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December 9, 2025 59 mins
2025: The Year America Got Thinner — But Not Healthier | Media Power Grabs & Cancer Truths
2025 is being called “the year America shed” — with more people losing weight than ever thanks to fad diets, Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepbound, and every quick-fix trend imaginable. But here’s the shocking truth: Americans may be getting thinner, but not healthier. Why? Today we break down the real reasons behind the wellness illusion.
Then, a massive story almost no one is paying attention to: the brewing Warner Bros. takeover battle. Donald Trump, backed by Saudi money and his son-in-law Jared Kushner, is pushing for a hostile takeover to compete with (and control) Netflix. What’s the motive? What does it mean for media, entertainment, and democracy? We dig into the power dynamics behind the scenes.
Plus — new, surprising research on cancer detection asks a provocative question: Should all cancers be found? The answer isn’t what you think.
The Karel Cast is funded by your support at patreon.com/reallykarel.
Watch, like, comment, and subscribe at youtube.com/reallykarel.
Listen on all major platforms: Apple Music, Spotify, iHeartMedia, Spreaker, and more. Catch the show Monday through Thursday at 10:30 AM PST, with daily clips on TikTok and Instagram.
Karel is a history-making broadcaster based in Las Vegas with his service girl, Ember — bringing bold commentary, big stories, and unfiltered truth.
#TheKarelCast, #2025Trends, #OzempicCulture, #WeightLossTruth, #Wegovy, #Zepbound, #AmericanHealthCrisis, #MediaTakeover, #WarnerBrosDeal, #TrumpNews, #JaredKushner, #SaudiMoney, #NetflixWar, #CancerResearch, #HealthMyths, #PoliticalCommentary, #NewsAnalysis2025, #LasVegasCreator, #LGBTQCommentator, #PodcastLife
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Corilla is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Corilla is the one that you need to.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Know now, it's show side.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
Do you hear that?

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Found?

Speaker 6 (00:31):
All over Australia kids are bumping into trees and walking
into road Why? I'll tell you. Also, twenty twenty five
the year we got thinner? But did we get healthier?

Speaker 5 (00:41):
We'll talk four.

Speaker 7 (00:45):
Uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged.

Speaker 8 (00:50):
It's the Coral Cast. Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 5 (00:59):
It is the cast.

Speaker 6 (01:00):
I am corell Happy Tuesday, December ninth, So very glad
you are joining me. Woooooo Well do you hear that sound?
All over Australia children are bumping into trees and walking
off cliffs. We'll tell you why. Also, twenty twenty five
was the year of a zempic. Yes it was here before,
but really this year the mass has got it, not

(01:21):
just the riches the rich people. And are we got thinner?
But did we get healthier? We are going to talk
about that and the Darings d of Washington DCS. Trump
heads to Pennsylvania to try to sell the affordability I
don't know memo that the GOP are trying to sell

(01:42):
and in Japan, a giant earthquake has them issue quite
a rare warning, which is that there could be a
mega quake. They're talking eight, nine, ten or above. What
would happen if that happened. We'll talk to you about that.
I am so glad you are here with me today.

Speaker 5 (02:00):
Have to tell you.

Speaker 6 (02:01):
I have to tell you that my mind is totally
you know, into topics. But my new single came out today,
Correl I Danced because and I am just so very
thrilled that it's here. Here's the cover. Isn't that a
fabulous cover? Look at that? And here is part of

(02:23):
the song.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
And mold.

Speaker 6 (03:00):
And so there's part of the song. It's called Corel
I Dance. Because the cover is still up. I want
to explain to you a little about the cover. That's
an eighties version of me I had. That jacket actually
got stolen from me in Long Beach. I went over
and tried to get it back from the thieves, but

(03:21):
they didn't have it. On the left is Andrew and
a little sailor outfit. On the right is my dear
friend Lorenzo Braxton, both gone, both people that in the
eighties I danced with. And this song means a lot
to me. And I want to tell you why, you know,
at the beginning of the show today, because I really
want this song to resonate. I sometimes dance with the

(03:45):
Apple Fitness Plus people. They do a dance workout cardio
and a lot of times they do it to eighties music.
And every time that I do it and they play
the eighties music, I cry every time. And the reason
I cry is I'm having a great time and it
makes me remember all the people, all the fabulous gay

(04:07):
men that I have danced with in the eighties and
nineties who left us too early because of AIDS or
other illnesses. Daniel Charleston just left because of ketamine, and
yet I danced with him so much. And so I
sat down, literally, I was I had just finished a
thirty minute workout, and I grabbed my iPad and it

(04:28):
just came out of me in under five minutes. I
dance because I dance because we did. I dance because
we could. I dance to show the world. I dance
to show the good. The lyrics are really powerful. If
you's I know, it's a dance song. But the lyrics
are really powerful. You know, on nights I feel afraid,
on nights, I feel alone. When it's you I want

(04:50):
to hold. I know just what to do, you know,
which is get to the dance floor. And so the
lyrics are really important to me. And I took the
lyrics and sent them into Suno, and Suno came up
with a melody. I then gave that melody to Leo
Frapier in San Francisco House of Frapier, and Leo turned

(05:11):
it into a song. He then sent me the track.
I recorded the leads. I then sent those leads back
to Leo. Jeanie Tracy came in up in San Francisco
into Leo's studio dance Icon Sylvester background singer danceicon of
her own, and she created these background vocals. There were none,

(05:32):
so she completely created them and where they should be
and how they should be and then bam. Matt Consola
on Swisscraft Records released it today and there are twelve mixes,
including Leo Frapier's, Matt Moss, Rafael Mesa, and Dirty Disco.
These are big name remixers, so happy to be working

(05:54):
with them, and I hope you like it. Please go
stream I Dance because.

Speaker 8 (06:00):
Really corell dot com daily you're missing out.

Speaker 7 (06:04):
Get the podcast videos in the blog in gleeting recipes
at really corel dot com.

Speaker 8 (06:09):
That's really k a r e l dot com.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Correll is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Correll is the one that you need.

