gosh,
Amazon is the worst job I've ever had. What do
you mean it's all repetitive. You just go around all

(36:55):
the time and you hurt your back, or maybe like
you don't don't want to just sit there and scan
things all the long over I can't do that repetitive stuff.
I start getting anxiety immediately if something's repetitive. It's the
lowest form of learning, and it just I'll go crazy, right,

(37:18):
So then we so then let's just focus on not
getting the repetitive jobs. Those are going to be taken
by AI robots anyways. I can't No eighty of us
think badly of AI. Why why do we think badly
of it? Because there's a tool we don't understand, And
there's probably a Chinese and Russian disinformation program too, but

(37:41):
that's totally separate. I'm just saying that we really just
don't understand AI, right, And it's a tool that I
use every day, but I feel afraid to tell people
that I use it every day. And I know it's
more people than me, and I use it as a tool,
but I don't thet it do just you know, describe
my life or anything like that. I use it as

(38:01):
a tool, right, But I shouldn't have to be afraid
to tell people to use it. In fact, every single
kid should be using it. Right. Eventually, we're gonna have
these AI assistants that help us with basic things that
we just don't need to do anymore. Those could be
associated with our businesses. Yes, my AI is already trained

(38:24):
to speak how I want it to speak. You will
never get a negative thought out of my AI. When
it comes to the mega art. It will come up
with an alternative answer, but it will never shoot me
down right. It could say it's a possibility of be
a natural all those things, but it will never shoot

(38:46):
me down right. But I train it to be that way.
I trained it not to talk like a Western archaeologist, right,
so it wouldn't be that way like you people don't
want to read about savages in all that old way
you want to read because when it reads, when I
put the stuff in from the old archaeologist, it tries
to regurgitate that stuff and it sounds bacist. So you

(39:08):
have to train your tools. You have to build your
tools to be able to use, and I might help
you build your business, right all right, So you guys
realize you use AI every day too, and most of
us do. If we use social media, right, it's just automatic,
But we do use AI for you use your to
make your videos.

Speaker 12 (39:27):
Correct?

Speaker 10 (39:29):
How does it feel? Does it? Were you scared at first?
You think it's gonna like, uh, come out of you
and shoot you with terminator missiles?

Speaker 15 (39:37):
Probably no, I honestly I was scared the first time
because it turned my boy, it turned my video into
Spanish speaking, and I was like, I didn't do it any Spanish,
but it sounded just like me. And I'm listening to
myself talking Spanish on the video and I'm like, I
never did this.

Speaker 12 (39:58):
I need this, what's going or not? And I showed her.
She's already here laughing at me. It's ai, babe, And
it says right in the corner that they turned the
video for my Spanish speaking audience.

Speaker 10 (40:10):
So is your Spanish proficient or a sec?

Speaker 12 (40:13):
What do you mean?

Speaker 10 (40:13):
Like was the translation correct?

Speaker 12 (40:16):
Yeah, it was very great. It was a point wow.

Speaker 10 (40:18):
So it really scary.

Speaker 12 (40:20):
It made me sound smarter.

Speaker 10 (40:22):
Actually, So those situations are a time when you could
use a tool that it might work. Actually, but you
might want to do the translation on your own too, right, Yeah.

Speaker 12 (40:32):
Yeah, I've done videos on my own tool. But just
to see that and I had no idea where he
can it might.

Speaker 10 (40:37):
Help the white boy here where my Spanish is you know,
not great?

Speaker 12 (40:41):
Right yeah, to get a bigger audience. So I think, yeah,
like you said, it does benefit us that we're doing
videos and our influencers that you know, we can use
that as a tool. And but yeah, it is kind
of scary up sometimes, and.

