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October 23, 2025 • 57 mins
Scott, Will Person, Jennifer, and Candy talk about CTE, Joe Namath, and More. #joenamath #nyjets #nfl #superbowlIII #nhl #neckguards #misdiagnosis #headtrama #cte #brain #willperson #jerrymaguire #showmethemoney #bobsledding #baltimorecolts #donshula #weebeubank #quarterback #vertigo #depression #vibration #sled #gforce #helmet #ice #hansdevice #daleearnhardtsr #autoracing #preventative #hockey #concession #sports #braininjuries #athlete #guardiancaps #alzheimersdisease #suicide #dementia #football #lockerroom #strike #tomcruise #anxiety #bipolarsyndrom#anger #rage #reclusiveness #fibromalgia #drunk #hallucinations #mentalhealth #tanyawest #kaynewest #medications #podcasts
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Happy ones. Everybody, welcome to another edition of Let It
Monny Scott Morgan on Photo City, mad Mouths tonight where
we talk about CTE on the program and the network,
and please ask Candy ibling back. Thank you, Candy.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
It's great to be here, Scott.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
And then Jennifer horse Fool welcome.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Back, Jen, Thank you, pleasure to be here and.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Laughing at leaves. William, thank you.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
I appreciate it. Appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Ready for the first of a doubleheader with us, man,
it's gonna be wild, fledding to night, unintended. I'm ready,
I'm ready and all we'll get this. Take care of
our business there first. All right, we're gonna talk called
Joe Namath. You had a pretty wild story about him.
But let me get the particulars on Joe Namath. Number one,
he won Super Bowl three in nineteen sixty nine. But
the amazing part about Broadway Joe is he never won

(01:11):
a conference championship. Because this was the year before the
AFL NFL merger. The Jets shot the Colts, and the
Jets are the only team to win a Super Bowl
without winning an AFL or or AFC or NFC championship.
The irony. The whole thing is a Baltimore Colts were
coached by legendary coach Don Shula. Candy, what's your take

(01:34):
about this?

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Oh, I mean it's pretty impressive.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
I didn't realize that they didn't have the you know,
AFC and NFC champions back in the day, but being
coached by Don Shoe was that's that's a pretty pretty.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
Nice Well he's the one that lost the Super bowling.
Go ahead, who are you talking to me now? Or yeah,
I'm talking to you, and just give me some information.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
What kind of information?

Speaker 1 (02:08):
What the bottom line is? Is this? Okay? Missus research
You don't need to research this on Candy. The bottom
line is Joe Naviath never won a conference championship. He
won the Super Bowl. It kind of reminds you of
the World Series before they had the championship series first
or out of it, and back then, if we had
the best record in the league, you got to go
to the Super Bowl.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
So it kind of goes like to the same effect,
like the Packers won three in a row, but they
weren't super Bowls back in the day because it was
before they named them super Bowls. So before they named
them AFC champions or NFC champions. They won the whole
kit in kaboodle, right.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
This was a super Bowl three is what they called it,
all right, So anyways, that's the trivia behind that. Joe
Namath never won a conference championship, but he had a
Super Bowl ring in his pocket and he's a Super
Bowl champion. Was no for the guarantee. Now that's our
version of the whole thing. Jennifer will have a different
story about Broadway Joe, which connects directly to what they're

(03:07):
talking about and why and what they've been speaking along.
But now they get a segment to talk about Broadway Joe.
Start off, Well, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
What I'm starting off. It's William's story about who is
Joe Namath to you? Because we all know you name
Joe Namath. He's a football great. But who he is
to William is a is a hero for life.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Why is that?

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Well, segue over to William. Go ahead.

Speaker 6 (03:32):
Well, the funny part is, man, I don't want to
start with this guy, like I never knew how he
will come back to impact my life. And the funny
part is I remember him sitting on the sideline with
a Minkoto he was like the first of the flamboyant quarterbacks.
But I remember him more so from this movie I

(03:52):
watched on Loop headed on Beta Max.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
That's how far this goes back. It was called C
C Rider. He was riding motorcycles.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
I don't know anything about that.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Well, you've been talking about the last couple of weeks
wondering about Joe Nama. That stood out in terms of
how he got you involved in all of that.

Speaker 4 (04:16):
Oh man, I got a lot to say, but I.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
Won't say it emotional.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
It's been emotional.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
All right, take your time.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
I don't mean to trying to be our on you.
Now it's your time, opportunity to talk about a Pro
football Hall of Famer. Man, start from the beginning, after
everybody starts, right.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Well, I thought that my emotional part with him was
over because like.

Speaker 6 (04:36):
He's the guy that saved my life. Yeah, I'm sorry
about this one.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
But oh no, emotions are great, it's real and you know.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
That's all good.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Oh man, I apologize. Man.

Speaker 6 (04:52):
When I first, when I first got help, you know,
I was dealing with the concussions, the CT stuff, teammates
dropping dead, doctors telling me there's no help for you.
Internet telling me the same thing. This guy shows up,
you know, with these videos out of nowhere.

Speaker 4 (05:17):
Yeah, man, I apologize.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
All good, all good, pretty much living on your floor
right at this, at this point when you when you
find these videos, you have zero quality of life? Yeah,
what's going on in your life?

Speaker 4 (05:37):
Right then? Well I give it up. Wasn't or else
for me.

Speaker 6 (05:41):
I uh watched, like I said, watching my teammates die
and punching everybody with the illnesses. I had them too,
and I just gave up. There was you know, no
doctors won't helping. An Olympic team won't help. Uh.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
This random video shows up is Joe Naman talking about
using hyperberic oxygen to like kind of like reversus symptoms.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Which symptoms, Yeah.

Speaker 6 (06:10):
Reversus and apogeis guys, this is a a I did
not really. I thought I was done with emotional report
because this was going on like, uh for like a
year after I've found treatment, and so every time I
heard his name, I just lost him.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
So uh.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
Yeah, I mean it's emotional when someone has that big
of an impact in your life, especially when you were
at such a low. The low that you were at
is it's not even a regular low, and it's it's
you were out. You were out of hope. You were
out of hope. You're laying on the floor. What does
that mean? You're laying on the floor. You moved your

(06:49):
mattress from your bed to the middle of your apartment
because your vertigo, your headaches, your depression, your confusion, your anxiety,
everything is so bad. You living on the floor with
zero quality of life, zero hope. You come across these
videos where Joe Namath is talking about the help that

(07:10):
he's receiving for his own CTE symptoms.

Speaker 6 (07:14):
Yeah, yeah, he put out these videos and when I
read them, I was I was a skeptic, I'll be honest,
because I tried everything there was to try it.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
I was treating my symptoms as I went, and uh
so I wanted to try this thing. You know.

Speaker 6 (07:26):
I was like, I start remembering that guy from CC righting.
I'm like, oh, CC rider, go help me.

