Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here, no time to fear. Corralla is so near because
(00:04):
show time is here. So on with the show.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Let's give it a go. Corrella is the one that
you need to know.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Now. It's show side.
Speaker 4 (00:24):
Correll, all right. On Today's Carrell Cast, twenty five percent
of Americans have a new job they never asked for
and did killing them. Plus the scariest movie for Halloween
you can watch. It doesn't have one ghost or ghoul.
We'll talk about that and so much more on today's
Carrel Cast.
Speaker 5 (00:44):
Uncensored's Unfiltered, un Hinged.
Speaker 6 (00:49):
It's the Corral Cast.
Speaker 7 (00:51):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
All right, it is the crowd asked. I am Carrel,
so very glad you are joining me on this whirlwind
cavalcade of a show. So let's start today about yesterday,
shall we. Yesterday we learned that I am a target
for real. Yesterday we learned that there are people out
there that would very much like to disrupt my life,
(01:19):
maybe even ended, I don't know, and that they are
a little obsessed, They are a little psychotic about it
because they've obviously been paying very close attention for like
the last twenty years and writing stuff down. Yes I
was scared because they used my middle name that isn't
really my middle name. It's not Francis, is not my
(01:41):
birth name or anything. It's my confirmation name, which made
me think that maybe it's someone I've known for fifty years.
I did have a friend named Tim reach out to
me this last week, who I knew when when I
was twelve years old. It was just so weird to
hear from him. And then suddenly this happens and he
(02:03):
was at my confirmation, so he knows my confirmation name.
We went to Saint Anthony's together. So was it him,
I don't know. And it wasn't great radio yesterday or
a great podcast because I was scared and I was angry,
and I was I was done, So I apologize for
(02:24):
it not being a great show yesterday. Also, I've realized
that like all the other threats against me, this needs
to go through proper channels and not on the air.
So I contacted the provider of the place where the
person sent the email from. That account has already been deleted,
(02:46):
so there's that. Today, I have a phone call with
the FBI Cybercrimes Division. We have already contacted the Canadian authorities.
Supplying information and interfering in government business is a crime,
and so I'm just going to leave it to the authorities.
Whatever happens happens, or whatever doesn't happen doesn't happen. I'm
(03:08):
just but I am not going to take it upon
myself to track this person down, because actually I'd like
to interview them more than punish them. I'd like to
ask them what I did to them to make them
want to do this to me. I'd like to know
what my crime, what my huge crime against them was,
(03:29):
if I had wronged them at some point of my life,
said something against them, or you know whatever. I'm I'm curious.
I want to know why they did it, more than
punishing them. Actually, I'd just like to find out why,
because it was a very vicious and mean thing to
do to contact the Canadian immigration officials and tell them
(03:51):
not to issue me a you know, a citizenship because
I'm not a good person and you know all this
other stuff. So it was a bad moment for me,
and I do apologize. It was scary. It is scary.
The person knew my confirmation name, which made me wonder
(04:14):
if it was tim. It was angering and upsetting. But
you know what, we don't have to do as much
as we think we have to do right now. Donald
Trump will be out of power. One day he will
be and while he is criminally tearing down so much
(04:36):
of America, literally including the East Wing, one day it'll
be up to many people to rebuild. And when we rebuild,
we shouldn't tape back together. As Pete Boudha Judge said,
the institutions that Trump tore down, we should reimagine America
(04:57):
and we should reimagine these institutions, the Department of Education
and all these other organizations and make them bulletproof from
future presidents, you know, make it so there will always
be there that snap is not reliant upon the whims
of Congress and their votes for funding. And so I'm
(05:20):
looking at America right now, like Las Vegas. Nine months
out of the year, I don't mind living in Las Vegas,
good weather, a lot of entertainment opportunities, a vibrant community.
Three months out of the year, I hate it. So
the same way with America the next three years. Who
wants to be here? Right, No one wants to be
(05:42):
here for the next three years. But after that, after
that we have a remarkable chance to reclaim and rebuild
the country. And so in three hundred and thirty five days,
there's midterms. Three hundred and thirty five days from today.
Speaker 7 (05:58):
He visiting really carilled on com daily. You're missing out.
Get the podcast videos in the blug including recipes at
really Correll dot com. That's really KA R e l
dot com.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Show Time is here.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
No time to fear Correll is so near because.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Showtime is here. So on with the show. Let's give
it a go. Correll is the one that you need
to know.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
So I'm gonna let law enforcement deal with that what
that person did to me yesterday, although I just want
to know why they did it and who it is.
I really I can't help but wonder if it's that
guy Tim. I hadn't heard from him in fifty years
and then suddenly he's talking to me online and then
two days later this happens. But but that's for them
(06:50):
to find out and perhaps a libel attorney. What we
have to think about on this show is our well
being and our health. Look, I was awake half of
last night. I put the couch up against the door.
I was afraid, and I thought to myself I'm not
letting someone scare me like this. I have a gun,
(07:13):
you know, worst case scenario fifty to fifty chance of survival.
So I want to look at the positives. Yesterday, that
person made me realize that I don't want to be
a political pundit. I don't want to be on MSNBC
or Fox News. I'd rather be on Drew Barrymore and
(07:33):
Jennifer Hudson, and that I am in control of that.