Speaker 10 (40:55):
You could throw some ideas to you, like so here's
an example. You say, hey, is there any kind what
what what do you think would change this recipe for
the better? From from uh deep in haaka Mexico? What
ingredients would they have? And it will research that stuff
and bring it out And that doesn't hurt to see

(41:16):
that kind of stuff, right, and who knows, maybe you
might make something more incredible with your recipe. I did
the same thing with diabetic recipes. I've run out of ideas,
I say, please, could you give me some? And that
a bunch of them come up, right, So I'm not
saying like it's not making me bad. Diabetic recipies they

(41:38):
put the glycemic index and everything right there, so it's
just a tool for a diabetic But my mama's my
mom doesn't understand it fully yet, so we're trying to
get her there right to understand that it's not. And
then other people that are elders, they're just like the
cell phone. At first, they're a little afraid of it.
But I imagine someday this will give elder somebody to talk

(42:00):
to yeah, what you can talk to AI you can't
and guess what it don't tell nobody, But you got
to make sure that it's you're not letting it guide
you and things like that, Right, But sometimes like you've
got to get something out, and if there's nobody else
to talk to, why not? Right? So I look at

(42:21):
it like this, it's a tool to use, and we
need to teach our kids. And they're all using it anyways.
And if the parents start start using it right now,
their kids are going to be using it when they're
not going to know, right, Yeah, So might as well
get in on the game right now and start learning
how to use it. Do simple things like have it
make your schedule things like that, and you'pe be amazed

(42:43):
at how easy it is, right to be able to
talk into something and have it write out your schedule
or your wish list or your you know, your grocery
list or whatever it is.

Speaker 12 (42:52):
Right.

Speaker 10 (42:53):
I'm also I have it analyze readings for me. Right, So,
like if someone sends me something from the govern that
I don't understand, I take a picture of it, put
it in there, and then I ask it to look
at it. Then I do it again. Have a double check. Right,
it's not infallible, but like it does have correct information

(43:13):
if you keep trying. Right. So then I found out
like that our taxes since we reassessed our house, our
taxes got raised and then it got backdated and they
sent us something that looked like eight thousand dollars. So
my brother's all scared. It's an eight thousand dollars bill
per year for taxes, but that's not what it was.

(43:36):
They were just reassessing the value total and then it
was only forty bucks extra a month, but backdated four years.
But AI explained it to me like that, bam. So
if you're got some kind of document that you don't understand,

(43:56):
it could help you with it. And that's a lot
of people, especially when it's medical documents all that stuff.
It's the jargon is just really hard to read. All
those those numbers and things that you put in AI.
It will explain each one to you. And if you're
worried about them doing it wrong, you ask it to
do it again and again you compare it.

Speaker 12 (44:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (44:16):
So these are the tools that I want you guys
to start using. If you're if you're going to do
something simple, just try it. With AI. Just try it, yeah,
and you know it can't hurt. And if you don't
like it then then then you know, let it be
for a little while. Maybe try something again in the future.
But just realize you're using it every day every time
you trevest into Google search engine or any of the

(44:37):
Facebook and Instagram anything like that. All right, So the
tools of the trade, right, Another tool that we have
to utilize is our cell phone in camp? Right, Why
can't we work it out to where every kid gets
a cell phone? That's proper, right, We're already giving them

(45:01):
a computer, right, I know, like, oh that was to
use it for every kid has a cell phone anyways, right, right, right?
If we gave them a cell phone that automatically only
does school stuff at school, right, and like the AI,
make sure that happens.

Speaker 13 (45:20):
I wish that was possible, honestly, because I think that's
the hardest thing right now with the new generation that
we have, our kids are glued to their phone and
when it comes to interacting class work, anything in school
gone out the window.

Speaker 10 (45:37):
Should the phone be taken away.

Speaker 13 (45:39):
Or I personally think it should, just because TikTok is
a big thing right now for the kids what you
see is a lot of videos in school with TikTok.

Speaker 12 (45:52):
Right, Yeah, so it's it's.

Speaker 10 (45:54):
Hard they're video in school when they should be.

Speaker 13 (45:56):
Yeah, you know, And I think that's the hardest for
us as parents when we see the kids come in,
the grades come in, what's going on? We're questioning why
because they're glued to their phone, they're not doing what
they need to right, And that's as parents we question
ourselves what are we doing. We're doing what we can,
we're pushing, we're doing a lot.

Speaker 12 (46:18):
But it's not even that did did you all have phones? No? No,
we didn't have to around when.

Speaker 10 (46:24):
You receive you your first pager, your first pager.

Speaker 12 (46:28):
I was sixteen when I got my first pager about
sixteen sixty.

Speaker 10 (46:32):
Well, I was eighteen because I had to pay for myself.
You pay for your.