Speaker 4 (07:31):
I wasn't even saying Joe name it that first, but
I said, but I have to try it.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
I have to try it.

Speaker 6 (07:35):
So I go in this thing and when I try it,
I was in that chamber for one hour and it
changed my life, gave me life back. Like during that
time I got I was brilliant. I was struggling with talking.
I couldn't find words. I couldn't remember any damn thing.
If you talk to anybody with concussions, the CTE stuff,
you will they'll tell you the same stuff over and over.
It's like a it's like a it's like a print

(07:56):
out of cookie cutter. It's the same stuff over and
over and over. That's why I keep say, and we
keep seeing these same We'll see the same athletes going
through the same stuff. It's it's the same stuff. And yeah,
and so what he did is he used that hyperbaric
oxygen to reverse the symptoms. And it worked for him,
you know, and so when I tried it, it worked
for me. For me, it's a little bit different. Like

(08:18):
he got permanent relief. Me I steal a little bit
tied in fact, machine machine is right behind me today.
Well so I'm still kind of tied to that machine.
But as long as I don't going like thirty forty
days what happened, I'm okay.

Speaker 4 (08:29):
You know, I have a little bit of I have
life back.

Speaker 6 (08:31):
You know, have black back, and I'm not back living
on that floor and just struggling.

Speaker 4 (08:35):
And praying for death anymore, you know. So that's the
big thing. Matter of fact, I called his h his foundation.

Speaker 6 (08:43):
I left him a message, and I guess he got
the message because when I call back, they knew who
I was, and he said, uh, I just said, just
thank him for me, And it was like, well, what
can he do to help? And I was like, nothing,
he already did it. You guys might have heard me
say this before, but yes, he already did it. Like
who the hell am I asking for anything else? But

(09:03):
he didn't leave notes. I didn't get any of his notes,
and that's the only thing I wish I had from him.
But hopefully maybe he'll come back and join the movement
and help us save more lives because he's responsible for
saving so many lives now, like I've passed this information on,
and I've passed it on.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
I have TikTok channels off dedicated only to that.

Speaker 6 (09:20):
Matter of fact, my whole day is consumed with TikTok
and helping people find help now. And so he's the
father of this thing, and I hope that he really
understands that.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
I don't know if he does, but yeah, so.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
Are you saying that you are you saying you actually
talked to Joe Namath and he didn't get back to ye.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
Yeah, I call this foundation. I'll send a message over there.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (09:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
They asked me whatever I wanted to send it to him,
and right and then I just didn't feel the need
to me.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
I didn't need anything. I was just kind of.

Speaker 6 (09:47):
Happy to be breathing again and see colors and just
being able to smile and see the beauty in life.
I realized I had seen the beauty and anything in
a long time. And like I said, I'm watching these
other athletes go through this stuff. It's it's the same
thing over and over. Like it's the hurt and the
pain coming from the families and the people they push
away from them.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
You know, it's the same thing. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (10:11):
But I do plan on reaching out to him soon
and see if you'll come team up with us, because
this is this is this movement, This is not mine.

Speaker 4 (10:17):
Anybody who comes to me and thanks me, I said,
I don't take the credit.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
I said, this is your name, this is not me. Yeah,
he's the main story. That's a really good story. I'm
an aspires about him, you know, and you and the
hyper parent chamber. I know and Peach episodes are going
to talk about the hyper paric chamber. But the fact
of the matter is he gave you a new, a
renewed sense to try to work through this whole ordeal

(10:40):
says a lot. That's why I wanted to do to
the voter segment. So guy who's known for what he's
done on the field, but what he's done off the
field as well to trying to help people deal with
such a situation like that great stuff. That's why I listen.
If you're emotional about this, I don't care. That's what
you're supposed to be or human fig you're not a robot. Man.
I thought it was all crowd out. We'll cry out happen.

(11:03):
It's okay, hey listen, I totally understand where you're coming from.
That's why we'll let you just roll will that, do
what you have to do, hit it out and you
make you got your story. And that's what people when
they go ahead and realize little person, they realize little
person is a real person who has emotions, and that's
what it's about. So, but that' said, we'll move on
to our next segment. We're going to talk about the

(11:23):
NHL mandating neck guards for all new players starting in
the twenty twenty six twenty twenty seven season, anyone who
has played at least one NHL game before then we'll
have the choice to opt out. Why am I incorporating
this into what we're doing. Well, let's take mace Ellie.
When your boss letting you have a lot of different

(11:44):
things about had movement, Okay, and that's why you when
you have neck guards, tell me where you think. Thanks
Rob Rossk, I appreciate it. He's my co host one
hundred and eight. Tis his baseball talk. So you talk
about that guards, how do you think that you could
relate those to moving on Bob Fledge or anything related

(12:06):
to a head injury.

Speaker 4 (12:08):
Well, I know that they got the net guards, and
I'm just not sure.

Speaker 6 (12:11):
I'm not a skeptic. Anybody trying to do something different
that's gonna help. I'm behind them one hundred percent because
that's the only reason I'm still out here talking about it, is.

Speaker 4 (12:19):
To make some change and help these athletes.

Speaker 6 (12:21):
But like I don't I don't know how it's gonna
help with the vibration, like the when it's shaking your
brain like this, I can't. I don't understand how that's
gonna help. I know it will help maybe with the
side to side some of that stuff, right, But some
of us, like most of us gotta be big guys
man like we're like I raised that two twenty, like
I'm a big guy, like I fit perfectly in the sled.

Speaker 4 (12:40):
I had no movement left.

Speaker 6 (12:42):
I'm stuck like this, so I wasn't moving around like
a lot of people unless I was in Auderberg, Germany.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Whatever.

Speaker 6 (12:48):
There's a there's a one turn. I think it's turn
twelve or thirteen. You're almost inverted. And the further you
sit back on the sled, the more of the g
forces stuff you feels, so it's the whip effect.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
So I'm all the way on the back.

Speaker 6 (13:01):
So one time I cracked the helmet just going through
that turn, and when it went back around, my mouth
smacked on.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
That helmet on the side of that sled.

Speaker 6 (13:10):
I think I was going to sleep, which is bad
because once I get to the end, I had to
pull those brakes. So yeah, I might have been out
for a minute. But I know two of my guys
cracked ribs on that track that week, so yeah, it
was a brutal week.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
It was a brutal week.

Speaker 3 (13:25):
And talk about the hairpin turns, because that is one
of the things. I mean, you don't have it in
your lawsuit against the Bob Said Federation, but you you
have mentioned, you know, as one of the areas where
Bob's sledding. The industry could calm down on some of
the concussions and brain injuries that Bob's letters get just

(13:47):
by reducing the intensity of those hairpin turns.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
Can you talk about that a little bit.