I am in control of this show, you know, and
I'm in control what I say. It also made me
realize I give way too much personal information out on
the show, way too much. The fact that they knew
my three sources of income, that's all of that should
(07:53):
be private information. It really should be. And so there'll
be changes in that area where I don't overshare. I'll
still share, oh share, but not overshare. But looking forward positive,
how can I rebuild the show that's still entertaining for
you and yet not trump laden every day? I think
(08:14):
that's what Pete Buddha Judge was saying in a speech
I saw him doing today where he was talking about
turning paralysis into promise, And that's what I think we
all need to there's three hundred and thirty five days
until the midterms. Big changes can be made. Now will
they be I don't know. It really depends of California
(08:37):
redistricts and so many variables that we can't see yet.
So let's not worry about it right now. Let's put
our energy into the fact that Democrats are going to
win the midterms, and there is historic precedent for that. Normally,
the opposition party wins the midterms when it comes to
(08:57):
a seated president. So if the seated president and as
Democratic than during their term in the midterms, normally it
goes Republican House and Senate, and so historically Democrats have
a great chance of winning the midterms. So let's put
our energies into that, and in three hundred and thirty
five days, let's try to reclaim some of our country.
(09:20):
If I'm still here, I will certainly vote and campaign
and help, But more importantly, let's look at the things
that are really out there that are affecting our lives
that we can talk about and share. You know, a
story came out yesterday. Twenty five percent of Americans are
(09:42):
now caregivers. Twenty five percent. One in four people are
caring for either an elderly family member, a spouse, or
even a child with a disability, handicapped something twenty five
percent of America, and they are suffering. They're suffering financially
(10:08):
because they cannot work as much if they have to
be a caregiver. So that's the first thing. And the
money from Social Security or other places to be a
caregiver is not enough to survive. It's like ten dollars
or fifteen dollars an hour and they only give you
so many hours. And in home nursing or in home
(10:30):
supportive care or nursing homes are just not possible in
some situations. So one in four of Americans are being caregivers. Now,
I've been a caregiver for both my mother and people
persons with AIDS, and I can tell you it's possibly
(10:51):
the most physically and mentally exhausting job there is on
the planet. And the fact that America is not set up,
that number is going to go up to thirty three
percent of Americans over the next fifteen years as America
gets older and older and older. Now, this is a
crisis that we can do something about with our vote
(11:14):
and with our voice. We have to help these people.
They're at wits ends. Psychologically, they're at wits end. Suicide
rates amongst caregivers are huge. Once the person they care
for dies, often there's suicides because they don't know what
to do. The whole their last five years or whatever
has been spent taking care of this person and then
(11:34):
they're suddenly gone. So there is a real long term
care epidemic in this country. Now. I don't expect Donald
Trump or the Republicans to address this. You know, he
just had an MRI for what I believe is a
stroke that he had, and he's got the best healthcare
in the world, so he's not worried about a caregiver.
(11:56):
You know, what's his name, You know he keeps falling down,
Mitch McConnell. He now has a caregiver that goes with
him everywhere in Congress in case he falls or space
is out. So these people are not concerned about the
average American and the need for care. We need to
(12:16):
put that on the political agenda when talking to candidates,
when posting online. We need to bring the plight of
the caregiver to the foreground. I could read you the
article about the twenty five percent and how they're financially challenged,
mentally challenged, how all the problems that they encounter. But
(12:40):
so many of you out there listening to me are caregivers,
and you know the problems, and see, this is a
problem that we can actually do something about. And maybe
in your community you can come up with an inventive
way to help. Maybe you can start a volunteer organization
that goes and relieves caregivers for a day so they
(13:03):
can go and have lunch, or have their nails done
or whatever, you know, just get out for a few minutes.
Maybe you could volunteer at such organizations that help caregivers
give care and lighten the load of one of your
neighbors just a little bit, even for like four hours.
(13:25):
You don't have to be a doctor, you don't have
to be a registered nurse. You just have to be
someone that can be there. So this is an issue
that I because I gotta tell you it's all consuming
when you have a sick relative that you're caring for
them from the moment you wake up and to the
moment you go to bed. It's just completely consuming. I mean,
(13:47):
Ember today started limping, this time with her left leg.
Last week it was her right leg, now it's her left.
I don't know what's going on, but I had to
carry her from the middle of the park because she
ran across to see a friend and she was running
full speed and then she she stopped start Olympic. So
who knows, she's ten, Maybe she just pulled something. But
(14:08):
that being said, I know what it's like to just
be her caregiver, you know. And that's a morning till
night job. If she were a person, it'd be even greater.
So we now have a nation where twenty five percent
think about that, three hundred and forty million people. Ten
percent of that is thirty four million people. Twenty percent
(14:32):
is sixty eight million, twenty five percent is almost eighty
million people are caregivers. This is an issue we need
to bring to the foreground. You know, someone in the
chatroom at YouTube dot com forward Sol's Worthy Crella is saying,
I'm one right here. I'm traveling on a plane to
(14:53):
do so. You know. So we we live in a
society where it's high stress. There's all kinds of stressors
all around us every day, and now so many of
us have to take on all those stresses and the
burden of caring for someone that we love. That system
(15:18):
is unsustainable because it's going to buckle under the weight
of being human. As a human, trust me, as a caregiver,
you can only take so much. There's days, there's days
you wish they died and then you feel so guilty.
But look, I'm gonna be honest. If you're a caregiver,
there are days you wake up and think, oh, die already,
(15:39):
and then you feel so terrible for it. But it's
just human. That's just a human emotion. There are days
where the little joys fill your heart, just the little
things at little dance with them as you put them
in the bathtub, or a little this or a little that.
