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August 9, 2023 • 23 mins
Scott and Jennifer talk about NFL Pre-Training, Parkinson's Disease, and Scott's New Book. #nflpretraining #parkinsonsdisease #oldschoolmedia #newschoolmedia #stlouisrams #teamgatewaytoacure #caregiver #patrickmahomes #mentalhealth #pschology #netflet #kurtwarner #sportspsychology #athlete #biomechanics #tomhouse #houseofarms
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Episode Transcript

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(00:20):
Happy Wednesday, everybody. I'm veryhappy because it's no limits and I'm pleased
be joined by former Saint Louis Ramscheerleader Jennifer the Cobb at number one.
I told you I will never sayLa Rams deliberately. I will say I
had to buy you dinner and won'tbe because of then I'm in the ell
a Spanish version of Elle Stoopy.Though no, by the way, I

(00:42):
don't. I don't think that Iknow Spanish because I don't. Okay,
then you know more than I dowith that, okay, amigo? Oh
god, then you got any wordsand I only know what I said.
How are you doing today? I'mdoing real well, continuing to work on
my book and getting a lot ofother things done. But I'm really doing

(01:03):
well. But I'm so happy foryou. Thanks. Yeah, this is
the guy I'm working with. WhenI told him about the idea, I
say, I want to want youto do it, and then I told
them we'll do a textbook two andand you know, I'm looking forward to
seeing how it goes. But jeez, you know it's crazy about these things,
Jen because when you do them andthen you practically know what you're talking
about. And it's all second nature. You don't have to memorize a stupid

(01:25):
thing, right, you know,Yeah, it just comes naturally. So
well, I just I just finishedmy children's book and I'm actually getting ready
to publish, and so I'm lookingfor a publisher. So any of your
listeners out there know of anyone myguy is actually self publishing. He recommends
self publishing. Oh okay, littletip. In fact, when we get

(01:49):
some time, what I'll do ifyou want me to, is I'm going
to bring out the Motor City MadmouthShow when we go out there and launch
it in October, and I'm goingto put you on and maybe I'll see
if I can get him to helpyou launch that book, you know.
Yeah, yeah, I actually uhfinished it and it's a children's book.
Uh. It's called Cheer for Care. It's about a little girl who found

(02:12):
out that she finds out that herdad has Parkinson's. And I actually met
with Maxine Clark, who's the ownerCEO of Bildebear. She now is on
the board. She doesn't she Idon't believe she owns the company anymore,
but she's very involved in it.And she loved the artist rendering and she
loved the concept of the book andit was amazing and gave me some ideas

(02:37):
of coming out with a second andthird edition, uh to continue the story.
And uh So I'm really excited aboutsome of the ideas that she had
given me, and I'm excited aboutgetting the book out. It's called Cheer
for Care and it's the It's abouta little girl and through the imagination of

(02:57):
a child's eyes, through her brandaginationof children's brain and how they creatively look
at things in their life, howshe comes up with wonderful ways of bringing
hope and comfort to her dad,who has Parkinson's. And I think that
generation, the younger generation, isvery philanthropic and they want to be involved,

(03:21):
and they have this perception that tobe involved as a caregiver that you
have to have money and spend moneyon them, and not necessarily you can
bring hope and comfort and love toyour loved one in the home, but
just connecting with them, just beingthere with them and remembering who they are
as a person, not the diseasethat they're battling. All right, Well,

(03:44):
you know you have one topic.I want to make sure we get
to it right away, so youtalk about NFL pre training. New movie
Quarterback on Netflix. Please elaborate.Yeah, so have you seen it?
Quarterback? No, I don't wanta quarterback gets well my compact schedule.
I haven't see in a movie inyears. I'm gonna say the last time
I saw a movie, I kepttalking too loud that somebody told me to

(04:04):
shut up, and I never wentback to another one at all, because
I think moving through I'm not avery good It's not a movie, it's
a series. I think there's sixor seven episodes and it goes into the
live of Drew Brees. No,I'm sorry that Drew Brees. Oh gosh,
I'm blowing growing up. I havea blake. It's three quarterbacks,

(04:27):
and the quarterback that stands out isof course Patrick Mahomes. But what it
what it amounts to is is itreally looks at how involved the the talent
and the training and the behind thescenes that these athletes are involved in,

(04:55):
right twelve months a year, andwhat we see on game day and everything
that behind the scenes that goes intothat day. It's incredible. I mean,
you eat, breathe, sleep,all of it. Football. It's
a full time job and so it'samazing when you look at the position of

(05:17):
a quarterback. That's the one positionthat there's not other positions like it.
You're you're out. You've got abackup, of course, but you've got
tight ends, you've got wide receivers, you've got safeties, you you know,
defensive linemen and all of that,and there's a whole entourage of other