Speaker 6 (13:52):
Yeah, Actually, that's where the most of the problems happened
because there were some people like I crashed seven times
over not in your career that I can remember about seven.
I know some people who crashed seventeen times a year,
and I know some people who never crashed at all.
We all have same symptoms, like h that's what. So
in the beginning, I didn't know the g forces were

(14:14):
the part of it.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
I wasn't sure.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
But as I started to ask questions and start doing
more research, and I started seeing people who never crashed
have the same symptoms, I'm like, Okay, then I remember
at the time we took the fighter pilots down the track,
they pulled extreme g's and then now they're rattle taking
a trip down in the box sled track. So I
understood things started to coming together slowly, and then those

(14:37):
articles began showing up showing that the pilots have the
same our military polties have the same issues as US.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
So yeah, yeah, so it's.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
Yeah, I believe it's a little bit of everything, but
that in that guard I just I think it might
help in some cases. I'm not sure for the help
at all, but I hope they tried, and see I
really hope. Yeah, anybody trying to do something positive, it's.

Speaker 4 (14:59):
Going to help them.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Yeah, I mean, even just the prevention of the even
a little bit. I think, you know, I don't know
about inside the shaking baby syndrome, you know, like you
were talking about with the ice, when the ice is
so bumpy and you just have that shaking baby syndrome inside.
If it's absorbent, it might absorb some of the friction
so that your brain doesn't have that. I don't know

(15:21):
enough about it. I know some people have in your
industry have been talking about all kinds of collars.

Speaker 4 (15:28):
Yeah, I mean, you just made me striking something up.

Speaker 6 (15:31):
Actually, I'm the guy all the way in the back,
so my head is actually pinned in the guy's back.

Speaker 4 (15:39):
So I got these handles, I'm pulling myself down in
his back, Like my goal is to put a knot
on his back. When he's done, he should have a
goose egg back there.

Speaker 6 (15:48):
But guess what I musto gonna have a goose egg
on my forehead because I mean there was many times
I've finished the races and my head is I'm bleeding
right here. Now, I got a big scab. I got
a big scab right here. So certain helmets they got
to fit your perfectly or the vibration. But so my
head is, I'm tucked in there good, So my head
is rightly not moving. So I just can't imagine that.

Speaker 4 (16:10):
I don't know, I don't know. It's yeah, So that's
not the point, I think.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
No, that's another that's another thing. Yeah, But I think
for NHL, like if we're to circle back to to
Scott's question, I mean, anything that's going to prevent your head.
I mean, I know in car racing they did that
years ago when Dale Earnhardt, you know, right, And so

(16:36):
I think any anytime you're helping to secure especially like
your head is a big weight on top of especially me.
I have a little skinny neck, you know, but but
like that's a lot. So if you can absorb some
of that absorption from anything, because there's so many fights
in NHL. And in fact, we'll talk about this in
a little bit, but William's talking to a guy that

(17:00):
was a hockey player and is is suffering severely with
CTE symptoms.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
A few guys, a few they were the first ones
to reach out.

Speaker 6 (17:08):
They were the first ones to reach out to me
when I uh started uh, when I actually when I
filed the case and started talking publicly about it, those
guys were calling me in tears, these big guys I
never met, and they were just thinking me for fighting
back because they felt like they didn't have a voice
and they didn't get hurt and it wasn't being heard.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Yeah, that's okay, Jennifer, glad how you brought the old
race and connection with Dale Earnherd, because you know, at
that time they didn't have the padded walls, so at
his depth open up things. But more importantly, once he
passed away than that that Han's device became more mandatory.

(17:47):
And that's why we talk about net guards because hockey
is trying to do anything. They came to be preventative,
and I think the keyword that's to be taken out
of the net guards is just all preventative, and that's
why they're mandating it within a couple of years ago
everybody to get used to it. It almost kind of
reminds me a little bit about guardian caps in the
NFL in that sense as well. But I'm glad to

(18:08):
thank for John for bringing that up. You're drawing the connection.
I asked Mario chris Bole about guardian caps. He didn't
know anything about them. What that deal with my medical people,
which try I don't care. I mean, he's a coach,
not a medical guy. But it's all about preventative. That's
the word that people need to take out of this
whole thing to prevent it. The Guardian counts hant device

(18:31):
in auto racing that goes through anything you want to
add cham before.

Speaker 6 (18:34):
We go to the station break. Did you say padded walls?
Do you mean for the race card drivers when he
hit the walls.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
Yeah, they ended up having those walls where they ended
up having those safety barriers of what they are.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
That's interesting. I had a speed skin reach out to me.

Speaker 6 (18:52):
She's got those same type of hand injuries because they
follow the space gater's falled and they slide into hit
the walls. And some of those walls I see a
pad on it. Behind it is concrete and this is
where they're getting their concuscious from. These are America species.

Speaker 4 (19:06):
Gracious. Yeah, yeah, matter of fact, they reached out to
me for help as well. It's the same stuff over.

Speaker 3 (19:12):
I mean, the more we're unraveling this over and over again,
I'm starting to see the bigger picture. And it really
is like if you're going to get into sports, which
everybody wants to do. Sports have so many benefits to them,
but we really got to really amplify. And this is
Scott thank you for this platform to talk about this,
you know, to Scott and County because the head, your

(19:35):
brain is your most important organ for a quality of life.
If you don't have your brain right, if you're suffering
from brain injuries and you can't have regular conversations you're having.
We're going to go over some symptoms, but I mean,
you're really it's it's takes a toll. And one of

(19:55):
the points that William makes consistently is you know, what
about the athlete? Yes, we love sports, but what about
the athlete? Are we just throwing our athletes away for
the love of the overall sport. We have to take
care of our athletes and we have to take care
of brains.

Speaker 5 (20:14):
Well, I think, Jennifer, that's one of the reasons. Well, why,
like Scott said, in the NFL, they keep going over
their helmets and redesigning and re.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
You know, and outlawing some of the old.

Speaker 5 (20:27):
Ones because they're not as protective you know, you hear,
And like Scott said, now they have the Guardian cap
that if people, if players want to wear them, they can,
you know. And I think for the safety of the players,
I'm glad that they're addressing it now. Obviously not to
the extent that it's preventing it from happening completely. But

(20:51):
it's a I mean, it's a violent sport, you know,
so it.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
It you know, change, change, change takes it comes on slowly, right,
like nothing happens overnight, But conversations like this is the
whole entire reason is because I don't think you know,
everyone thinks like one William says all the time. I
didn't think it would happen to me. And he said
if someone would have told me, oh, if you go
into the spot the sport of Bob's letting, you might

(21:15):
have a concussion. He's like, ah, whatever, Like talk about that, William,
About where you were, what you thought, Like, what would
be in a proper warning for you?

Speaker 2 (21:23):
You were twenty eight years old, you were invincible.

Speaker 6 (21:27):
Yeah, you know, just the facts, the real facts, like
people are actually committing suicide, even if they didn't know why,
if they didn't know what CTE was. But tell us
the truth, you know. I found out later that our
box at office, they couldn't find helmets.