So it has its rewards, but it's also so taxic,
(16:01):
and it's going to take the entire country to change
our attitude about aging and aging in place. You know,
Elon musk solution is a robot. Well maybe there's some
truth to that. Maybe care robuts wouldn't be such a
bad thing, so the caregiver could at least go out
(16:22):
and spend a few hours away. But if you know
anyone that is a caregiver, you need to tell them
you're there for them. You need to tell them I'm
here to listen, I'm here to help. If you need something,
please reach out for you or for the person that
you're caring for. Call them before you go to lunch
(16:43):
and see if they want to go, Ask if you
can bring something over. Can I bring over lunch and
be with you while you care for your mom or whatever.
It's going to take humanity to help the now twenty
five percent of America that are caregivers, and it's going
to take legislation. So we've got to start talking. Email
(17:05):
your lawmakers. It's not hard to do. Email them and say, look,
we have a care crisis in this country. We do
not have adequate long term care solutions. Let them know
that they should be thinking about. Like in Europe, in
the UK, they have caregivers that go out three times
(17:28):
a day to people's houses and stay for hours. That
would totally help here in our country if we had
government subsidized caregivers that could and not just a few,
but a brigade of them in every city sent to
look out for people and to help the caregivers that
(17:51):
are there in the home. You know, it's easy under
the Trump administration and just modern time to lose compassion,
it really is. I notice I've lost some of mine.
I don't like that. I don't like that I've lost
some compassion, you know, And I think more than ever
(18:16):
under Trump, we need to rEFInd our compassion, not have
it beaten out of us. You know. We need to
care for each other more, not less. And aging is
happening to all of us. Heaven forbid, I need a caregiver.
I don't really have anyone in my life that could
(18:37):
do it. Ember is just not up for the task. So,
you know, I think it's everyone's worst fear, and there
is a lot of fear involved. You know. The person
receiving care doesn't want to be a burden to their
family member. They don't they don't want to cause this trouble.
And so you have the person that's declining, and they're
(18:58):
probably mad that they're declining and that they need help.
And then you have the people helping and their psychological
state is not great. And then you throw in the
financial hardship of being a caregiver, and you have an
unbearable weight that so many American families are carrying. We
can't be oblivious to that. It's why I want to
(19:20):
talk about it today. Reach out, connect with somebody, offer
your help. Put in with your lawmakers that you want
long term care solutions to be a priority for them,
that you want to discuss perhaps expanding Medicare to include
at home care, which would include two or three visits
(19:42):
a day, meal preparation, doctor visits, taking them to and
from doctors. You know, these are people that contributed to
America up until the point that they became incapacitated. They
desi to not be a burden. They deserve to not
(20:05):
feel like a burden. And the people that are taking
the time to care for them deserve a life not
filled with financial strife and mental anguish. Now I would
think that's just obvious, but obviously it isn't. I mean,
(20:25):
I have a hundred stories about when I was taking
care of my mom. There are so many funny, funny
things that happened. I mean, just and I look back
and they're funny now. They weren't funny at the time,
but they were funny. You know. My mom wouldn't let
anybody at the nursing home changer diaper except me, and
so I had to go and I mean, it was
(20:46):
humiliating for her. I'm sure, but like she said, well,
you came out of it, and I said, no, I didn't.
I was a c sectionh shere's what you're gay. You
don't care, And I'm like, you're my mom. I wouldn't
care either way. But you know, we would laugh about
so many things. But then there's all the precious moments,
like every night when I transferred her from her wheelchair
into her bed on a stool because she was four
(21:06):
foot nine, and I'd lift her up and do a
little dance and place her in her bed and lift
up her legs. It can be rewarding, but it can
also almost kill you. And we need to care and
we need to plan better in this country for the
people who care. All right, coming up next, how old
(21:28):
is now? It's show side, all right, let's take a
(22:03):
little quiz in the chat room and down in the
comments down below. How old is too old to father
a child? Now? I don't mean you know, when when
does the sperm stop working? Because I think it works
until you die. Some old sperm make a little old baby,
(22:23):
little baby, little wrinkly baby because your sperm so old.
But how old is too old? You know, until it
becomes unfair to the child because Kelsey Grammar is seventy
and he just fathered a child and he already has five.
(22:43):
So it's not like this was his big shining moment
I finally got a kid. No, he's more than replaced himself.
But he just fathered a child at seventy years old.
When the kid enters kindergarten, he'll be seventy six years old.
When it graduates high school, he'll be eighty eight. They'll
(23:03):
think the grandfather is there, Oh, your granddad's here at'art. No,
that's my dad. Not to mention, what does old sperm do? Like,
is the kid gonna have all kinds He's gonna be
geriatric teenager. I mean, yeah, I know I've got the
old age disease, but my dad was seventy. I've got
I come from old sperm, So how old is too old?
(23:27):
Because for me, you know, I'm I'm just thinking it's
really selfish of people like Tony Curtis or Kelsey Grammer
or other men. It's just pure hubris. Oh well, maybe
they're wh because his wife is like thirty eight or something,
and the kid will be cared for. He's got money.
(23:49):
But that's not the point. The point is when does
the male ego need to be put into check and say,
your days of fathering a child are over. I mean,
I'm seventy years old. He will not even see the kid,
probably get married or he'd be ninety one. You'll be
like a cripkeeper at the wedding. So what do you think?
(24:10):
I think fifty. If you haven't fathered a child by fifty,
then that's that adopt a teenager. There are plenty of
teens young or eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen year olds that
need to be adopted. If you reach fifty and you
still haven't fathered a child or you already have, stop,
(24:30):
I think men should have their tubes tied at fifty,
just the sectomy away. So how old? Yes, Robert de
Niro did father a child of like eighty. It's just
you know, and as James S. Table points out, the
risk of autism and all of that increases with the
old little sperm, those poor swimmers. I mean, was there
(24:51):
a sperm lifeguard pulling the sperm up to the egg,
Like did it have to knock real hard at the
outside of the egg?