Speaker 13 (46:36):
Yeah, I paid for my parents are like, you're getting
one of those, but they didn't even know what.

Speaker 10 (46:46):
I have to pay for it. Like back in the day,
I paid my own pager. I don't know. Kids expect
you guys to pay for your phones now? Right? Those
are so expensive, so that'd be another thing, like a
way to make some small amounts of money to be
able to pay for your phone bill and things for
your business or your business license and stuff. The phones
themselves are a way to make money, right, So we

(47:09):
can't just be looking at them as a gift that
a parent gives to their kids and that they watch
TikTok on. We got to be thinking that these are
the AI tools that they're going to be utilizing, right,
and it's gonna get crazier. Team, I've already seen several
instances of technology of the future. Right the drones that

(47:30):
ring doorbells at are drones? How long is it going
to be where your kid has her own drone? Like
and even is that going to be allowed? And like
what about if it's like some animal drone, like you
could send it to go bother Tommy on the other
desk a bottom, Like I don't know, Like when are
the what are the rules gonna be? So we better
start making them really quick, because this stuff's happening right

(47:52):
in front of us, right, like like does a rich
kid get ten drones?

Speaker 12 (47:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (47:58):
And like like one knocks the ball in the hoop
from like or what about these glasses that literally make
you so you know what every single thing is in
the room. Like, the kids that can afford the glasses,
are they going to have an advantage over the kids
that don't. Yeah, so we're gonna have to find out
a way to get this technology to all the kids.

(48:21):
I can't think of a better way than a business
program that enters these tools into the program. Right, So
you're learning to use these as a tool, not as
a TikTok. That's how they're learning it. Yes, they're using
it as a plaything. They're not using it as a
work tool. I grew up with it as a work tool.

(48:41):
I got my first phone working at a company. Why
to call my boss? Not to take a picture? Those
next tails you could barely fit in your podcast. Oh man,
So there's a method to my madness yet, right, I'm
coming up with these ideas that because these it's gonna

(49:02):
take money. So there's going to have to be a
way to fund these programs. But like I remember, back
in the day, Apple Computer gave a computer to every
single kid in my whole school. These this can be
done again, right, we just have to figure out how
if they can give a kid a laptop computer, like,

(49:25):
we can get them the other tools that they need
to create a successful business or a successful self. Right,
But that's gonna take our team up at the you
know Saron Unified School District, Right, Yeah, this is gonna
take a little work. Now, they're like Ora, Robert, you
do the work, you write the grants up, you do
the No, no, no. If you're saying that, you need

(49:48):
to look back in the mirror. These are our kids. No,
it's not my job to be coming up with these ideas.
I'm giving them to you to plant the seed. You
guys can grow them.

Speaker 4 (49:58):
Now.

Speaker 10 (49:58):
There may be these programs that are already grow, but
they're not big enough to where I know about them. Yet.
I want them big enough to where we all know
about every single parent knows that their kid has a
possibility of going to create a new entrepreneur at this
school and walk out of school with a business license.
And they don't have to go to college right away
because they already got a business that's bringing in money.

(50:18):
What maybe they'll be an influencer. You never know, they
make money with that phone right there, right, Like, some
of these kids have bigger followings than we could ever
hope for.

Speaker 5 (50:28):
You.

Speaker 12 (50:29):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 10 (50:31):
So if they already got that, let's turn that into business,
so they'd be rich before they even You don't go
to college exactly, so I'm not always the person who
gets this stuff in the technical grant writing stuff. I
got big ideas that I'm giving to y'all. I think
this could really be a way to help Sam Bernardino kids. Yes,

(50:55):
and we could really really benefit in the future by
teaching the kids to use a cell phone properly as
a tool, Teach them to use the AI on it,
teach them not to use it for certain things, right right,
Like you do not really want to be recording your
friends fighting and all that stuff, but no teaching them

(51:17):
that that's not appropriate. But if if you went to
the company and said, TikTok, if you do that, it's
against the law to show minors fighting, guess what happens.
It stops. But that hasn't happened. Why has it not
happened because we let it happen. We don't speak up,
we don't change it. So I don't know, who knows.