(05:41):
other players, but you've got onequarterback, and so there's a lot of
weight on these guys shoulders. Youknow, they've got to know the plays
and they've got to be the camaraderiethat goes into being the leader and what
Patrick does on the sidelines to keepthat energy high and not allow each play,
whether it's a good or bad,to mess with your mind because eighty

(06:04):
percent of it is up here.And you know, it's really interesting,
Scott, how mental the game playson these guys minds every Sunday, and
how it carries on to the weekand their training regimen, and so,

(06:28):
you know, I think it's soincredibly awesome that these guys, and I'm
sure a lot of other football otherplayers also do this, but they work
with therapists for their mental health.I mean, they do go down into
mental health and keeping that like onpoint and not allowing the energy that can

(06:54):
carry you down a completely different road, a different path to mess with you.
And how psychology plays a huge roleeven on the field during game day,
that other players, how they messwith you. And so you know
when another player from another team isalready messing with you, you know there,

(07:16):
you're already in their head. Sohow do you turn that around to
benefit you as the player to projectsuccess for a w for that game?
You know? Amazing? Wah Patrick, do that? You know the amazing
part of all what you said oldJen to me, a quarterback reminds me
of the pitcher in baseball or acatcher. And I can tell you,

(07:40):
Jen another lifetime ago when I didn'thave gray hair, and we probably half
of what I did now, Okay, I was a catcher and I used
to like messing with the umpires adsand I was the ultimate guy that Freud
got even at the young age often, which you can, you know,
go five decades and I know youcan do the math on that,
right John, Yeah, you know, trying to be polite about it.

(08:03):
Fun. I used to take intentionalmould visits. I used to get nail
from more catchers interviewers. I usedto talk to the hitter just to throw
them off, and then if theumpire didn't give me the call, I
got of the way they got nails. So I did everything in the world
to getting anybody. Yeah, well, I mean it's it's an edge though,
gentlemen. Yeah, yeah, butno, it's interesting because these these

(08:24):
fellas are out there, you know, busting their tushes every day, every
Sunday for game day, and youknow they've already studied you, studied you
as as a player. They've lookedat every film everything about all of you,
and they know exactly what to doand what to say. And you

(08:45):
know, it's it's a game outthere in the head. As well as
it is physical, it's most mentaltoo, and you know it has many
too Oftentimes during the season when thecameras were filming this NOWLS was following Patrick
around for the season, it reallymessed with him and he had to really
turn it around. And he's gota really great way of he's got a

(09:11):
great mental formula that he follows thatreally makes a difference and the way he
leads that team, well, let'sface the reality, Patrick mahomes to me
when you'll talk about it. He'sway ahead of himself mature maturity wise,
compared to a lot of players.And it doesn't hurt when you have Andy
Reid is your coach and have agood support system. But you know what,

(09:35):
Patrick Mahomes is that rare bird outthere, Jennifer, that you know
what, he's even killed. He'ssmart, He'll never renegotiate a contract.
He doesn't care he's signed whatever heis. He's a most unselfish player out
there, jen And when you haveunselfish players out there that will take whatever
they have and then you can allowmore. Oh but but he he's not

(09:56):
where he's at today because of histalent. He's where he he's at today
because of all the details, allthe consistent details that he does behind the
scenes. It's the little things thatmake a difference. And it's not just
showing up and doing it one time. You can't go to the gym and
the next day say well, Ihope I lost weight. You can't go
to the gym for a week andsay well, look, I hope my

(10:18):
biceps are bigger. It doesn't showedup that way. It shows up maybe
a couple of weeks later. It'sthe consistency that makes the difference, and
that is what Patrick does. He'sconsistent and he pays attention to details,
and that's what pull that's what's givenhim super Bowl championships. And the same
goes for Kurt Warner, and thesame goes for all the other super Bowl

(10:41):
champs out there. They are thatway because as a whole team and an
individually, they follow the consistent,the consistency, the details, and they
do everything that other people aren't doing. That's why they win. Well.
You know, Larry Bird to mewas very good at it too, because

(11:03):
when you talk him out and he'sactually in my book though, Jennifer too,
or I talk about him thinking threesteps ahead, and I met him
at the Palace of Auburn Hills andI asked him a couple of questions about
that. He was very gracious withhis time. So I actually mentioned from
him my book as well, thisis pretty gold stuff. I'll have to
check it out. Things to you, because I'm always a student of mental
behavior. And the one thing nowadays, oh Jen is people tend to take

(11:26):
mental health lightly. You can't dothat nowadays, you can't that's why you
see more psychologists employed by teams,and you know, even a guy for
the Detroit Tigers, Austin Meadows.I don't know if you've heard of them
ever since the Tires acquired him.Unfortunately mentally he's handsome issues and hopefully he
gets through that. So you knowwhat, these players aren't shy about it,