Speaker 4 (21:41):
They were safe but aerodynamic, and.

Speaker 6 (21:44):
So they they wanted to counsel the sport of skeleton
for the two thousand and two Winter Olympics. But somehow
they pulled some strings and did I forgot what they own,
know everything that they did, because all that stuff haven't
been revealed to me yet. But yeah, that was a
that was a big issue. But I just tell people,
you just have to be cautious. It's like, see this
picture behind me right now. I got that picture before

(22:05):
I found help, and it was to remind me that
I'm cloudy because I was wearing a helmet and I
damaged my head. And that's how I had little trinkets
like that around me just to remind me of why
I'm like this today. I was definitely gone into you know,
that dementia, and I don't know how far I would
have gone without that.

Speaker 4 (22:24):
Chamber showing up. But I don't want anybody have to
live this life.

Speaker 6 (22:28):
This is a horrible life when you have to lay
on the floor and in your business living room and
you can't get to the bathroom. Now my restroom is
now a jar. Would have lived on it like that's
what you're going to be standing for. And the crazy
part is every athlete I spoke to in my sport
and every athing that they spoke to, all dealing with
the same stuff.

Speaker 4 (22:48):
And so at some point till we got to do better,
we have to do better.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
Well. The main thing is that I see what you're
talking about, and I faced this every single day. Can
You'll be the first to tell you with Alzheimer's ideal
that I know everything is slow, but I have to
keep the move as a mentum going and if I don't,
I'll get stale quick. So you know again, I know
what's going to ultimately happen to me, But I'm not
going in the negative, focusing on the positive. But I

(23:16):
had no idea this was going to happen. And it
takes me a while to get back on the road
and doing it in baby steps. I feel I can
drive and just have Candy along with me, and if
I have to drive five ten minutes of the store,
I can do it. But I'm happy when she's around me.
It takes I get that headache and chance the title
and right there as well. So everything is all slow, preventative.

(23:36):
I never visualized that habit. I saw my aunt Pearl
die of Alzheimer's and it took her a while to
get to it. Now all I am as one of
their younger cases, being diagnosed in my early sixties, and
that's surreal and de vins and I had another aunt
who died of that. So I breathe everything you're saying.
That's why we are doing, sir, because I'm the one

(23:56):
person on the planet living with it, and you gotta
contact in me. So I had the time and the
resources to be able to vote in such a thing.
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off like
a whad. I didn't even cutch you off with no,
that's all right, it's not good. Then I explained the
how I was getting lost in my neighborhood. What it
looked like.

Speaker 4 (24:16):
Did I explained that to you. It's so ridiculous.

Speaker 6 (24:20):
Let me let me show you. This is how ridiculous
it is. This represents the block I lived on. Right,
I live right here in the middle of this block.
And so on some days I was so cloudy I
refused to drive my car. I didn't want to hurt
anybody or myself, so I started walking. I had a routine,
I make will walk, I go get me aside from Kelston's.
So all I had to do was walk here, make

(24:41):
that little left, make a little another left. Stores are
right here, right right. So some days it's like, okay,
what if I go the other way? What's on the
other side. I couldn't figure it out. I would be
in my apartment having a little meltdown. It's like, what
the hell is over there? It's the same thing, stupid,
you just went the other way. You just made rights
instead of left. I couldn't figure it out. This is

(25:03):
how good stuff is. And you know, I don't want
anybody live in that life and being stuff worund stuff. Okay,
there's no guarantee that I might one day go backwards.
I have no idea what this thing is will take
me to day.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Yeah, the one thing you're doing, which we're all trying
to do on this show, and what what you live
and what we live in as the fact of matters.
You're doing something about it. You're active in the process,
and the longer you stay with it, it's like you
and I are fighting a heavyweight fight. It's going fifteen
rounds and we're not looking to be a quick PKO.
And that's what we have to continue to do to

(25:39):
maintain our existence. And that's why I look at a
lot of the shows that I do here. But the
one thing I can tell you I look forward to
every Wednesday night, this one time where you can take
that sense of humor and mind and throw it right
out the window. There is no sense of saying called
a sense of humor one. We're talking about what we're
doing on no limits, dealing with your situation. It does

(26:00):
at work on this show, and this is not essentially
worth a sense of perpec then, and that's what everybody
should get out of the show, and now I also
have a sense that with time for a station break,
when we come back, we're gonna try to lighten things
up with Jerey McGuire. We're gonna talk about misdiagnosis. Candy,
you'll have her takeaways. Candy's gonna take over while you
hit jeremcguire, and we'll talk about the Goal Fund page.

(26:20):
Go ahead, Candy self.

Speaker 5 (26:22):
Florida Tribune published a book, Lessons from the Microphone, Tuning
into the Enduring Widom of Visionary Leaders. It is written
by our host, Scott the Motor City Madmouth Morgan. Roth
talks about his forty plus years in the industry and
how it has changed.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Get your copy today.

Speaker 5 (26:39):
It's available on Amazon, Barns and Noble, Kindle, Google and
Apple Books. There's also a link on our website www
dot South Florida Tribune dot com, where there is a
plethora of great content, so go check it out. If
you like to listen to podcasts, you can find us
wherever you get your podcast. If you want to advertise,
you can call Scott nine five four three oh four four.

(27:00):
If you want to be a guest or have topic ideas,
you can always email us at self Florida Tribune at
gmail dot com. But most importantly, if you see that
red subscribe button in that lower right hand corner, that
means you have not yet subscribed to our channel yet.
I honestly I don't know what you're waiting for. It's
great content. You gotta check us out, click it, like us,
and share us, and then turn your notifications on so

(27:23):
you're notified every time we go live. We'd love to
have you in our chat room too, because we love
interacting with our all of our fans and all of
the good people out there, So please do so. One
last thing and I'm gonna quick put it up there.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
We're talking about CTE. We're trying to raise.

Speaker 7 (27:42):
Money here so help us people https colon slash slash
go fund period me slash nine three F F nine
C six E.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
We're trying to raise money so that Bill can give
we can do this free.

Speaker 5 (28:04):
Free hyperbarrack chamber sessions for people that are affected by CTU.
We're trying to help him get there, help as many
people as we can, so please help us help all
of them.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
Back to the program, all right, Candy, Well, we're gonna
talk about Jerry McGuire. So I'll let Candy lead the
way on this.

Speaker 5 (28:26):
So William tell us about I mean, if anybody knows,
show me the money. So show me how Jerry McGuire
affected you.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (28:35):
There was one point where I was doing football movies.
Football movies, it's a crazy story. I always say, first
of all, how much time do we have? Because I
don't want to go over because I guess it's a
long story. How much that we got is that you
need five minutes, you need two minutes, What you need,
you can do five.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (28:55):
I was doing a series of football movies, so I
had like a three or four movie deal with I
did Jere McGuire. First the water Boys showed up, which
I didn't go do, and then any given Sunday, which
I wanted to set and walked away because I was
watching the movie started to get violent, it was viting,
started to show up, and so in jerem maguire, Like
when I got there, this guy showed up with Mark Ellis.