(51:38):
Maybe TikTok will disappear here in the next few days.
That's what I'm worried about that one, Like, we don't
know what's gonna happen. With TikTok, But we do know
that Instagram and Facebook will be around. They will here.
They're American companies for sure, So let's start utilizing them. Team.
These are not these are tools, like they need to
be treated as a tool. And that's another thing we

(52:00):
can do is these are utilities. Yeah, like we got
a stand up for our kids. Like, has your kids
ever done anything bad because they saw it on TikTok
or anything?

Speaker 12 (52:10):
Honestly, we haven't had that yet.

Speaker 10 (52:12):
So have you heard of them telling you a story?

Speaker 13 (52:14):
Yeah, we've heard the story one with the.

Speaker 12 (52:17):
They put something on a computer and it blows up
and it goes in smoke. Oh s somebody did it
at a middle King King middle school.

Speaker 16 (52:25):
Oh yeah, so they evacuated everybody because yeah, I guess
they pour something on the laptop and it makes it
like smoke, like like if it's a big old and
I guess somebody didn't.

Speaker 10 (52:36):
Actually work who would what?

Speaker 12 (52:39):
Yeah, Like, yeah, that's stuff and that that there was
a video that was trending all over social TikTok actually
and yeah, one of the kids saw it and.

Speaker 10 (52:51):
They did that shouldn't be on that's just mentioned property.

Speaker 12 (52:54):
Like yeah, and if you went.

Speaker 10 (52:56):
An algorithm and China you'd never see that video, but
they alter the algorithm so that our kids see that
stuff on purpose. Yeah, they are literally training our kids
and we don't get it. That's why I really don't
trust TikTok. And now I know Instagram is doing the
same thing as well as Facebook. You can't get past
that stuff, right, But at least those are American companies

(53:18):
and they have the you know, hopefully they have our
kids good intentions that are Yeah, I hope.

Speaker 12 (53:23):
Yeah, yeah, I know. One thing I need to say
is you got to build if you're gonna be doing this.
I tell everybody this, don't just post it on TikTok
because like you said, we don't know how TikTok's gonna last.
So post it on Instagram, post it and make sure
you YouTube too. Yeah I got YouTube, and you make

(53:45):
sure that all those are going up too, because if
you just have TikTok and that's the only thing that
you're relying on on, does that get shut down there?
What do you do now?

Speaker 5 (53:54):
Ye?

Speaker 10 (53:54):
Right, you know, and then you're like all that contents off.
That's actually why I stop TikTok for a while because
I cannot. No one. I don't care who you are,
no one can anticipate Donald Trump. I don't care who
you are. No one can do it. And that's one
thing that I have learned. So his dealing with TikTok
and China, we don't know what he's going to do.

Speaker 12 (54:16):
He can be gone tomorrow, he can be.

Speaker 10 (54:17):
Pissed off and then bam is gone. You know, we
just don't know. He really is trying to protect it
because you know, the youth love it, but like that's
not that's not how he makes decisions. So I did
slow down on that one. But you know, like if
if it does get sold to an American company and they,

(54:40):
you know, start, I might move back over to TikTok
a little bit. But and then I'm still waiting. But
we still got to utilize all the different things, right, correct,
So where do you post?

Speaker 12 (54:49):
First TikTok?

Speaker 10 (54:51):
Then you post Instagram because he goes to Instagram or no, I.

Speaker 12 (54:55):
I don't like doing that. I got post TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat.

Speaker 10 (55:01):
YouTube, Okay, do you copy the video the fish time?

Speaker 12 (55:04):
I have to because YouTube is very strict, very strict,
so you can't have music or anything it has to.

Speaker 10 (55:11):
Be your Well, you can have royalty free music, that's it.

Speaker 12 (55:15):
Oh I don't know.

Speaker 10 (55:16):
Yeah, So like you put it in there, put royalty
free in the music section. When it brooms up, and
everything that's free that you can use will come up,
like the royalty free Native American music, royalty free rave
music or whatever, and they'll come up and those ones
will transfer to Okay, so like I use one called

(55:37):
the Sea Shawman. It's like.

Speaker 12 (55:42):
It's but it can.

Speaker 10 (55:43):
Actually transfer to all of them.

Speaker 12 (55:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (55:45):
When I did it the other way, it kicked off
all my videos. Man.