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Let me in?
Speaker 4 (24:58):
I mean, really, just because you know, me and Steve
have this saying when we see someone wearing something they shouldn't,
we say, just because it comes in your size doesn't
mean you should wear it. Well, the same thing, just
because your sperm can impregnate a woman doesn't mean you
should do it. So I think fifty. What do you
(25:22):
all think? I'd love to see your comments down below
at YouTube dot com, forward slush really Correll, where you
will like and subscribe. I'd love to hear what you
have to say in the chat room or at patreon
dot com forward slash really Carrel. What age do you
think a man should stop fathering children? See biology does
it for a woman. A woman can't have a baby
(25:43):
after a certain age, you know, once she's gone through menopause,
that's it. And that happens in the fifties or early sixties.
But a man even father a child at eighty. It's
so like feudile, it's so like the old case. You know,
these old old kings would get these young maidens and
(26:03):
get them pregnant for their rights of secession. Well that
ain't happening anymore. You don't have to have a right
of secession, you have a will. So how old, how
old do you think I think fifty. I think fifty,
and then that's it if you're a man after fifty,
no more fathering children. You know, I'm sixty three. I
(26:25):
can't imagine getting someone well, for a variety of reasons.
But I can't imagine getting someone pregnant at sixty three
and having and who wants to raise a kid in seventy.
That shows how Boogie entitled he is. I mean, he
ain't gonna be awake all night with the child in seventy.
He'll be dozing off in the afternoons. He'll be on
the same seat sleep. He'll be on the same sleep
(26:47):
schedule as the kid. The wife will have to put
down Kelsey and little Kelsey, and the wife's gonna have
to care for them both sooner or later. I mean,
when the kid's six, he'll be seventy six. She'll be
feeding both of them baby food at that point. So
when does it become too old to father a child?
(27:09):
I say fifty? You know, Yes, Diane Keaton adopted in
her fifties. That's fine, that's fine. Adopt an older child
in your fifties, Okay, don't adopt one when you're eighty five.
You'll foster one maybe, but don't adopt. What about what
do y'all think? What age? I say, fifty? What do
(27:30):
y'all think? I mean, it's Kelsey Grammar too old at seventy?
Do you think he's too old? Should he have fathered
a child? Should his wife have said no, you're getting
your tubes cut? Or is it fine? Do you see?
You know? Woof? They've got the money and is that
what it really equates to? No matter how old you
are as a man, if you have the money, you
(27:51):
can just father a child at any age because it'll
be taken care of after you die. That's so horrible
for the kid and the kid having to explain their
eighty year old father. I mean, ugh, I can't imagine.
I can't. My parents were relatively old when they had me.
They were in their thirties, so by the time I
(28:14):
was in my twenties, my parents were well into their fifties,
so I mean, you know, they weren't that old, but
they were older because in their time, people were having
babies at sixteen and seventeen and eighteen. My sister was
done having all six of her kids by the time
she was thirty. Kind of smart. I think got it
out of the way. But what of you all? Is
(28:36):
Kelsey Grammar too old? I think he's too old. I
think seventy Robert de Niro too old. I mean what next?
I mean, Donald Trump, he's eighty. Should he father a child?
You know he wants to. I'm sure Milania is like,
uhuh oh, hell no. I mean, you know, Baron's his
last child, right, and he's in his twenties, so, but
(28:58):
he was at that would mean he was in his
sixties when he fathered Baron her late late fifties. Let's see,
my grandfather had my father, when my grandfather had my
father when he was in his seventies. Oh my goodness.
Her father was seventy when he was born. Oh my goodness.
THEO Vaughn and he really disliked it. Yeah, I dislike
(29:20):
it too, Dad. Let's go play football. I can't. I've
got arth riders.
Speaker 2 (29:27):
Dad.
Speaker 4 (29:27):
Let's you know, let's go hiking. I can't. I'm on
my hover round. Let's go to Walmart. I'm just saying
I think it's I think it's irresponsible. All right, when
we come back in your zip code, one of the
most expensive we're going to talk about that and so
much more. We don't go anywhere. The COREL Complete View yours.
Speaker 7 (29:49):
Listen daily to the Corel Cast on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Show Time here, No time to fear. Corilla is so
near because show Time is here. So on with the show.
Speaker 2 (30:08):
Let's give it a go. Corilla is the one that
you need to know.
Speaker 3 (30:14):
Now. It's show side.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
Is your zip code one of the most expensive in
the USA. Also, what is the scariest movie for Halloween?
I'm gonna tell you? And what am I drinking? I'm
going to show you the health benefits of it when
we come back. Don't go anywhere, Yummy.
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Yummy, uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged.
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It's the Corall Cast.
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Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
JDA gave birth at fifty five. Wow, fifty five, so
you'd be seventy five when the kid's basically just graduating
high school and going into college. I just, you know,
I know we're going to talk about another story. But
I just think that's selfish. I think it's the ultimate
selfish thing that a human can do, you know, I
really do. I just I think it's hubris. I think
(31:23):
it's it's ego of course, I've always thought that, you know,
like these people who do the in vitro and stuff.