Speaker 6 (06:27):
To know, all right. Go stream Correl k a r
e l I Dance because buy it, stream at play it.
Tell me which mix is your favorite mix, use it
in your social media post. You can add it in
Instagram and TikTok as music for your post. Please Correl

(06:47):
kri l I Dance because I am not the only
Correl unfortunately on Spotify and on Apple Music or Title
so you have to look for me. It's Corel k
ari l I Dance speak. I am not Corel gotgt
Gott He's a classical musician, but I am Corel, So

(07:07):
please go and stream it.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
All right.

Speaker 6 (07:10):
Speaking of streaming and online in Australia, they've done something brave,
something wonderful, and I hope the rest of the world
does it. And that is today in Australia, people sixteen
and under had their social media accounts deleted period. It
is a law and the services have to do all

(07:31):
they can do to make sure that the kids don't
set up fake account saying they're over the age of sixteen,
as kids are wont to do.

Speaker 9 (07:40):
Now.

Speaker 6 (07:40):
The Australian government did this because of the research that
is out that proves social media is bad for kids. Basically,
anyone under the age of sixteen, it's bad. It is
not good for children. A lot of people have complained, well, yes,
but this gives vulnerable children a sense of community, It
gives them a p you know, if they're marginalized children,

(08:02):
it gives them a place. Yeah yeah, yeah, guess what
I was a marginalized kid. I got by without social media. Okay,
So the argument that kids need social media is ridiculous
because it's harmful and you know, kids might need crack
but we don't let them. Kids might need alcohol to
deal with mom and dad, but we don't let them.

(08:23):
You know, kids might need cannabis, but we don't let
them have it. It is bad for them social media.
We know this, and the Australians have finally, you know,
you gotta love Australia. They had a mass shooting years ago,
forty three people killed.

Speaker 5 (08:39):
What did they do?

Speaker 6 (08:40):
They immediately the next day outlawed guns immediately, no conversation
about it, no back and forth, they outlawed them. Now,
if you want a handgun, you have to register it,
you have to prove that you use it for target practice,
all this kind of stuff. And now they know that

(09:00):
social media is bad. The scientific proof is out there
and they've banned it. They are the first domino to fall,
and I hope that many other countries follow suit. Now, kids,
you might hate me for this, and so you're just old.
I am old, And guess what. I'm old enough to
know that you, if you're sixteen or under, should not

(09:23):
be wasting your time on social media. Read a frickin' book,
go to the library, communicate with people, have meetups, go
meet your friends, go for a fricking bike ride, get
out in nature, study, figure out what you're gonna do
with your freaking life. Get away from social media. Australia,
my hats are off to you, absolutely off. I think

(09:47):
it is one of the best things any country can do.
What do you all think I'd love to hear your responses. Now,
most of you listening to me, when you were sixteen,
you didn't have social media. Okay, so this wasn't a thing.
We had the telephone, maybe a party line, and we
had the phone cord that was fifteen feet long, so
we could take the slim line phone from the kitchen

(10:09):
into our bedroom.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
Okay. That was social media.

Speaker 6 (10:14):
Social media was meeting your friends after school, you know,
going for watch stranger things. The camaraderie between those kids.
They're not kids anymore, but you know what I mean,
the camaraderie between that group. Watch the Goonies, you know,
watch the Lost Boys, the camaraderie stand by me, watch that.

(10:37):
The camaraderie between those groups of kids does not exist
in nations where the kids have access to social media.
They don't have large groups of friends that they hang
out with. They hang out online. The best thing in
the world would be if social media were taken from.

Speaker 5 (10:57):
All of us.

Speaker 6 (10:58):
By the way, I think adults do much worse with
social media than kids. The best thing in the world
would be if Instagram, x truth, social Facebook, all of
it went away. Our elections would go back to being
safe and sane. Again, think about that. American presidencies have

(11:20):
been swayed by social freakin media. MAGA could not have
been created in the mass way that it is without
social media. It just couldn't have. So Australia said, you
know what, We're not just gonna talk. We're not just

(11:41):
gonna look at these studies and say, yeah, that's true.
Social media does hurt our children, but there's nothing we
can do. They're doing something and today it started or
else cooking with Carter on Instagram says today, I love
that kid. So I say, hats off to the Australians.

(12:03):
I think we should follow suit in this country. I don't,
and god the data is there. Another report just came
out Kids that use social media before the age of
thirteen are more depressed. They have problems with attention, They
have all kinds of emotional and psychological problems. We know
this now. You gotta remember my whole life. I grew

(12:26):
up with being discriminated against for the children, for the babies.
We can't like they teachers in school.

Speaker 10 (12:35):
We must protect the babies. Oh, we can't let people
have abortion. We must protect the babies, the children. Don't
let drag queens read to the children.

Speaker 6 (12:46):
The children the babies, and then we let them grab
a phone and bury their lives inside a screen when
we know it's bad for them. You know who social
media is good for when you have children, the parents,
Because I have seen many a restaurant now where I'm
sitting there and the family next to.

Speaker 5 (13:07):
Me of two kids.

Speaker 6 (13:09):
The kids are using the tablets and the phones and
they ain't even ten years old, and the parents sit
there on their phones while the kids are sitting there
on theirs. And that's dinner, and that's sad. I have
commented several times to those types of families. I have
gone up and said, do not like your children. I
said this, I swear to God. I walked up, I

(13:31):
said do not like your children? And they go, what
do you mean? And I go, well, you're all having
a family dinner and yet none of you are talking
to each other. You're all on your phones. Oh well,
you know it's okay. No, it's not okay, it's not okay.
So I think what Australia have done is great.

Speaker 5 (13:49):
What do you think?

Speaker 6 (13:50):
I'd love to hear your comments from the chat room
at YouTube dot com forward slash really Carrell down below
the video here be sure you leave your comments. We
want the algorithm to pick me up, just like you
want to go stream Corel k ariel I dance because
go stream it. There's twelve mixes. One of them is
gonna float your boat, okay, and so and else? What
are saying in the chat room here? Let's check about Australia.