Speaker 17 (55:49):
Oh wow.

Speaker 10 (55:50):
And then after the fact right now, it's been happening
a lot. Have you noticing that that revenue sharing stuff
is coming up all the time. Yeah, that's weird stuff.
Like are you sharing revenue with a lot of places.

Speaker 12 (55:59):
Now or uh no, what do you mean.

Speaker 10 (56:03):
Like their music, Like if you use like the Rolling
Stones Root sixty six, it shares revenue with them now
from my stuff? Oh yeah yeah yeah, Like so I
have to click a bunch of clicks and say, yeah,
all share the revenue with them, right yeah? So Like
I mean, like, man, these guys are just getting rich
off us.

Speaker 16 (56:20):
Henry and Facebook is getting me like that all the time.

Speaker 12 (56:24):
Copyright Are you okay with sharing up?

Speaker 18 (56:26):
Like dude, yeah, like, yeah, go ahead again, you know,
if he's gonna let it play my video, you know,
but yeah, you should definitely have more platforms if you're
gonna do that, you know, and just keep posting, like, uh.

Speaker 10 (56:42):
What about in real life stuff like.

Speaker 12 (56:45):
I really try not to only some certain things, but.

Speaker 10 (56:49):
When people eat the food, dude, what do you mean?

Speaker 12 (56:52):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I think you meant like when
people send me content.

Speaker 10 (56:56):
People when they say that knowing, then like you actually
have to go the content right it.

Speaker 12 (57:01):
Just to get posted, right, Yeah. No. And the funny
thing is a lot of people think that we're going
out every day. I just have so much recorded in
my phone because wherever we go, even if we take
the kids, I'm recording. So okay, I'll save this video
for a free.

Speaker 10 (57:16):
Time helping videos.

Speaker 12 (57:18):
Yeah, I literally got like thirty videos in my forem
right now that I haven't even released. And it's it's
nice to see other infloors now doing it. I mean, yes,
it kind of hurts me because I'm like, oh, I
already had done that video, but I never posted it.

Speaker 17 (57:34):
Now that person went over there and did the video.
But you would think that would be the case, but
it's not. Actually, it increases the views on the second round,
and I've noticed that with the different groups.

Speaker 10 (57:46):
We'll go somewhere and we'll do two minutes left. Oh man,
you see this show. This is crazy show. We love it.

Speaker 12 (57:56):
Well.

Speaker 10 (57:56):
I want to thank you too for coming on and
making this show. So yeah, I know I talked a
lot this thing, but I really do believe that our kids,
there's something to this that we could help our kids
in the future. And just imagine if, like you know,
we had thirty McDonald's donors. Awesome. Yeah, how will we

(58:17):
find out more about your guys' videos and stuff?

Speaker 12 (58:20):
You guys can follow us at Henry perezro Merrow and
the on't even think he has my name is because
I have to get certified and it couldn't be the
business name. So it's under Henry perezro Merrow on all
pages Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and YouTube.

Speaker 10 (58:35):
And it's Family Street Food and you'll see them at
a lot of events around the city, and make sure
you go up there and by the the Briare, Caeso
and Berra. So are we how much of you one minute?
How do we get some food?

Speaker 12 (58:54):
We're actually gonna be there's gonna be a new market
night coming out in Miracle car wash.

Speaker 10 (58:59):
Okay on the street. All right, stay tuned in this
Rob Porter with I Love Summer. You know miss Nippy
on you Rkart and we all had a here.

Speaker 8 (59:23):
Now I'm the man who those the blues.

Speaker 12 (59:27):
Hey, you're night.

Speaker 19 (59:28):
I'm live in the blues them using deep do so
I'm walking the tall game, live in the blues.

Speaker 12 (59:39):
I'm the Blues. Logan made.

Speaker 7 (59:44):
NBC News on CACAA Lomala, sponsored by Teamsters Local nineteen
thirty two protecting the Future of Working Families Teamsters nineteen
thirty two dot org.

Speaker 12 (59:58):
Hi, folks, it's Mel Vukovich from the Tahebo Tea Club.

Speaker 1 (01:00:02):
We just received the first shipment since the new tariffs,
and because our tea is harvested deepen the Brazilian rainforest,
we had to pay a fifty
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