You know, I don't mean to I don't mean to
be rude, because there are some people who, you know,
I mean, they can't have a kid, so they they
do the in vitro. I get that. But that's like
buying a dog from a breeder. I hate to say that,
(31:46):
but you know, you should adopt a dog. There's so
many dogs out there.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (31:52):
And so I think adopt a child if you'd if
instead of But you know, it's ego. They want it
to be their their their bio, they want it to
be their genetic material. I get it, I do, I
get it. But to me, it's a little bit of hubris,
a little bit of ego, which is fine. I guess
(32:12):
all right. I was meeting a story yesterday and I
and I just had to say, who the frack are
these people? So a list of the most expensive zip
codes in America has come out, and I know for
most of us, we think every zip code's expensive nowadays. Uh,
but the number one is Miami Beach, Florida three three
one oh nine, where the median home price is nine
(32:35):
point five million. Dollars then nine four oh two seven Atherton, California,
eight point three million dollars one one nine six two. Sagaponack,
New York. Five point nine million dollars nine two sixty
(32:55):
six one. Newport Beach, California. I know it well five
point seven. These are the median home prices five point
seven million dollars one one nine seven six Walter Mill,
New York five point five million dollars nine three one
oh eight. Santa Barbara, California, five point two four million
(33:16):
dollars nine four nine seven. Zeros Ditson Beach, California, five
point two million dollars nine two six five seven. Newport Beach, California,
five point one eight million dollars nine four oh two
two Any of you in that one? That's Los Altos, California.
Five point one nine two sixty six two Newport Beach,
(33:40):
that's the third zip code in Newport Beach five point
one million dollars. And this one shocked me. Uh nine
two oh six seven Rancho Santa Fe, California. I was like,
where is that? Uh? Down in number twenty three eight
five two five three is Paradise Valley, Arizona? Where the
(34:05):
median sale price is three point five million dollars, and
at number twenty six you'll find Nevada's first entry eight
nine four one three glen Brook, which is three point
four million. It's located in Douglas County on the shores
of Lake Tahoe. Nevada's other entry came in at forty
eight eight nine four oh two, which is Crystal Bay
(34:25):
two point seven million, located in Washoe County, also on
the shores of Lake Tahoe. Wow. You know when I
saw this, I was like, Yes, Maxwell says, that's crazy.
People who work in those towns can't afford to live there.
(34:47):
Uh yeah, yeah that Rachel says, Yeah, my daughter and
son are are in Atherton and they'll never own a
home because you know, so we know the statistics. Let's
ask chat GPT and see have it's changed. Chat GPT
told me how to report that email and such all
of that. How what percent of America of America makes
(35:11):
over one million per year? Because that's how much you'd
have to make to afford that loan. Let's see what
it's saying. I've got some Russian looking something. What that
says it's still thinking? Wow, I guess that's a complex
question for chat gpt because it doesn't know the answer,
(35:32):
or it's been going down the last few days. I
don't know if any of you have noticed that chat
gpt has has not been working the last couple of days.
It's just taken forever, and I wonder if Google could
answer faster. Here here we have a race going between
chat gpt and between Google. Let's see who finance your past?
(35:52):
All right, let's see's.
Speaker 7 (35:57):
Chat chilled com daily. You're missing out. Get the podcast
videos in the blug including recipes at reallycrrell dot com.
That's really k A R e l dot com.
Speaker 2 (36:12):
Show Time is here, No time to fear.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
Okay, is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 2 (36:19):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Correll is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 4 (36:31):
Okay, we have the number here and it's it's I
don't say shocking, but according to a recent article, Americans
tend to overestimate how many households earn more than a
million dollars. In fact, less than point five percent. So
not even one percent of us households earn more than
(36:51):
one million dollars a year. So if that's three point
four million is one percent, so about a million and
a half households. A stead by smart Asset estimates that
the top one percent of earners. You need an income
of about seven hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars to
be in the one percent. So you know, it varies
(37:14):
by state, but it's well under one percent of Americans
earn more than a million dollars per year, and it's
more in order of point one two point five percent.
So I ask you, guys, who the frack is buying
all these houses? And they're in that top zip codes
of America for money you don't get below a million
(37:39):
at the very bottom they list one hundred zip codes
and the median home price, the median home price in
Long Beach, California right now is hovering near a million dollars.
Who is buying houses? Well, no one, it's obvious. In
Las Vegas we have a six month inventory now five
five month. If we reach fixed, then the market's depressed.
(38:02):
I'm kind of depressed in the market, but we've got
a five month in five months of inventory, that's how
they gauge the markets. Five months, so that means we
have enough houses. You know, for there's five months of inventory,
meaning there aren't enough buyers every month to wipe out
the inventory. During the pandemic, we had no month of inventory.
(38:27):
Now we have five months. No one's buying houses because
they're just too expensive. And that zip code list if
less than zero point five percent of us. And that
doesn't that just boggle your mind? I know, I want
to show you a video here from the kitchen, but
doesn't it boggle your mind about all these luxury things
(38:48):
here in Vegas. It's luxury sweet this, you know, five
hundred dollars tickets for that, And yet these companies are
banking on less than one percent of Americans being their
their client because most of us just don't have the
fricking money. It's amazing to me. I looked at houses
(39:13):
in Long Beach. I thought, I feel safe there. You
know what, I would go back. Ahh, that ain't happening.
The cheapest condos five hundred thousand dollars can't do it,
cannot do it. And I'd love to move to San Francisco.
I would adore it, living off of market, maybe on
Fulsome or Castro or down by the what is that
(39:33):
North Beach? You know, before you get.
Speaker 3 (39:35):
To the go.