(14:14):
It's so sad what has happened to kids?

Speaker 2 (14:16):
It really is.

Speaker 6 (14:17):
I couldn't agree more Correl. It's also really sad that
there are no public spaces where kids can hang out
like we used to have. I agree, malls and roller rinks.
Come to mind fully agree. I spent so much time
at the roller rink. I used to skate professionally actually,
and spent so much time at the roller rink. We'd
go to Venice Beach every weekend and roller skate every weekend,
me and my friends Dennis Beach. We take the bus

(14:39):
miles and miles fifteen years old, fourteen years old taking
the bus to Venice from Long Beach. We also had
under eighteen dance clubs. We sure did Noah's Ark and
the Teenage Disco up in La I'm for certain it
wasn't circus. Forget the name of it, but there was
a teenage disco up in Los Angeles which was great
fun and I went to it as well. Social media

(14:59):
makes it for child predators easier for child predators. Yep,
Rachel says thumbs up to Australia. I agree, ray Ra
Nati good for Australia. I agree, I fully agree, because look,
we now live in an era where data comes at
us and tells us something and we promptly ignore it.

Speaker 5 (15:23):
Or you'd all be vegan.

Speaker 6 (15:24):
For instance, I know some of you are, and because
of me, some of you are, and that's great. All
of you aren't because you refuse to accept data that
doesn't fit your life. Now, Like they said in the
one good line from the movie after the Hunt, life
is not made for you to be comfortable or not.

(15:46):
Everything in life is there to make you comfortable if
data is uncomfortable, So what.

Speaker 5 (15:52):
The fact is we ignore the data.

Speaker 6 (15:55):
We know a plant forward diet is the way to
health and the way to longevity and the way to
help save the planet. We know that, but many of
you listening to me still come up with stupid reasons
why you have to eat meat or dairy because you
don't have to eat meat or dairy.

Speaker 5 (16:14):
Maybe dairy.

Speaker 6 (16:15):
You know, I've given a lot of thoughts to vegetarianism recently.
I am a vegan, and you know, I don't want
to eat eggs, but sometimes I'm somewhere and there's something
made with milk or cream and I really want it.
So I've been entertaining it. I haven't tried anything yet,
but you know, but that data is there, and you
promptly ignore it. The climate change data is in. We

(16:39):
know what we need to do, and that means no
more fossil fuels within five years globally, no more coal,
no more oil. We know that, we know it. It's
not even debated anymore. It's for anyone with a brain,
it's in evidence. We ignore those facts. We tend to
ignore facts that would make that we have to change

(17:01):
our life. We don't want to change our lives, and
we certainly don't want to change our society, and so
we ignore that. We know that Donald Trump did not
win the last election fairly. We know that everybody knows that.
We know there was tampering in the Swing States. We
know that Elon musk illegally contributed.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
We know all this.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
We know it.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
It's a fact and we do nothing about it. Nothing Australia.
We know that guns need to be banned in the
United States when it comes to assault weapons, handguns, they
need to be strictly regulated. Strictly regulated. You need to
be licensed to have one, you need to have insurance

(17:43):
on it, so if you do some deed with it,
it's covered. We know this. We know guns. The number
one killer of kids in America are handguns. We do
nothing about it. We know that fact. The number one
cause of death for people under the age of eighteen, guns,

(18:04):
we know that, we do nothing about it. In Australia,
they knew that they outlawed guns in Australia. They know
that kids under the age of sixteen should simply not
be on social media, and as of today in Australia
they won't be, or at least they're trying.

Speaker 5 (18:25):
We won't even try.

Speaker 6 (18:27):
We know that Donald Trump is doing illegal orders every
single day.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
We know this.

Speaker 6 (18:34):
Generals know this, the Cabinet knows. Everybody knows that what
he's doing is illegal. Nothing happens. The Supreme Court is
out of control. The conservatives on the Court are handing
him complete and absolute power. They are paving the way

(18:58):
for fascism, we do nothing about it. Clarence Thomas's wife
participated in an insurrection, But we're going out and tackling
people who's sole crime is wanting to live and work
in America. But the woman who committed open sedition, with

(19:20):
the blessing of her husband the Supreme Court justice nothing.
We are a race of animals that will not take
anything that is presented in evidence and make a change.
Unless it fits our lifestyle, then we'll do it. If

(19:42):
it doesn't fit our lifestyle, we won't make the change.
And that's why we're doomed as a species because we
continually ignore what is right in frick in front of us.

Speaker 5 (19:55):
We just ignore it.

Speaker 6 (19:57):
We do nothing about it because we ill powerless in
many ways. You think I can't solve global climate. I
was in the shower this morning. I said, I started
using a pummice stone for my feet so I don't
have to use a dremo. I use a dremal on
my feet, not anymore. I got a pumice stone and
now every morning I pummis stone them. In fact, my
feet are so smooth. When I do yoga, they slip,

(20:20):
so they do.

Speaker 5 (20:22):
I try to slip, but.

Speaker 6 (20:24):
I was in there and I thought I should turn
off the water while I pummiss my feet. You know,
it takes a minute or two and that's just water going.
And I thought, you know what, that ship has sailed
Las Vegas.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Water.

Speaker 6 (20:35):
The ship has sailed because the corporations that are here
use more. I use about forty gallons of water a day.
There are rich people in Las Vegas that use over
one hundred thousand gallons of water a day and they
pay a fine and they don't care because they can
pay the fine, so they don't care. They water their properties,
they have their fountains. I'm not talking about commercial businesses.

(20:56):
I'm talking about the people.

Speaker 5 (20:57):
That own them.

Speaker 6 (20:58):
The casino owners, their house. They published a list. Mark
Wahlberg uses almost eighty thousand gallons.