Speaker 4 (29:16):
He showed up.

Speaker 6 (29:17):
As soon as I walked on the field, it was
like more than five hundred people there. He said, hey,
stick right next to me. I don't know this guy
I'm like, okay, sure, So I stuck next to him.
This other guy, Allan Gram shows up. He used to
play for USC I think, used to block for O. J. Simpson,
play pro and does a lot of Hollywood stuff. He
comes out with this megaphone and he's screaming at everybody.
He said, if you're like one hundred and fifty pounds,

(29:38):
you don't look like a pro football player, get out
here right now. If you never played pro football, get
out of here right now. You're wasting my time. And
so I wanted to leave, but that the guy, the
other guy, told me to stay there. So they break
us up into positions. They put me with the defensive backs,
and they was like, you too fat, You get out
of here. Sideline you extra, you too fat, you're too

(29:58):
skinned to get out. It was millionat and that was
the mostly milliating thing I ever did. And so we
get to the point where this one guy, he says,
if you can't run four or five and the forty,
you wasted my time.

Speaker 4 (30:08):
Get out here now.

Speaker 6 (30:09):
Guy said, I can do what I can do it.
He gets to the line, he takes about four steps.
The guy stops to watch. He said, when he gets done, tell.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
Me to get us out of here.

Speaker 4 (30:17):
You know that.

Speaker 6 (30:17):
It was that kind of thing. So when I ran,
I actually ran the fastest time right. In fact, all
the people ran the fastest forty times. So we get
to the next thing.

Speaker 4 (30:26):
There's these four tackling drummings laying on the ground.

Speaker 6 (30:29):
So I had to run forward, back pedal, run forward,
back pedal. The one guy went through, he touched one
bag that kicked him out. When I went through it,
I stepped on every damn bag to be stepped on.
Anything it could be stepped on that I wasn't supposed
to step on. I stepped on it, and that guy
looked at me, he said, you're exempt. You don't have
to do anything else.

Speaker 4 (30:47):
You just si right there.

Speaker 6 (30:48):
Everybody looked at me for if the boy, if it
looks couldn't kill out of be dead on the spot. Yeah,
and so yeah, so we got to the point where
there it becomes physical, like they hired me just because
they wanted to me put the uniforms on and run
ass and make the people. But there were some people
they brought out there to do the hard hitting. And
so we get to the first very first scene they're doing.
The guy asked me, He said, how do I supposed

(31:09):
to hit this guy? Because this guy's Hollywood stump man.
He said, he rolls cars and jumps out of burning buildings.
So he's doing ten yards across the middle, puts catch
the ball and the guy tackles him.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Right, So they do that, and he asked him, how
do we do it? He said, you can't fake football.
You just have to hit him.

Speaker 6 (31:26):
So the guy does his route, bro catch the ball.
The guy just hits him. He lays down, you know,
he falls down, and then they called cut. Everybody walks
back to the huddle. That Hollywood stump man still lay
on the ground and we went overlooked them. He had
like snot in his eyes.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
It was it was brutal. It was brutal.

Speaker 6 (31:45):
Yeah, And so the thing is, they promised everybody more money.
He said, the better you guys do, the more money
we're gonna give you. But they didn't starting passing out
that bonus money. So one day we're in the locker
room and that people on these sets are always talking
about strikes.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
So Cuba walks in.

Speaker 6 (32:00):
He hears somebody talking about strikes from the movie the
program from a previous movie. So Cuba says strike. He said,
entertainment is out. No entertainment tonight is outside of the
locker room right now, don't strike right now. You got
his bodyballs, just don't do it now. I'll get you
your money.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
So he left. These producers came in, some other producers
flew in.

Speaker 6 (32:21):
We're still in the locker room for hours, and they
upgraded our money like they were supposed to do in
the first place.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
And the rest was that.

Speaker 4 (32:28):
You know, but I'm gonna give you another story.

Speaker 6 (32:31):
The other part of it is when you crossed the
like I didn't really care, Like I didn't really want
to cross that picking line, Like I didn't care about
getting more, but I wasn't.

Speaker 4 (32:38):
Going to cross that picking line.

Speaker 6 (32:39):
Because in the next movie they did Waterboy, one guy
told on somebody talking about strike. So they fired this
guy and so they're all both playing defense. So when
they call, they call the next play. So remember he's
on he's on defense. They said the action, So they rolling.
This guy gets up stead of him going this way,

(33:01):
he runs behind the line and he just pumbles.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
This guy.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
He just knocked so much consciously, and then the director
was like break that looked that was a great hit.
He said, hey, wait a minute, you both on defense. Yeah,
and this guy was like, he's all kind of wobbly,
and so he said, don't do that again.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
So then.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
It happened again. They called hike.

Speaker 6 (33:24):
The guy runs, runs down the back, he clumbs this
guy again blown. He said, hey, why you do that again?
We told you don't do it again.

Speaker 4 (33:32):
So I can't make this up.

Speaker 6 (33:34):
They actually took cardboard and they put it on this
guy's him and right here and taped it and said
don't look at him again. But that's the violence of
these sports and likes. So these people are out there
getting getting pumble. So when I actually got down to
the set of any given Sunday, it was out of
the Stone movie and they told me what they wanted
me to do.

Speaker 4 (33:54):
Now, I wasn't the guy who was gonna be just
running fast with a uniform on. And I left the set.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
I was like, I'm not.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
I'm not that I wanted you to take the hits.

Speaker 4 (34:03):
They wanted me to take some hits. I was like,
I am not gonna do that.

Speaker 6 (34:07):
I'll take somebody, I'll dive over with somebody, but I
will not take those hits because my Deaes.

Speaker 4 (34:12):
I remember that scene in Jerem Maguire where he gets
flipped at the end.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
Mm hm.

Speaker 4 (34:18):
We did that the first day, like I think it
was thirty seven times. It wasn't even close to what
they wanted.

Speaker 6 (34:22):
The second day we got it in four takes and
it wasn't even perfect, but they was like, well, we're
just gonna deal with that.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (34:29):
But that's that's the crazy.