Speaker 4 (39:35):
I'd love it even with housing assistance. The condos one
bedrooms are four hundred thousand dollars, and that's undermarket price.
So who are these people catering to? For the first
time in America, for the first time ever, the average
price of a new car is fifty thousand dollars. It's
(39:57):
never been that high ever. That's the average price of
a new car. That's not me. And yes there are
some for twenty thousand, but a majority are fifty to
eight hundred thousand. There are trucks out there that are
just trucks. A Ford fucking pickup truck one hundred thousand dollars.
Who's buying them? I'm not, You're not. Who is? That's
(40:21):
I just it boggles my mind. You know, I think
I need some chocolate. I'm drinking a most delicious drink
here and I want you guys to learn how to
make it. So here we go. Let's hope I make
it before the commercial break.
Speaker 6 (40:34):
Good morning, it is Carrel.
Speaker 4 (40:36):
I'm in the kitchen, so glad you are joining me
on the Correll Cast on this Monday. That was my
leftover dishes. That's what I do every morning. I serve
myself on a silver platter. Now I've been trying to
tell you all and inspire you all to do more,
to do better, to you know, eat better, be better.
Every morning. I do this, by the way, every single morning.
Speaker 6 (40:56):
There we go. This is my fruit cup. That's Ember's
food baw sheet. Next to me. This is nutpods, my tea.
Speaker 4 (41:03):
That's my old Country Roses set that Daniel and Steve
gave me for Christmas last year, the last Christmas gift
or two years ago, the last Christmas gift from Daniel Charleston.
That's my oatmeal with walnuts and soy milk or almond milk.
And that's what we're gonna talk about today. Behind me,
you will see the almond milk that I'm making. And
(41:26):
you know, in the store, it's so easy, just go
buy it, grab it off the shelf. Almond milk, soy milk,
oat milk. But it's got additives, it's got a lot
of oil, and I don't like that, so I bought
a meo matt. This is a actually they sent it
to me. This is a meal matt and it is
a milk maker and it takes almonds or walnuts or
oats or whatever you.
Speaker 6 (41:47):
Want and makes your milk.
Speaker 4 (41:49):
Now, it is a little labor intensive because you put
this much almonds in.
Speaker 6 (41:55):
Here with the water.
Speaker 4 (41:58):
It does its thing, and then you have to strain it,
and then you have your milk. I strain it three
times and you get this out of it. That right there,
which I put in my Brava oven and dehydrate to
make protein powder right here, because protein powder is hugely expensive,
and why waste?
Speaker 6 (42:17):
Why waste that?
Speaker 4 (42:18):
You can sprinkle that in your oatmeal or put it
in a protein drink or whatever. You can do this
with any kind of nut that you want, including and
or a soybean soybeans, and you don't need this.
Speaker 6 (42:29):
You can use a blender.
Speaker 4 (42:30):
It's one cup of nuts soaked overnight in three cups
of water, and then the next day you drain the water.
You put the nuts in your blender with three cups
of fresh water, and then strain.
Speaker 6 (42:39):
For soy beans.
Speaker 4 (42:40):
You do that process, but you simmer on your stove
for twenty minutes before you strain out the soybeans because
soybeans have to be slightly cooked or they upset your digestion.
Now it's more intensive, but it's fresh, it's wholesome. It's
it's natural, it's better for your body. There's no additives,
there's nothing in it, and it just shows that you care.
(43:04):
So whether you use a blender or a meal mat
or one of the other nut milk makers out there,
I highly recommend you make your own. And I know
it takes time. I mean, look, I got to clean
all this up and everything. It's five thirty in the morning,
and you know, I don't want to be doing this,
and I do it twice a week, and I always
saw it when I have to do it, but it's
just so much better for me than buying it from
(43:25):
the store and cheaper. I don't know if you've noticed,
but a half gallon of nut milk in the store
is four to six dollars, just like regular milk.
Speaker 6 (43:34):
This is just this much nuts right here.
Speaker 4 (43:36):
That's not even a quarter pound of nuts, so I
think it's probably two ounces of nuts.
Speaker 6 (43:43):
So you know, here's a queen at five thirty measuring
her nuts.
Speaker 4 (43:46):
All right.
Speaker 6 (43:47):
I just wanted to keep do these sort of segments.
Speaker 4 (43:49):
To inspire you to take more time for your health.
I have to do dishes now and strain my nuts milk.
I mean strain my nut milk, and then do thirty
minutes of yoga and then go do a two and
a half mile walk with Ember, and then come back
and do a show for you.
Speaker 6 (44:07):
So on with the show. By the way, look how
rich and creamy this is. Do you see that? Look
at that delicious and all of that from there.
Speaker 2 (44:28):
With oop.
Speaker 6 (44:28):
Sorry, we're just a little mess to clean up.
Speaker 4 (44:31):
Rich and creamy almond milk, so good for you. You know,
I mentioned that I used the milk for the hot
cocoa drinking. While I'm inspiring you, I wanted to inspire
you to add more chocolate to your diet.
Speaker 6 (44:44):
That's right, chocolate. It's so good for you.
Speaker 4 (44:47):
Flavonoids, anti inflammatory, and macha by the way. So here's
what I do each and every day. Just make room
for the calories, you know, make room for the calories.
Speaker 6 (44:58):
So here's what I do.
Speaker 4 (45:00):
First of all, here's my almond milk, freshly made. All right,
So that's about eight ounces of almond milk there. Cover
that back up. Now, I use this really cool device
called a velvetizer. It's from Hotel Chocolate. It's called the
Hotel Chocolate Velvetizer. It's basically a froth. Oh sorry, it's
(45:27):
basically a frother sort of thing. So I mix up
in my nutribullet over there. I mixed up the chocolate
stuff first, and then I put it in the velvetizer.