(11:50):
Scott. They come out and say, absolutely, you go to a
doctor to help your teeth, Yougo do a doctor to help your eyes,
a physical doctor for you know,your your structure, your body,
and you go to you know,a doctor to help your mind. Because
sports psychology is really it plays intothe whole formula of what makes a really

(12:11):
good athlete. You know, youcould talk about it all day, but
you're not going to get the results. You can show up all day long,
but if you don't do the work, you're not going to get the
results. And in order to getthe results, which is the data that
drives the behavior, you've got todo all the little things, and those
little things is what makes a championanyway you look at it. Yes,

(12:37):
of course these guys have talent andthey can get it, but if you
don't use the talent to the degreeof all the little details consistently, you're
not going to have the data it'sgoing to drive the result. That's just
the reality of it. Great stuff, Keen, all right, any Parkston's
updates that you want to tell usabout what you're going to be doing pretty

(12:58):
soon? Yeah, so I am. Our trailer for the movie is going
to be pushed off. We're lookingat hopefully maybe posting it at the Boston
Film Festival this fall, but it'sstill kind of on the fence. If

(13:22):
anything, it won't be a fulltrailer, it'll be a teaser view viewing.
And I'm still talking to the presidentof the Academy for the Boston Film
Festival, going to get back tome on that. But I will for
sure post information more as it getscloser. It's not going to be till

(13:43):
this fall. I'll posted on mysocial media and of course we'll have a
couple more you know shows here thatI'll keep the listeners up to date on
that. But yeah, it's aHouse of Arms. It's a documentary movie
about Tom House, who is acoat that has helped so many amazing NFL
quarterbacks, the Hall of Famers,major League Baseball pitchers, to become one

(14:11):
of the best in the industry.He has Parkinson's and so what he has
done to so many athletes over many, many years to make them so great,
he's now using the same concepts tobattle the biggest disease of his life,
and that's Parkinson's disease. So themovie really focuses on his life that
follows him around and how all thedifferent therapies that he's involved in are helping

(14:35):
combat the symptoms of Parkinson's and thedisease. My role in the movie is
the flip side of the disease,and that's the caregiver, the one behind
the scenes that is just as importantas them going to their doctors and taking
the medicine and the therapy is havinga loved one there as I loved my

(14:56):
father and watched my mother as acaregiver, you know, care for my
dad through the battle of Parkinson's.And Tom's got a wonderful wife, Murray
House. She's an incredible caregiver athome in the home, but also Tom
has traveling caregivers, his coaches thatare with him while he travels the world
to help so many young athletes quarterback, college quarterbacks, high school and professional

(15:24):
quarterbacks to become the best that theycan be, as well as major League
baseball pitchers, you know, differentdifferent levels. So so I'm really excited
to be part of it. Yeah. Well, and we'll schedule more shows
more often now as more more ofthese opportunities for that. So let me
just reiterate one thing I'll get intomy book, and I know you have

(15:46):
to get going pretty quick, buta House of Arms is the movie that
you're talking about. House of Arms, and then Tom House is that correct?
Yes? Tom House, he wasinvolved in the Million Dollar Arm the
book where he took two athletes fromtwo different countries never picked up a baseball
in their life. He trained themfor one year, and at the end
of one year of training them,they both signed a million dollar contracts.

(16:08):
So it just goes to show that, you know, bio mechanics play a
huge They play a huge impact onthe success of an athlete in their sport.
And like I said earlier, it'sabout the detail and the consistency.
If you're coachable, if you'll learnto listen and you follow the direction of

(16:29):
those that know what they're talking about, you'll get there. All right,
Let me give everybody just a basicoverview. I really haven't talked about this
live, but now you're the firstone that I'm going to have an opportunity.
Jen. The book I'm writing rightnow is basically old school media versus
new school medal with a subtype adjustingin the media. All I do basically
is talk about the history of themedia, all the great players that I've

(16:52):
introduced, coaches and whatnot, andthe influences I've had father figures wise.
So I'm trying to take the bestof old school on the first half and
then with the way the times are. And then if you combine the two,
you have yourself a pretty big bookwhere you know, and I'll get
into that more when we have moretime, But I just want to what
your appetite a little bit so,and now I'm writing a textbook as well,
so you know, this is oneof the things that I think that

(17:15):
I don't know everybody can benefit bythis book. Some people said, well,
isn't it narrow to an audience.No, I mean, come on,
anybody in their right mind, Iwant to know how the old media
works for you. I would think, though, unless I'm assuming the wrong
way, But I don't know.But but I'm only looking forward to it
coming out probably about four to fivesix weeks and all that. But I've
been working feverishly to get it done. And hey, you're the first person