Speaker 6 (34:30):
But the irony is years later after we finished that,
I meant to lift the trainer ser this is my
last year racing with the boss that team. I started
dreaming about Tom Cruise running out that tunnel. He had
to run out that tunnel deliver his lines to his
client who was knocked out on his ground. And every
night I started dreaming that.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
I was like, Okay, I think that means I'm supposed
to go back to La go back to Hollywood. And
so after I left TV or say, that's what I did,
but it was Tom Cruise. Tom Cruise brought me back.
Yeah great started Yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
Yeah, Grapeot folks, we'll talk about misdiagnosis. Take it from there.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Well, let's talk really really quickly before we go to
misdiagnosed well misdiagnoses, so CTE is very often misdiagnosed as PTSD,
bipolar syndrome, depression, anxiety. William said, you know, William swears
he was in dementia. But we were talking earlier about hockey,

(35:24):
and this list is from a gentleman who is suffering
severely from CTE symptoms from playing hockey. And he says,
this is not even a complete list, but I'm going
to read you off these symptoms. And I know William
had some of these. William didn't have anger, thank goodness,
but this guy says quick temper, anger and rage so

(35:45):
bad you're worried every time you leave the house. Impulsivity,
poor judgment, reclusiveness like no social skills, staying away from everybody.
And the reason we're going over these these symptoms is
so that people can start recognizing this in yourself or
in your loved ones and start questioning, maybe I have

(36:06):
a brain injury that I didn't even realize that I have.
So reclusiveness, trouble concentrating, memory problems, trouble prioritizing, lack of motivation,
lack of initiative, paranoia, feeling like people are always coming
at you, or staring at you or are focused on
you being watched or followed. Anxiety, unexplained localized pain in

(36:31):
different parts of the body. That's fibromyalgia. That's a trauma,
a trauma condition. Brain and fogginess, it feels like your
brain is numb. Depression, lack of empathy, ugly thoughts, verbal outbursts, apathy,
mood swings, fatigue, irritability, lack of interest, and with William,

(36:55):
oh gosh, there's even more lack of energy, restless legs,
ringing in ears, down and light sensitivity, spaced out feelings
and look, sensory overload, out of body feelings, feeling like
I'm drunk or floating outside my body. I feel this
twenty four to seven hallucinations in the winter time for

(37:16):
some reason, when the sun goes down it gets really bad,
or other times I might get sensory overload when the
sun is up, you know, from too much. So there's
all kinds of things, and it's especially if the medications
are not working. William, you want to kind of add
to this or add your commentary to this list, or

(37:38):
what meds you you experienced.

Speaker 4 (37:41):
Well, you know, my background was mental health.

Speaker 6 (37:44):
First place I ever worked after I left college was
it was the first mental health facil the.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
West of the Missipi River.

Speaker 6 (37:49):
So I will I learned like watching the extreme behaviors
from depression all the way up to criminally insane and
even some of the people who have been lobotomized at
the time, you know. So that's that was really my background.
But all those symptoms he talks about, like they really
touched home. I read that same list and as he
was saying that my ears a ring and soul out
last night when I actually looked at that list, and

(38:11):
I was like, ah, you know, it was like that moment,
but yeah, that was Yeah. I think that list pretty
much touches everybody.

Speaker 4 (38:20):
Yeah. But the other thing is, like I was.

Speaker 6 (38:23):
I was watching the documentary, was the Kanye West documentary, like,
and I was telling people like, that's my background, Like
that's what I did, That's that was my passion. And
so when I went to watch that documentary, and I
always tell people, I don't think he's bipolar.

Speaker 4 (38:36):
I say he might be schizophrenic, but I don't think
he's bipolar. So I'm watching this documentary and all of.

Speaker 6 (38:41):
His symptoms that he was talking about, the first thing
he talked about was the man's how the mass made
him feel, but it didn't.

Speaker 3 (38:46):
Work in you're talking about Kanye West.

Speaker 4 (38:48):
Kanye West, Yes, yeah, So I tried to they gave
me the same mans. When I when I had just
kind of given up, I said, let me try something.
I can't sid here fester like this.

Speaker 6 (38:58):
So I let the doctor prescribe me as ALLA and
it made things fifty times worse, you know, And so
those pills are made for healthy brains, so if you've
been misdiagnosed, which it didn't make sense to me because
Kanye was a rapper.

Speaker 4 (39:10):
He wasn't a he wasn't a sports player. But then
I remembered his song. He had a song that said
he had a car accident and his jaw was in
the back of his mouth, and so that mean he
had a concussion. There's no way he didn't have a concussion.

Speaker 6 (39:23):
And during that time period, they didn't treat concussions because
his outburst and well, I.

Speaker 4 (39:29):
Said, that's gotta be brain related. That is not. He
looks like CTE welcome post a child.

Speaker 6 (39:35):
And so I got home and I actually I calculated
that when I had my first concussion and when my
symptoms kicked in, and then I looked at his first
of all, another red flag guy that jumped out at me.
He was diagnosed bipolar at forty. That's a no, no, bipolar.
You're gonna get that between eighteen.

Speaker 4 (39:55):
And twenty one.

Speaker 6 (39:56):
You're not gonna get to twenty two, twenty three, twenty four,
twenty made just maybe that could happen, but never forty.
So I believe that that concussion is what's causing him
these issues because he's been misdiagnosed. That's what I personally think,
and it's very simple.

Speaker 4 (40:11):
I know it's family.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
They have the chamber.

Speaker 4 (40:13):
Just give me that chamber, give me that champer. Four months,
see what happens.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
See now, I know we could do a lot of
different things with misdiagnosis, so we're not going to be
able to take it at all in the next five
to seven minutes. But if Jennifer, when we talk about
misdiagnosed in general nature right now, gave me a description
of what we're looking to do mentioned tonight, and then
obviously we'll talk about it on a later episode.

Speaker 3 (40:37):
Yeah, I mean, if if any of those symptoms, you know,
if you recognize any of those symptoms, or if you
are diagnosed with something and the medications are not working,
if you're frustrated and you're thinking, you know, anxiety medicine
is at a number one, right Like if I take
I could take a quarter of a xanax and be
out like a light. Someone with CTE can take two, three,

(40:58):
four xan x. They might walk around in a fog,
but it's not going to take away the anxiety. The
medications don't help, so then the person is it feels
even more helpless, even more hopeless, and ends up. And
you know, one of the things that we didn't talk
about are it says ugly thoughts, but suicidal tendencies. That's
William talks about. You know, his teammates dying. They weren't

(41:22):
dying on their own they were dying by their own hand.
And that's a really important thing to talk about in
you here, and we'll talk on November eleventh about veterans.
But you know, because it's important because people are taking
their own lives. They're committing suicide not just because they're
hopeless and feel helpless, but because these symptoms are so

(41:43):
bad and they don't want to keep living. This isn't
a life and so knowing that, hey, maybe this diagnosis
is wrong and we can get people help a different way.
That's what's important.

Speaker 1 (41:56):
Great style far you know what, We'll go to Candy's
take ways go ahead, and then we'll put the go
f on me. Hey, just you know nine o'clock PM,
me's her time, will change his gears. It goes with
Candy and I and we go over the sports Exchange,
where the only tendency is that everybody has to deal
with is where all of my topics are going to
go in rapid fire. So get ready for a wild,

(42:19):
wild night and the second half of our double Hatter
on this Sports Exchange just no limits where we have
a limit of no limits on emotion in this show,
but when it comes to no limits later, there's no
limits on how loud I'm going to talk because I'm
gonna turn it. It looks like both and lose and no,
I don't plan to say because if I do that,
there will be a lot more of the problems in

(42:40):
CTE called hearing problems on this program. All right, can't
you give me some takeaways?