So take your milk, whatever milk you choose, so long
as it's a nut milk, put it in there. Now,
this is sprout eighty five percent dark chocolate.
Speaker 6 (45:49):
It's very expensive.
Speaker 4 (45:50):
I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 6 (45:52):
I use one cube, So one cube in there, and
then in here, ah if I can.
Speaker 4 (46:01):
There we go.
Speaker 6 (46:03):
That is dark cocoa powder. And I'm gonna have to
pause because I have to get more.
Speaker 4 (46:10):
Okay, see see it's not Hershey's cocoa.
Speaker 6 (46:16):
It's organic cacal powder. It's different and it's better for you,
and it.
Speaker 4 (46:21):
Has all the flavonoids and everything that you're gonna want.
So this I take two tablespoons of that. There we go,
and then macha is so good for you. It's just
so good for you, mancha, and it goes so well
(46:44):
with chocolate that I use.
Speaker 6 (46:46):
A chee spoon of macha in here. Okay, I gotta
put you down. There we go.
Speaker 4 (46:56):
Now you're gonna want a little sweetener, so Squirt it, baby,
squirt it with some agave.
Speaker 6 (47:03):
Or whatever you want.
Speaker 4 (47:04):
I mean, you know, sugar is sugar, Honey, agave, maple
syrup would work.
Speaker 6 (47:08):
But just a squirt.
Speaker 4 (47:14):
Then I'm gonna mix that up in the nutri bullet
and put it in the velvetizer and have the most
delicious chocolate macha drink. It's about one hundred and fifty
hundred and eighty calories, maybe two hundred, but it's so
good for you.
Speaker 6 (47:28):
It's so good for you.
Speaker 4 (47:31):
Good alrighty, didy didy, So that drink is right here.
I do drink it every morning. It is two tablespoons
of cocoa cacao, one teaspoon of macha, eight ounces of
almond milk or nut milk of your choice, and a
squirt of a gave and a cube of dark chocolate. Now,
the reason I don't just use dark chocolate is there's
a lot of fat in chocolate from cocoa butter. So
(47:54):
the coco powder gives you all the benefits of the
dark chocolate without all the fat. The fat calories, so
it cuts down on calories. Drink it every day. It's
a health alixir and it's so good. Get some ceremonial
grade macha some COCW powder and have it every day.
And I highly recommend that velvetizer. It's the Hotel Chocolate velvetizer.
(48:15):
It's it creates a wonderful texture for the drink. So, yeah,
you know a lot of you still want to talk
about the housing. Yes, it's a great post workout drink.
It's got good calories, good flabinoids, lots of vitamins in it.
Who knew chocolate was so good for It's a health food.
Chocolate is a superfood, and so many of you just
don't put it in your diet. Please do. It's a superfood,
(48:39):
either co cow powder or actual eighty five percent dark chocolate,
which is vegan, by the way, just naturally vegan. It's
a great food. Please enjoy it and make your nut milk.
The Queen says, to juice your nuts, So do it.
I use a meo matt am I O m at.
(49:00):
I used to use that other thing that I recommended,
and then it kept breaking, and I'm sorry for that.
So the meal matt has not broken. But you can
also use a vitamix, just use it, or a ninja,
just use whatever you want. Rachel Kapper in the chat room.
There is no good vegan at home recipe for creamer.
I buy nutpods. Nutpods has no oil in it and
(49:23):
it's creamy and delicious. Nut pods and utpods. It said,
Sprouts and other markets home Whole Food, Sprouts, others, nutpods,
they're the best. Just leave it to them. The one
store bought thing that I use nutpods creamer. All right,
when we come back Halloween week, there's a very scary
movie out. It's terrifying, and we're gonna talk about it
(49:46):
and you should watch it although it's scary. However, a
lot of you want to talk about the housing crisis,
and this is a topic we will continue on the
show because there are housing crisis happening all over the
country now. Because average ever to Andrew and I bought
a house in our thirties, you know, we bought Park
Howard for one hundred and ninety nine thousand dollars. Our
(50:08):
friend and now deceased Leon McKittrick bought it in his
name and then said when we could get it in
our name, we would have it reappraised and give him
fifty percent of the appreciated value. So when we got
the home loan, we got it for the price. In
other words, we acted like he was selling the house
(50:29):
for what we paid plus half of the appreciated value,
and that got us into a park Howard. That's how
we got it. Leon McKittrick bought it, put it in
his name quick claim deed over to us and said,
when your refinance, just gives me fifty percent. He made
fourteen thousand dollars because by the time we refinanced the
house had gone up from one ninety nine to two
(50:52):
twenty seven. So he made fourteen grand in eleven months.
Because we got our job at KFI and after eleven
months we were able to finance the house. But he
was like, look, you're paying a mortgage where you live.
You're paying eighteen hundred a month for the house. You
might as well have a mortgage. There are creative ways,
but not anymore. There's no creative way to buy a
(51:14):
house anymore because they're too expensive. All right, when we
come back. The scariest movie you'll see this Halloween. It's
on Netflix. Don't need to watch it?
Speaker 8 (51:23):
Oh yeah, ter scary scary Boom no is show side.
Speaker 9 (51:54):
No, it's done, Lady Beatrice, It's not gonna suck being
lactose intolerant for Halloween and Christmas.
Speaker 4 (52:04):
I'm a vegan. I have a wonderful holiday season. You
don't need milk to have a good holiday season at all.