Speaker 5 (21:05):
Of water a day. But they want me to turn
off the shower. Nope, that ship has said fine by ship.
All right, I'll read your comments put them down below
or in the chat. Do you think I'll thraw has
done the right thing? I do? Or do you think
kids are just gonna find a way to get back
on mid Maybe now is show.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
We need to be a punt.

Speaker 6 (22:22):
But you and I joll you my heart to say,
all right, we're gonna hear a lot of that. I
was dancing I Donald Trump, what a gooney is? What
a goonberry? Absolute goonberry. So Australia has said no, no

(22:47):
to social media and their kids, and I say yay
to them. Now over in Japan, I watch an HK World.
It's a big deal. On an HK World, they have
warned of a possible mega quake. Okay, so there was
a seven point five earthquake, which is pretty freaking mega

(23:09):
if you ask me. It struck the northern part of
the country, causing thirty four mild injuries and some damage
to roads and buildings. The government is estimated that an
offshore megaquake could cause a tsunami up to one hundred
feet tall, that's like an urban Allen film, and kill
two hundred thousand people. They have issued an official advisory.

(23:33):
It's not a prediction, it's an official advisory that the
probability of a magnitude eight or a larger quake is
now at about one to two percent. And that's enough
for them to say, we gotta get ready, we got
to be ready. That's incredible. Now Japan lives you know

(23:57):
with earthquakes. They have a lot of earthquakes over in
Japan a fukushimah. But you gotta wonder. The Ring of
Fire has been so active of late. Many volcanoes are
going off, and now we have Japan with mega quakes.
If I were writing a disaster movie, I would not
use Dennis Quaid. By the way, I like him as

(24:19):
an actor, but he's just too maga. What a shit show?
Did you see that Kennedy honors sl Stallone, whom I like.
I like Sliced Stallone. I so wish he wasn't maga.
I just wish he wasn't maga because guess what, I
think slic Stallone does deserve a Kennedy Center honor.

Speaker 5 (24:37):
I do.

Speaker 6 (24:38):
He has made really inspirational and incredible movies. He is
a great comeback story. Tulsa King is a huge hit
thanks to that cute asshole what's his name, Sheridan? Tyler Sheridan.
He's cute, but I'm told he's an asshole anyway. I've
never met him. I guess I shouldn't pread judge him.

(25:01):
But Tyler Sheridan has written this Tulsa King show, and
I like Tulsa King. I like the premise. I like
Garrett Hedlund, who's in it. I want to marry him.
He's gorgeous, and I like the show, and I like
Sly in it. I mean the surgery. You get past
how he looks, you know, after a minute. And so

(25:22):
I believe he deserves the Kennedy Center honor. I think
he does. And all these people were ragging on Kiss
because there they were these plastic looking Kardashian like rockers,
and they're saying, you know, it's not rock and roll
to kiss the butt of a dictator, and it's not.
You know, I don't think any of them should have

(25:42):
accepted this from Donald Trump. I don't, but that doesn't
mean they don't deserve it.

Speaker 5 (25:49):
Now.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
Look, I don't own one Kiss song. I haven't listened
to one entire Kiss album. But I know how important
they were to rock and roll. Okay, so they deserve
a mean they do. And so it's rough because you
got people like sl Stallone, who deserves the award. You

(26:10):
got people like Kiss, they deserve the award. Felma Houston
Or and that wasn't Selma Houston Ward, Gloria Gaynor. I
can think of many bigger R and B dance artists
who actually deserve the award. But the problem is they're
all maga and I just don't understand how artists. Sly
Stallone grew up in Hollywood since he was like twenty

(26:32):
three years old, twenty four he started by making a porno,
the Italian Stallion. How he could go from making a
porno to being in the Oval with Donald Trump? You know,
and I know sly likes some young I was curious
whether or not he was an Epstein person or not,
because you know he does. He tends to marry. I

(26:55):
know he's got a wife and daughters, but you know
he look at his wife. She's many is his junior.
So just because Trump is honoring them doesn't mean we
should dismiss their you know, deserving us of the award.
I think Slye deserves it. Kiss deserves it. It's just

(27:15):
sad it came from this president. It really truly is
what's going on in the chat room. Cops and robbers
pretending to be professional wrestlers, stickball, yep, those are all
games we used to play. Australia started as a prison colony,
yes it did, but now they got it rightn't didn't they.
Nowadays kids are kept home under lock and key. Can
I just tell you the weirdest phenomenon before we go

(27:37):
to part two of the show, because this speaks to
what you're talking about in the chat room.

Speaker 5 (27:41):
So I drive by a.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
School every morning on my way to and from the
park with Ember, or we walk by it if we're walking,
and the parents maybe some of you have experienced this,
the parents drop them off, you know, bring them to
school because it's a grade school zero through six or
I'm sorry, one through six.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
And so the kids are between.

Speaker 6 (28:02):
The ages of eight and nine, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, forteen,
say eight to thirteen, and because how old are you
in sixth grade twelve, so they're like seven to twelve
years old, and the parents, you know, drop them off
like my parents used to do, or we used to
walk by ourselves at seven, eight or nine years old.

(28:24):
But anyway, and then a large number of parents large
from eight fifteen to nine o'clock when the bell rings
eight forty five, when the bell rings, the parents line
up along the fence and they watch their kids on
the playground. And I, for the life of me, do

(28:45):
not understand why my sister and I were lucky if
my mother even slowed down below ten miles an hour
to throw us out of the car at school. I mean,
what the thought the thought that my mother would ever
get out of the car and watch us on the plague.
She'd be like, why, I don't understand it. I know

(29:05):
they're called helicopter parents. That's helicopter's crash. If you're so insecure,
if you think your kids in danger out there on
the playground, then don't even met that school. Why would
you stand there and watch your kid on the playground?
Can any of you explain that to me? Do any
of you have friends that are parents that do this?

(29:29):
I am gonna have to go to the recorder one
day and ask them, why are.

Speaker 5 (29:32):
You standing here? Why haven't you left your kids in school?
All right, we'll be back to part two of the
procrast I don't get that. Do y'all get that? I
don't get that.

Speaker 11 (29:44):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.