Speaker 5 (42:45):
You know the raw motion will that you showed at
the beginning and the opening of the show makes it
really real, you know, I mean because we can talk
about it, but it really brings it home. And how
something so simple as reaching out to people talking about this,

(43:07):
How even if we affect one person, every show like
this is worth it. You know, how you talked about
Joe Namath and how what he did save your life.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
It's inspiring.

Speaker 5 (43:21):
I mean, you know, and and then you thanking us
for being on this platform and giving you this platform
to talk about it. And it's like it's a no
brainer for me, Like why wouldn't more people do this,
you know, to help you raise money, to help you
help others, because that's all you're doing, is you want

(43:41):
to help others. You know that we're affected with something
that affected you, and it affects a lot of people,
I think, way more than we care to admit.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
You know, some of it in sports, but it doesn't
have to be in sports.

Speaker 5 (43:59):
You know, we always think of it as in sports,
but like I think about Scott Scott's fallen, like you
can fall at home and hit your head and that
you know you can get CTE from that, and people
don't think about those things.

Speaker 2 (44:14):
And I think I'm so glad that we're using this
platform to bring.

Speaker 5 (44:18):
This information out to people so that they maybe can
recognize things and maybe help one person.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
And I think, you know obviously, I mean, I'm a
Jerry McGuire fan.

Speaker 5 (44:30):
I liked the movie, but I really like the beginning
of this with Joe Namath and the raw motion you
saw on I know you were almost embarrassed, I think,
but you shouldn't have done because honestly, no, honestly, that
was real. That was raw, that was unscripted, and I
loved it. That was my favorite part of all of

(44:50):
that we've done so far, because it really showed me
how much he impacted you and how it changed your life.
And if we could do that for anybody else.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
I'm thrilled.

Speaker 1 (45:03):
And you know, I'll say this moment, that's why I
did an audible with the line of scrimmage and decided
to lead off with Joe name It because I kept
listening to a pal and he kept bringing it up.
Turned this into a segment. Hey, listen, I don't have
a problem with you demonstrated real emotion, but really, seriously, really,
it's a good way to lead up. So it was
your funt Okay, thanks, Yeah, I take full responsibility for

(45:26):
doing an audible with the line of scrimmage and caused
the need to break down and a good way. But
the reality is is that Weaview Bank was his coach
and he beat Don Shula, who to me with the
Baltimore Coles, and we got Joe name with with the
guarantee and the Joe name with what is guarantee was
he got back to you and helped keep you in
a position where I could grilly about this every cotton

(45:49):
pick and awake all here on. But don't worry. You're
gonna get it a little bit later. Oh my god,
but you handled it for so good. I'll let you
off easy. I hit you tonight, boy, Oh goodness, Well
you take that rong emotion you had. Now you're gonna
feel like it was my hard boiled egg that I
blew up in a microwave. A we could go. But

(46:12):
that's the side of the point. That's last week's news.
But meanwhile, what a show we had, and I we
appreciate rob my co host mo Rosca coming in here.
Jennifer's all choked up over my one liner, so she yeah,
pretty days of hers ago out there and turned red
like an apple or red like my shirt or red
like your shirt. KNDy, Well she's a different shirt. But

(46:33):
check out that dough on me page if y'all get
a chance, and let's help my partner on the Sports
Exchange as well as mister Inspirational with the sliding to
get going with that. So if we get ready to
sit over the Sports Exchange in a few minutes, Katy,
go ahead.

Speaker 5 (46:48):
Well, well, explain a little bit about this go fundme
page because we just put it up there. But really,
what's the meat and guts behind it? Like, what do
you want to accomplish? What are you looking for to
use these funds for?

Speaker 6 (47:00):
Actually, honestly, I have a champer right behind me. I've
already started. I've started a year and year and a
half ago. The same way you started me crying. Is
people calling me crying the same way to me now,
which is ah man. But yeah, I just want to
offer the same treatment that was offered to me. And
it's so expensive to do it on your own. It's
you know, it's just it costs a lot. Most people

(47:21):
won't be able to do it, and I just want
to pay it forward. No more to it than that
offer the same treatment and some extra things that we
know that are working better now.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
And just paying forward.

Speaker 3 (47:32):
That's it.

Speaker 4 (47:32):
There's no hitting agendas.

Speaker 6 (47:35):
I hope that you come and follow us because the
thing that people missed with my story, they missed they
talk about the dementia, I mean the all the weird stuff,
but they I was a dementia guys, and I know
we have parents and grandparents. And once I came out
of it, I don't know how. I was like, this
is impossible, but we all have people that are aging.
And then when I start talking to people later, I

(47:56):
found out there's studies on this for Alzheimer's and for dementia.
No one told me, and I find it out for myself,
you know, by accident. So this thing is it's gonna
help a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
And that's well. This is my weekly ritual where I
crack somebody. One liners are poor Jen. She has to
go off camera because she can't stop laughing. If he
boiled up, she has to go off And I knew
i'd lose her one first show because I'm going to
say something crazy that he's gonna turn into a red
apple me blessing. I don't know if you have freckles

(48:30):
or not, and whether you have tears on your eyes
that didn't raw motion. I don't know what they call that. Yeah,
you just there. I know then I get here on
the program, you know you have raw e motion. We're
talked to deal with Joe. She got a real emotion
because she's dealing with a program. But that if I'm

(48:51):
making real people, this is a serious subject. I realize that,
but that doesn't prevent me from cracking one liners because
in the eyes of my legendary following in law freight
Outlan kettle Corn, you gotta keep it real, and that's
what we do. Preight out like he's not only resting
in pizzas, he's laughing and uh piece as well, watching

(49:11):
me go crazy about this subject. And Jennifer's out there
turning into a red apple every he saying, no, wait,
she has her I have to get off camera. You're
gonna laugh, but don't get off camera because we gotta
get off on this happens to me. Oh Dan, you're incredible,
I thought, I like Margo.

Speaker 6 (49:28):
Thank you so much for doing what you do. Scott
and YouTube Care and Jennifer, thank you guys so much,
so thank you. Nothing worse than being open, Like you're
on your own with this, and.

Speaker 5 (49:38):
So soon this go fund me. So you're trying to
raise money to get more machines. Where are you located.

Speaker 6 (49:46):
I'm in Los Angeles, but I have places in the Midwest.
Was doing in Saint Louis. It's the middle of the country.
I could afford the real estate there. I'm gonna donate
that in myself.