(17:36):
I've even spoken to right now,Jen about it publicly. I've been pretty
low keyed about it. So youought to take that as a compliment,
you know. Yeah, that's great. I'm so happy. There is a
lot that goes behind the scenes andwriting a book, and I know that
that's true to your heart. Andit's been a lot of work, you
know, for many months or howlover long it's taken it writing for this,

(17:59):
Jen. Okay, this will blowyou away. Ready, I've been.
I've been. I probably put itclose to three three hundred hours and
about four weeks to get this thingdone. Yeah, wow, or what,
I don't know. I'll let you. I'll let you go ahead and
let your imagination run among nice.You know what, Jennifer, A sleep

(18:25):
is a foreign language to me,So yeah, you know, to me
Spanish and German and Portuguese. Maybeforeign language is to me insomnia in sanity
de call it whatever you want,crazy man, But you know the thing
is, I've talked about writing abook. But you just have to have
the right idea, and Jen,it has to really click the right time
at Boom, and the only thingto see me as Google Docs and otherwise

(18:45):
you can tell me, oh stupidthough, but no, Google Docs kind
of saved me a little bit onthis deal. So I know we're running
out of time. Jen, It'sokay. Anytime I get with you is
great anyways. But the main ideais you're in the book too. I
mentioned how we matt here you online. Yeah you are, And I say
this with the utmost of sincerity.Jen, Okay, you're in it,

(19:07):
and I really admire what you standfor, the way you're trying to work
towards a cure towards Sparkinson's disease.And you know I'm with you in this
fight. And I've told you youhave unlimited anytime you want to come on,
you have an open invitation to talkabout it anyways, And I know
eventually our time will cross, willultimately met. But right now I'm more
than satisfied with us being able towork together and put our efforts towards the

(19:30):
same thing. So I know we'rerunning out of time. Let me just
go over one company piece of information. Okay, just you know, no
limits of being broadcast around the world. The audio version of no Limits can
be heard on iHeartRadio, Apple,Spotify, Google, where we get your
podcast. If I talk fast,I do. It's okay. You can
listen to it over and over andget it all anyways. Please hit the
red sub Scott button on YouTube SouthFlorida Tribute. We're striving for a thousand

(19:53):
subscribers. Please also comment, like, and share the broadcast. Want to
be a guess, no problem,do it in the chat room or send
your ey idea selfware Tribute at gmaildot com, go and advertise costs efficiently
call me three four for nine forone and we broadcast live on Facebook,
LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube or websitewww dot selford at tribute dot com,
Twitter at Tribute to South Kandy.Evelyn does a great job behind the scene.

(20:15):
Makeature of content gets up as wellas the videos and so forth.
So got that piece of promo.An the last thing you want to do
before we close this thing out,and you could go on to probably places
I'd like to be, but obviouslyhave another broadcast night. Go out there
at gender fortun I think if youare an auctioneer. What's that? I
think in your second life you arean auctioneer. Oh we've been. Let's

(20:45):
say they're so fast. Well,you know, when I have a certain
time frame, I have to makesure my co host, as you are,
is able to get out in atimely matter. And I'm doing everything
in my power to make sure wekeep your skip. I appreciate that,
and I always enjoy I always enjoybeing on the show. I love it.
Your listeners are great. I mean, I think it's a great way,

(21:10):
a great platform to get the messageout personally is many people know my
dad just passed away in late Januaryof Parkinson's. And if I can help
inspire one person out there, uhthat to give them hope and comfort as
they battle the disease, to slowit down the degeneration of it. I

(21:33):
know that I've done my purpose inlife, and so I have a big
heart and and I have a lotof compassion, and you know through through
my service, that's that's what Iwant is to help others. Well,
Jen, you and I are team. I'll do anything I can to give
you all the air time you needto get it done. We are a

(21:53):
team, you and I. Yeah, and you can go to my website
www. Dot Team Gateway to aCured dot Org and you can get more
information about Parkinson's caregiver support and it'sa great it's a great platform to understanding
mostly what caregivers and how they canget help financially and as well as help

(22:18):
in the home team Gateway to aCure dot Org. All right, well,
that wraps up this edition of NoLimits. So I mean half of
Jennifer Leec. My name is ScottMorgan, Rotham, over City, Madmouth.
Thank you for joining us and Jenniferand I will schedule another time when
she can go ahead and give ussome updates. Meanwhile, just following the
No Limits, okay, the SportsExchange we'll be on as well as some

(22:40):
of the most timely topics out thereand we'll make sure that we can get
those onto. So once again onbehalf of Jennifer Leec. My name is
Scott Morgan. On the Stigma,I'll thank you for joining us tonight and
we will catch you on the nextedition of No Limits. Good job,
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