Speaker 8 (29:50):
Listen daily to the.

Speaker 11 (29:51):
CORELL cast on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
Show Time is here.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
We're in no time.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
To fear Corilla is so near because show.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
Time is here. So on with the show.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (30:10):
Corilla is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 4 (30:15):
Now it's show side.

Speaker 5 (30:30):
You'll be well, You'll be great.

Speaker 6 (30:33):
Not gonna eat one thing on your plate. You took
the shot in your tummy. I don't know where they
do the shot. Where do they do the shot? Neoz emping?

Speaker 5 (30:43):
Anyway, we're talking about.

Speaker 7 (30:44):
That uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.

Speaker 8 (30:50):
It's the Corral cast. Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 6 (30:59):
Yowell, you'll be great. You won't touch one thing on
your plate. Got the shot in your tummy now, no
food looks very yummy. Your flabby asses melting by the day. Baby,

(31:21):
A zen pick with govy and zep bound will save
the day. Each a herd out randy rainbow. Well, in
twenty twenty five, more people took the jab.

Speaker 5 (31:37):
Did you get the jab?

Speaker 6 (31:39):
Now? Remember some of these are the same fucking people
that refused to get a COVID shot. Some of these
people are the same fucking people that will not get
a vaccine because there's this whole who knew that you
can no longer rely on the CDC or the government
for health care guidelines. Case you can't because now they're like, oh,
don't take that vaccine, don't take that, don't give babies
vitamin K shots, don't do years of science that we

(32:02):
know works. And they're like, no, no, now, no, so
now you can't listen to the CDC.

Speaker 5 (32:10):
You can't.

Speaker 6 (32:12):
But these people who wouldn't even take the covid jab
are sticking themselves up with the ozempic and the wogovi
and the zeppound.

Speaker 5 (32:20):
Oh yes, onny, the golp. Once.

Speaker 6 (32:25):
As a nation, okay, as a nation, we have lost
more weight in the last year than any other year. Now,
you would think that's a good thing. You think, wow,
that's great, people are getting healthy. Nope, no, Actually, look

(32:47):
at this dynamic. In twenty twenty five, Americans lost more
weight than ever, and in twenty twenty five Americans spent
more money on healthcare than ever. Figure that out. You're
on a drug, you're losing weight, Allegedly you're getting healthier,

(33:09):
and then you still got to go the doctor a
to get the drug that's making you lose weight. Cancers
are on the rise, colon cancers, skin cancers, endometriosis, all
these kinds of things on the rise, and younger and
younger people in their twenties there are now men in

(33:29):
their twenties getting prostate cancer. And so we live in
an odd time where people have access to incredible medicine
like GLP ones, you know, just incredible space age medications,
and yet they're not getting healthier. They're actually getting sicker.

(33:54):
And you have to wonder why I don't wonder I
know exactly why I'm sitting here acting like well, you
have to wonder why that fuck that.

Speaker 5 (34:00):
It's the food.

Speaker 6 (34:02):
Even if you're only eating a small amount of it,
you're still eating toxic food. GLP one isn't gonna keep
your ass away from McDonald's, keep your ass away from
all these processed foods, ultra processed foods that you buy
because you don't have time for dinner, so you're gonna
just throw some pre made pasta or some you know whatever,
ultra process things that have thirty ingredients and ten of

(34:23):
which you can't pronounce.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Oh, but I'm losing weight. Yes.

Speaker 6 (34:29):
Fruit and vegetable consumption in the United States has not
risen in twenty twenty five. Okay, beans, rice, whole grains
have not risen in twenty twenty five. Nope, So we
have a time where people are eating less food but

(34:50):
they're not eating better food. When they are eating, they're
still eating junk. They're just eating less junk, which is great.
But if you're losing weight and you're not replacing the
junk with whole foods, grains, beans, you know, drupes which

(35:11):
are nuts, fruits, vegetables, pulses like lentils, if you're not
doing that, then you're skinny, but you're not healthier. And
for me, it's not about your weight. I'm overweight. I'm
about twenty five pounds overweight, and yet I'm healthier than

(35:33):
many of these skinny people in terms of my labs
and all of that. So and it's because of what
I eat and more importantly, what I don't eat. So
we live in a nation obsessed with being thin, but
we don't live in a nation obsessed with being healthy.
And there is a huge, huge difference. And that's why

(35:56):
there's still these bad diets. You know out there the world.

Speaker 8 (36:00):
Corrill dot com daily you're missing out.

Speaker 7 (36:04):
Get the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at
really correll dot com. That's really k A R e
l dot com.

Speaker 1 (36:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Corell is
so near because show Time is here, so on with
the show.

Speaker 2 (36:22):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (36:24):
Correll is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 5 (36:29):
You know, it's funny.

Speaker 6 (36:30):
I can always gauge by the chatroom at YouTube dot
com forward slash for the Corral.

Speaker 5 (36:33):
Which topic is really sticking?

Speaker 6 (36:35):
Everyone there is still talking about kids and how today's
kids they just it's not a good situation.

Speaker 7 (36:42):
Now.

Speaker 5 (36:42):
I know we're old.

Speaker 6 (36:44):
Okay, we're old, and we were raised a different way,
but that doesn't mean we were raised a bad way
today's kids because this is coming from the story from
Australia where today today sixteen year olds and below do
not have access to social media. They have been cut
off and I'm all for it. But we live in

(37:07):
this world now where kids are not allowed to be children. Ay,
they're not allowed to fuck up. How many of you
fucked up a lot when you were a kid.

Speaker 5 (37:20):
I did. I mean, it's normal, it's natural.

Speaker 6 (37:24):
And when I say fuck up, I mean you know,
maybe you broke a window with a baseball, or maybe
you you know, I don't know, you went somewhere on
your bike you shouldn't have, or something you know, you
messed up, you know, or you got hurt, broken bones,
how many of you have broken a bone.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
As a kid.