Speaker 5 (49:56):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (49:56):
And we just gotta get the money for the equipment,
and I need help with the bill out too, So
I got a big build of waiting on this right now.

Speaker 4 (50:03):
I just it's got to raise the funds to get
the get the equipment.

Speaker 5 (50:06):
And at some point you said you want to eventually
get to the point where you can give vouchers out
to people with some of this money after you've taken
care of because I just want everybody to realize that,
you know, like so if you if you don't live
in the Midwest, you can still you know, don't know.

Speaker 3 (50:22):
And event yeah, he wants to fly people in, so
he wants to cover travel room, you know, everything, so
that so that someone who's hurting can travel in to
his center stay for thirty straight days. Do two treatments
a day if they need to, three treatments a day
if they need to, but get get proper care for

(50:42):
thirty straight days longer if they need it.

Speaker 4 (50:45):
But yeah, yeah, there is thirty days for this thing.

Speaker 2 (50:48):
So okay, okay, I think it's just important.

Speaker 5 (50:51):
So when people are when they know that they're donating,
what all it covers and what you want to cover
to help people?

Speaker 1 (50:59):
Right?

Speaker 3 (50:59):
A medical Yeah, a medical grade chamber starts around. I
mean there's some for seventy thousand, but they're really one
hundred hundred and fifty two hundred and fifty thousand. It's
no joke of a machine, and it's no joke of
a price. If in you're battling CTE, you're probably not working,
you're probably not taking in a whole bunch of money.
So then when they say the treatment is available to you,

(51:22):
but you can't afford it, it's not available to you.
So William wants to remove that burden accost and say no,
we for the from the grace of people the public
making donations through his GoFundMe, he's now able to purchase
a medical grade hyperbaric oxygen chamber. They have them where
there's multi like six people can go in a chamber now,

(51:44):
So if we can get one of those and you
can treat six people at a time, you have you know,
you could run it twelve hours a day. They're made
for that, so you can run it twelve hours a day.
You can how many people you could help over and
over and over again, just amplify the quality of life,
give them back their quality of life from on the
ground to speaking on podcasts to encouraging everybody else. Like

(52:07):
he's got cognition. You can hear me. He's an excellent speaker,
you know.

Speaker 4 (52:12):
And it's very simple stuff.

Speaker 6 (52:14):
Guys like like like I have a soft chamber back
here and I allow people to come music, but I
can't send too many people because it's not designed for
that type of warring tear. And if it goes bad,
then I'm gonna go bad. And so we need the
metal ones, the big ones. That's gonna you understand the
warring tear. And it's just so simple stuff.

Speaker 3 (52:32):
It's very simple, and they're different grades. There's the A
T A, the A T A and I forget what
that sounds for, but it's it's how how how much
compression or how small it can compress the actual molecule.
So medical grade chambers start at two point zero two
point oh a t A and it goes up from there.

(52:55):
But that at two point oh at A it shrinks
the large oxygen molecule all the way down to a
tiny oxygen molecule equivalent to thirty three feet underwater. So
you'll hear HBOT hyperbaric oxygen therapy. People who do they
do dives and we call it a dive, which is
the same as a scuba dive. Right, I've done sixty

(53:16):
dives in an HBOT chamber.

Speaker 4 (53:20):
Yeah, Connor, I've.

Speaker 6 (53:22):
Brought about three hundred dives in myself. I won't have
more than five hundred hours in.

Speaker 1 (53:26):
Well, let me tell you everybody that's watching and listening
through on our platforms. If you think you're gonna get
it overnight, you're not. That's why we're doing this show
repetitiously so you get it, so don't be discouraged. All
of us are learning every day and we hope you
can learn along with us as well. That does it
for this edition of No Limits. So with that said,

(53:46):
we have the Sports of Change at the top of
the hour, and the go fundme information is on our
screen right now, but we'll be back. Well, let everybody
know what we're going to be up. I think we
will be off what next week? Is that, correct, Jennifer,
But no.

Speaker 3 (54:01):
We're yes, we're off next week, correct, right.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
And then we'll return the following I believe so in
about two weeks from now, we'll have another set of
topics and we'll come up with some new information to
educate you. Well, appreciate the loyalty and now only become
bringing awareness of CTE. Will, Jennifer, Candy, and of course myself,
Will and I are the specimens in this whole deal.

(54:23):
But nevertheless, I catch the specimen. I don't even know.
I've heard a whole lot worse than that, but especially
I never thought I call myself a specimen on a
live broadcast. Nevertheless, it is.

Speaker 3 (54:36):
It is.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
I got. I've got Jennifer lasting for the second time
like the last out again. Wait wait, don we get
to see her in person? How bad that sense of
humor is going to be in the eyes of Jackson.
Everybody knows who he is country, But that's a force
to change. Top of the hour and last thing as

(55:00):
we go, William and jen how do you want everybody
to get a hold of you.

Speaker 4 (55:05):
Yeah, no, it's what.

Speaker 3 (55:08):
One man at one man with a chamber is William's
uh social media comment one at one man with a chamber. Yeah,
you know, follow him, comment, reach out DM. He's got
answers for you.

Speaker 2 (55:25):
You guys can talk.

Speaker 3 (55:26):
He can help you because he's amazing. So at one
man with a chamber and then uh, and then if
you can donate even fifty dollars, one hundred dollars, whatever,
you can give twenty five dollars, you know, one hundred
and twenty five dollars, one thousand, twenty five dollars. You know,
every little bit is going to add up to saving
more lives from from this condition.

Speaker 1 (55:46):
There you go, Well that put the button ribbon on
his button on it. Whatever you follow an I a
don on top of an eye, a T cross on
top of sea, whatever edition them. But I'll tell you
what we and we will be open to the public.
This is not this is a public and we're going

(56:07):
to be opening to the public in about twenty nine
minutes time. There's sports exchange in the older city and
man Mouth keeps on both and lose on more off
the wall stuff. So that does it. Two weeks from
now we'll be added again the Fearsome Foursome does it?
So me well, thank you very much for joining us,
and we'll answer any comments on YouTube that we get

(56:27):
more happy and if they also want to reach Jennifer
and William, you can reach us through Southward to me
at gmail dot com as well, and we'll be moren't
happy to forge your questions to them as well. So meanwhile, Candy,
thanks again as my co host. Jennifer is always great
to work with you, and I'm glad I get the
Annuel two or three last and the one hop off
camera first show, which is said everybody knows why you're
doing it and William emotion and no emotion. I can

(56:50):
guarantee in about twenty eight thirty minutes you're mostly gonna
be a whole lot different than it was around fifty
four minutes ago. Let me tell you that be raw
emotion of that's gonna be wrong. Oh my god, this
guy praisey. Well, all right, that doesn't We've been in
the night seeing two weeks Under Woman and talking about
c T with Jan and William. Thank you, everybody, having

(57:12):
a good night.

Speaker 4 (57:12):
Thank you very much,
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