You'll be fine. And yes, I'll post the recipe at
my website reallycorrel dot com and vegan in Vegas dot com.
I'll post them at both vegan in Vegas dot com
and really coral dot com. All right, See, we got
(52:26):
through a whole show without mentioning Trump too much, without
insulting Maga without you know, I'm just so fine with it.
I'm just so good with it. The ent is trying
to call me, y'all. They're trying to call me. They're
like really trying to call me. They want to reschedule
my appointment. Oh no, should I answer it on air? Hi?
(52:47):
I'm on air right now. I don't have time for
this call. Can I call you back in ten minutes?
Thank you? Put an end to that. Huh. I've waited
three months for the ant appointment, and now they're going
to reschedule. Don't you hate that? You wait months for
a doctor's appointment, then they just reschedule Okay, it's Halloween
this week, so I got a scary movie for you.
(53:08):
It's called House of Dynamite. If it doesn't scare the
but Jesus out of you, you're not paying attention. It
is from the famous female director who did the hurt
Locker and she did Oh, she's done a lot of things.
And why am I blocking out her name? What's her name?
(53:30):
Somebody in the chat room hurt Locker director Bigelow? Is
it Catherine Bigelow? Yes? And this movie unfolds in nineteen minutes,
and you see the nineteen minutes from four different perspectives.
It's not an eighty minute movie. It's actually a little more.
But you know, they didn't exactly stop watch every nineteen minutes,
(53:54):
but it's nineteen minutes told from four different points of view.
The President of the United States and three other people.
What is it about a nuclear weapon? Is you know,
blown off set off launched from the Pacific and they
don't know where. Our satellites didn't pick it up, and
(54:14):
it's headed for Chicago. And did you know that the
multi trillion dollar missile defense system that we have is
only sixty one percent accurate? So it's basically a coin toss.
It's only sixty one percent accurate, and if they miss
(54:35):
the target, they don't fire at it again because they
want to save the other missiles for in case there's
other targets. So sixty one percent chance of taking down
a missile, I bet you all think there's a big
greater chance than that. Nope, And all of the facts
in the movie have been checked out. The Pentagon has
(54:56):
called it a piece of crap movie. Every senator that's
seen it, and every DOJ official, Department of Defense official,
or retired general said it is completely accurate. It is
so frightening because what it tells you, and I'm not
ruining anything. You'll want to watch the movie, but take
a xanax or something first. What it tells you is
(55:20):
that in this country, we basically would have nineteen minutes
tops to decide on world annihilation. Nineteen minutes, that's it.
If someone launches a nuclear attack, our government has nineteen
(55:44):
minutes to decide whether to launch a counter attack. That
means nineteen minutes to talk to all the world leaders
and see if they were involved nineteen. It can't be done.
No one can make that kind of decision in nineteen
minutes and right now, the person that would be making
that decision is Donald J. Trump. That's what the mos,
(56:08):
not Idris Elba, who I wouldn't mind being the one
to make the decision, But Donald J. Trump would have
nineteen minutes to decide whether or not to basically end
life on the planet as we know it, because if
we launch, if someone launches a single missile against us,
(56:28):
and we launch a counter offensive against who we think
launched it, they're going to launch more. That's called mutually
assured destruction. And that's why the movie is called House
of Dynamite because that's what we live in. We have
built a world out of a house of dynamite that
is waiting to explode, and it will explode in nineteen minutes.
(56:53):
And the really terrifying part of that movie is that
everything that we care for, everything that we value, everything
that we've worried about, everything can change in nineteteen minutes,
out of the blue, literally out of the blue. If
nine to eleven had been a nuclear attack instead of airplanes,
(57:17):
George Bush would have had nineteen minutes to decide what
to do. Wow, watching it unfold in real time is terrifying.
It is the scariest movie I have seen in a decade,
because it's real and we haven't really seen a real depiction,
(57:41):
including the people that get to go to the bunker
in the mountain. There is a list right now as
we speak. There's a list of people to be ushered
into the mountain what is it Lone Mountain or whatever
it's called. There is a list. And you bet Jared
Kushner's on that list, and Stephen Miller's on the list,
and Steve Bannon's probably on that list. You and I
(58:03):
are not on that list. And in nineteen minutes, the
world as we know it could completely end nuclear winter.
It is so frightening. It is so frightening. You know,
you gotta watch it. And that's, by the way, that's
(58:25):
a generous Nineteen minutes was generous. Catherine Bigelow acknowledged that
it could be as short as seven minutes because of
hypersonic missile speeds and where they would be launched from.
So between seven and twenty minutes, any day of the week,
all of our fate could be decided in seven Look,
(58:49):
a hurricane just wiped out Jamaica and Cuba. I was
born in November of nineteen sixty two November seventh, nineteen
sixty two, a week from Friday, October nineteen sixty two
was the Cuban Missile crisis. A genealogist said, I was
born in the wake of the Cuban missile crisis. I said, well,
that bomb didn't happen. This bomb did. We almost went
(59:13):
to war back then, and that unfolded the actual decision
in under eight minutes. Yes, it had taken a few days,
but there was a ship and they said, if this
crosses the line, we're laun chains. And it took a
Kennedy on a BackBox. Watch the movie I Am Corelbe
(59:35):
Who you Want to Be? Is hurt anybody? Watch House
of Dynamite on Netflix, Absolutely terrifying. It's so scary. Oh
my god, we'll see you tomorrow.
Speaker 7 (59:43):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the Corell Cast on your favorite streaming service.