Speaker 6 (37:41):
I broke several, my wrist four times, my ankle twice.
Oh yeah, I broke bones, got dirty, went and played
in a creek, actually walked out in a creek and
caught crawdads. I've done that before. By the way, you
take a screw or a nut along screw and you

(38:01):
put them on a piece of string and then you
you tie a piece of something to or you just
put a piece of something on the screw like.

Speaker 5 (38:09):
I don't know what did we used to put.

Speaker 6 (38:10):
We used to put just whatever we were eating, uh,
And then you throw it in the little creek and
crawdads will come and try to get it, and you
pull them out. We never kept them. We just threw
them back in the in the stream. But you know,
we used to walk through street and oh we got
there was danger child. There were many times when I
was a kid in Maine. Oh my god, Molly, we

(38:31):
were in danger girl. We you know, we were running
on logs because we were near a sawmill and there
were logs that they floated down the Panotscot River into
the into the mill and we'd go into where they're
storing the logs. The logs would be floating and we'd
jump out on the log and run. If you fell
in that water, it was freezing and if you got
in between the logs.

Speaker 5 (38:51):
You could drown.

Speaker 6 (38:53):
And yeah, some kids did, but you know what, it
was fun and we did it, and our parents led us. Well,
they didn't really know because we would say, you know,
it'd be two in the afternoon on a Saturday, and
I'd be like, I'm going out, and they'd be, okay,
be back at dark now in the summer. In the winter,
that was at five o'clock. In the summer, that was

(39:13):
at ten o'clock. How many I remember be home when
the street lights come on. Kids today don't even know
what time the street lights come on. I mean, our
parents had to be reminded that we existed. It's ten o'clock.
Do you know where your children are? Oh shit, I
forgot where are they? You know, our parents literally had
to be reminded that that they had kids.

Speaker 5 (39:36):
People are like, I know you all drink out of
a hose. Didn't you have access to a sink?

Speaker 6 (39:42):
These people don't even know the idea that we didn't
go in a house for hours. Kids today, had no idea.
We would leave the house in the morning and not
be in anybody's house all day long. Maybe for lunch,
maybe we'd be outside. So if we wanted to drink,

(40:03):
we had to go get drink out of a hose.
Why because it was outside.

Speaker 5 (40:07):
We weren't.

Speaker 6 (40:07):
We didn't go inside of houses. We stayed outside. Rode bikes,
climb trees, went to the mall, went to the movies.
I went to so many movies as a kid, Oh
my god, so many, several times a week down at
the mall, you know, go to the movie, walk around
the mall. Yeah, with my mom, with my mom, because

(40:31):
I didn't have many friends. I was a little fat,
gay kid, so you know, it was mom, me and mom.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
But whatever.

Speaker 6 (40:36):
My mom was a great we'd go to Chinese lunch
and go to a movie. Nowadays they watched their movies
on this you know, and a bicycle. Electric bicycles, what
the fuck? You know, what the hell electric bicycles, I mean, really,

(41:00):
electric bicycles for kids?

Speaker 5 (41:06):
What? No child? You know? Those should be outlawed too.

Speaker 6 (41:11):
I love that Australia outlawed social media for kids under sixteen.
If you're under sixteen, you shouldn't be able to have
an electric bicycle. A. They're dangerous, but be pedal, Get
some cardio, expand your lungs, breathe in some air. That hell,
does a sixteen year old need an electric bicycle?

Speaker 2 (41:30):
Four?

Speaker 6 (41:31):
When you're fifteen, you can pedal one hundred miles. If
you can't, do's a problem. When I was a kid,
I roller skated from Long Beach, California, to Venice Beach.
That's thirty miles each way. It took two and a
half hours to roller skates, sometimes three, sometimes four. We'd

(41:52):
leave at eight in the morning and get to Venice
around noon, and then we'd be there until about two
or three, and then well.

Speaker 5 (41:59):
We'd us part of the way home.

Speaker 6 (42:02):
There are parts we couldn't bust though, so we still
had to, you know, skate like half of it. Can
you imagine nowadays living in Long Beach, California and letting
your kid my mom didn't care, where are you going
Venice Beach? They knew it was thirty miles away, They
didn't care. Be careful, call us, let us know you're okay,
because I use the payphone to do that. So we

(42:24):
call them on the payphone. Now, kids just don't. But
more importantly, they don't have the desire to do it.
We wanted to do it. We wanted to go for
a bike ride, we wanted to go to the mall.
I remember twenty five cent movie theaters, by the way,
and then dollar movie theaters came. Like in the eighties

(42:45):
there were dollar movie theaters. I remember when movies were
twenty five cents and fifty cents absolutely, or the nighttime
movie was like a dollar fifty. I'm old, but kids,
they wanted to do this. The other thing was hanging out.
You'd go hang out at a friend's house. You'd be

(43:05):
up in their room. We didn't have internet. God knows
what we'd be doing in the room, doing our nails,
doing our hair, drawing, painting, dishing about people, talking on
the phone to other friends. You know, you'd be up
in their room. Jimmy, it's time for dinner. Oh can
Bobby stay? Okay, call his mom and make sure. How

(43:28):
many times did you eat over at a friend's house.
I ate over at so many friend's house. Sometimes I
barely aid at home in a week. Nowadays, it's just
all different and not better. If it were better, great,
you know, advances in childcare. If it were better, it's
not better. Kids not having any quiet time.

Speaker 5 (43:51):
You know.

Speaker 6 (43:51):
As a kid, I had lots of quiet time in
my room. I'd be alone in my room. Maybe i'd
listen to music, you know. And at school we had
quiet time. Put your heads down, We're going to turn
off the lights in the class. Put your heads down,
spend the next twenty minutes just being still. Kids don't

(44:11):
have quiet time anymore. Everything's thrown at them NonStop. And
I wonder what kind of generations we're creating. I mean,
look at gen Y and gen Z.

Speaker 5 (44:21):
Wow wow, wow, wow wow.

Speaker 6 (44:23):
The generation of nothing is supposed to offend me. The
generation of I want, you know, easier ways to do things,
not harder, you know. I mean just gen Z and
gen why. They are just cry babies, you know, and
everything's got to be politically correct. Nothing can rock their boats,
of their world views. It's kind of sad. It's kind

(44:48):
of sad, you know. I'm so lucky I wasn't killed
by a serial killer when I was sixteen and seventeen
and fifteen and gay out in dolphin shorts, cut up
to my ass. Oh yes, you could see all my business.
I would roller skate that way, I'd wear a pair
of boot roller skates with dolphin shorts with a slit

(45:09):
on the side and a tank top and perm blonde hair.
Gay at fifteen in nineteen seventy seven, it is amazing
I did not have anything befall me. And they were
in the area. I've seen many a murder death kill
show up set in the seventies and eighties out of

(45:31):
LA and many there were many gay serial killers who
you know, they preyed upon gay boys. I guess I
don't know they didn't find me attractive or whatever, because
I never never met one, But I could have the
way I was carrying on, you know, And we used

(45:52):
to be able to walk everywhere and bike everywhere, and
now there's so much traffic. I wouldn't let my kid
bike around Las Vegas? Are you kidding me? The way
that they say, Oh, no way, not unless I lived
out by Mountain's Edge or whatever where they could go
out into the hills. And even then, I remember when

(46:12):
I was I was in high school, so I was
like fifteen or sixteen. A neighbor was going to the
river and I wanted to go. We were c beee buddies.
They were over eighteen. I was under I was like fifteen,
and I wanted to go. They were already drinking and
smoking and doing drugs and having sex. I was having sex.

Speaker 5 (46:28):
With one of them, Little Squirrel was his name. It
wasn't little.

Speaker 6 (46:34):
He was eighteen, and I wanted to go to the
river with them, and my mom let me for the
whole weekend.

Speaker 5 (46:41):
Fifteen years old. All right, see you Mondy Chucky.

Speaker 6 (46:45):
I'm sure she was worried, and I'm sure you know,
but I called her every day from the payphone at
the campground we were staying at, and she knew the
name of the campground we were at and all of that.
But she's still let me go. I was fifteen, though, Yeah,
go with your friends. There was another sixteen year old
that was in our group. I was fifteen. I had
a friend that was sixteen that was in the group,

(47:06):
and then two eighteen year olds.

Speaker 5 (47:09):
They let us go.

Speaker 6 (47:11):
My mom wouldn't worry I was gonna become a drug
addict or start smoking or drinking or and she trusted me.
And I think that's part of the thing. Our parents
trusted us, They trusted us, they trusted their upbringing of us,
and so they knew if we were out in the world,

(47:33):
we could handle whatever, and if we couldn't, they also
knew that there would be other adults around that could
because back when we grew up, other adults got involved.
They weren't afraid to touch another person's child. If a
kid needed help, they'd go help. You know how many

(47:55):
times I can't tell you how many times I'd be
walking through a neighborhood and miles of you know, far
away from my house, have to go to the bathroom,
and there would be no public bathroom, So I would
knock on the door of someone that was home, and
some old person would come to the door and I'd say, Hi,
I'm walking to the beach.

Speaker 5 (48:12):
This would be when I was in Long Beach. We
lived up on thirtieth Street. The beach was.

Speaker 6 (48:15):
Six miles six miles five miles. The beach was five miles,
and me and my dog would walk to the beach
and then walk home. And if I had to go
to the bathroom and I wasn't around a place, stores
would let you go to the bathroom by the way
back in the day, But if there wasn't one around,
I'd knock on someone's door and say, you know, I'm
walking to the beach and I really gotta go. Would
you mind? And they'd let me come in and use

(48:37):
their bathrooms. Could you imagine someone knocking on your door
now asking to use your bathroom? You wouldn't let them.

Speaker 5 (48:45):
Could you imagine a kid knocking on your door and saying,
I need to use the bathroom. Would you let me?
You wouldn't let them in.

Speaker 6 (48:52):
You'd be afraid that they'd say something that you did
something to them or something or something.

Speaker 5 (48:58):
But no back. Yeah, absolutely, And.

Speaker 6 (49:03):
You know, our parents could trust us because when we
grew up gen X and boomers, there were repercussions for
acting up. And it wasn't your parents having a logical,
thought out, empathetic conversation with you. That wasn't what it was.

Speaker 12 (49:27):
Now.

Speaker 6 (49:27):
I'm not for hitting kids, but I've been hit, and
believe me, when I was hit, I didn't do whatever
it was.

Speaker 5 (49:32):
Again.

Speaker 6 (49:33):
I once talked back to my mother, my mom, and
I got her knuckles right in my mouth. She backhanded me.
She was like, don't ever talk to me that way again.
Guess what I never did. And I had a toothache
after that too. You know, was she abusive. No, did
I deserve it? Yeah? And we would get grounded. You know,

(49:56):
you're not leaving the house, you're not calling any of
your friends, you can't watch TV, and you can't use
the phone. There were repercussions for what we did. Nowadays,
there are no repercussions for kids to behave badly.

Speaker 5 (50:14):
They don't.

Speaker 6 (50:15):
There's just no punishing kids. Is Oh, you don't punish children.
You don't yell at children anymore. I would yell at
a child before i'd yell at a dog. Don't yell
at dogs. But people, some kids deserve it. I've hate
to say it, but I have parented other people's children

(50:36):
in the stores and stuff. I saw a kid the
other day when I was at Walmart, of all places,
but I had to go. I needed labels for the
Christmas cards and they were cheaper there, so I went
to Walmart and this kid was walking down the aisle,
grabbing stuff off the aisle and just dropping it on
to the floor, and his parent was going behind him

(50:58):
and putting it back.

Speaker 5 (51:00):
And I looked at the parent, and I looked at
the kid, and I go, are you going to stop it?

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (51:05):
Well, he just stubbed this kind of stuff. It's okay,
it's not okay.

Speaker 6 (51:09):
And he grabbed another one. I said, hey, you stop.
You don't take things off shell leave them there. And
the dad would like, well, don't parent my child. I said,
well you ain't and I said that. I said, well
someone got you.

Speaker 5 (51:24):
You're not. Oh yeah, mm hmmm, yes, all right.

Speaker 9 (51:31):
We will FU show, no show.

Speaker 7 (51:46):
SI.

Speaker 6 (51:59):
You know Sandy in the chatroom at YouTube dot com
forward slash really Carrell. By the way, if you're not
a patron, please become one at patreon dot com. Forward
slash really, Carrell. That's patreon dot com. Forward slash really, Carrell.
I appreciate every patron. The show would not exist without you.
James Schnabel is a patron. He's in the chat room
right now. There's many patrons in the chatroom right now.
And I thank you, Raymondati, I thank you all so much.

(52:23):
Sandy brings up a great point. Though I was barely
reprimanded and I was only hit once, but well that's
because I used the F word. I was like fourteen
and my mom said something. I go, oh, just fuck
it and backhand to the mouth.

Speaker 5 (52:42):
That was it.

Speaker 6 (52:44):
I didn't use that word around her anymore anyway. I
don't know if it's generational or what, but growing up,
me and my friends, we wanted to impress our parents.
We wanted our parents to be proud of us. We

(53:06):
wanted our parents, and yes, we all had the rebellious stage.
You know, when you're a young teenager thirteen, fourteen, it's
your job to hate your parents. But I never did
hate my parents. I always wanted to take care of
my parents. My parents were handicapped. I always wanted to
protect my mom. My mom was four foot nine and

(53:27):
had bow legs and walked a little bit differently, and
people openly made fun of her. Adults and children in
the seventies and eighties made fun of my handicapped mother,
and I would always want to protect her. I didn't
hate my parents. On the contrary, I loved them and

(53:47):
I wanted to impress them. Part of the reason I
am Corel was to impress my mom and dad when
I was young. You know, they came to my plays
when I was in high school and in junior high school.
The talent show that I am seed, the very first
talent show, my very first live performance on a stage

(54:07):
Franklin Junior High School nineteen seventy six car Wash. I
was fourteen years old. That was the theme of the
talent show and I beat out everybody in the school
to be the MC imagine that. And I wanted to
impress my peers, but mostly my mom and dad. When
that show was over, it was my mom that I

(54:29):
wanted to find and see what she thought of me.
I don't know that kids nowadays give one rat's ass
what their parents think about them. They care more about
what their social media, how many likes and followers they've got.
That's why I think Australia is doing a great thing
today by banning social media for sixteen year olds. Okay, well,

(54:51):
I am Corella and I do love you all and
be who you want to be so I doesn't hurt anybody.
I just can't thank you enough for being here every day.
We got two more shows this week, and then four
shows next week, and then it's the holidays. Yeah, holiday,
I'll be a holiday. Uh So today I'm just gonna
leave you with the song because you know what, I

(55:13):
love the song and I love you and so it's
released today. This is Corel k ariel I Dance because
I would very much like for you to hear it
and love it and enjoy it, and I'll see you tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (55:27):
So I'm not.

Speaker 2 (55:51):
I know, just want to do start to.

Speaker 12 (56:03):
Remain said mama, your family asta favorite.

Speaker 13 (56:14):
Song, and.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
Then going.

Speaker 12 (56:24):
And I have to show and.

Speaker 13 (56:30):
Then on a nine so I don't feel the fam No,
I don't get a cry at the time, and comes
to say the.

Speaker 14 (56:41):
Sun advance that I start to move across the water.

Speaker 2 (56:51):
The dance dance, dancy, I just because we do, I
just because we couldn't.

Speaker 10 (57:09):
I need to show around.

Speaker 2 (57:13):
How is to steal your hear? How is to hold
you dear? To be the right?

Speaker 14 (57:18):
I test all nice, I did think I wed, I
just because we couldn't.

Speaker 12 (57:29):
I just to show the wild.

Speaker 2 (57:31):
I just to show I still feel your dear. I
still hold you, dear.

Speaker 5 (57:37):
I just still be the right I do hona, I
do so hope you love that.

Speaker 2 (57:42):
Song pure cold and we just want to when it's
in my mon hold to feel with me, my sol
I don't know, make me.

Speaker 5 (58:25):
Okay. All day now you all are gonna be going
around going.

Speaker 6 (58:28):
I dance because we did. I dance because we could.
I dance to show the world. I dance to show
the good and I want you to be doing that.
I want you all day, all day. I want you
to be walking around. I dance because we did. I
dance because we could. I dance to show the world.
I dance to show the good. I dance to feel

(58:51):
you near. I dance to hold you dear. I dance
to be the light. I dance to on a nights
on days that's sadness winds.

Speaker 5 (59:01):
Oh.

Speaker 6 (59:01):
I just love this song, and I have to tell
you I'm really loving myself as a songwriter these days.
These lyrics are incredible lyrics. I just they really are,
and they're they're about, you know, when you lose someone.
It doesn't have to be to a you know, it's

(59:22):
just about when you lose someone and they're no longer there,
how to keep them in your heart?

Speaker 5 (59:27):
You dance, child, I am forel of who you want
to be? Song or anybody will see you tomorrow all
day today, I didn't because we did go stream it.
Correl can't carryelle. I dance because I dan to show
the world. I dance to show the good come out.

Speaker 11 (59:44):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the CORELL cast on your favorite streaming
service
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Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by Audiochuck Media Company.

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz is the story of two brothers–both successful, but in very different ways. Gabe Ortiz becomes a third-highest ranking officer in all of Texas while his younger brother Larry climbs the ranks in Puro Tango Blast, a notorious Texas Prison gang. Gabe doesn’t know all the details of his brother’s nefarious dealings, and he’s made a point not to ask, to protect their relationship. But when Larry is murdered during a home invasion in a rented beach house, Gabe has no choice but to look into what happened that night. To solve Larry’s murder, Gabe, and the whole Ortiz family, must ask each other tough questions.

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