Ep. 5125: They Tell You Exactly Who They Are - podcast episode cover

Ep. 5125: They Tell You Exactly Who They Are

Mar 28, 20242 hr 33 min
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This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for THurs. Mar. 28, 2024. 

Our guests today include: Steve Stewart from Tallahassee Reports, Dr. David Hartz in Optimum Health Naturally, and Jerome Hudson from Breitbart. 

Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott.

Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston
Check out Grant Allen’s blog by going to wflafm.com/grantallen.

Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
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Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.

Transcript

Good morning, and welcome friends to Thursday on the radio program known as The Morning Show with Preston Scott aka common Sense Amplified. That's Grant Allen. We're in the baseball cap. Oh my gosh, plum story. It sounds like anyway. It is March twenty eighth. It is Show fifty one, twenty five. I can't believe we're going to finish up the month of March this week. My oh, my, April first is Monday, and we are into the fourth month of the year. Already it is Day eleven, sixty

three of America held hostage. But more importantly, it's Show fifty one twenty five, and so we welcome you to this program reminding you that this was the day it was. It was the night before Jesus was was crucified, and it was communion the Last Supper. What a scene Jesus would share the Last Supper, knowing that one who sat near was going to betray him, another would deny him, and all of them would fall asleep and would not be able to pray for just one hour. Our verse today comes from one

Timothy two verses five and six. It says, for there is one God, there is one mediator between God and men, Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time. There you go one Timothy two, five and six. I know that a lot of people swell up the church attendance numbers on Easter Sunday. This one will be no different. My challenge to you is if you're one of those that makes the twice a year pilgrimage to church for Christmas and then

Easter, really think about that. Church attendance is not about punching a time clock for God. It doesn't make you a Christian. Yes, you can worship God and read scripture and sing songs without anyone else present. Absolutely, that's not the point. First, the Bible talks about, don't forsake the assembling together. A church is not a building. A church is made up

of people. That's what a church is. And by you not being there, the church is missing something because we all are part of the church. That's what we're called to be part of. Your presence encourages You also gain much from hearing God's word from a good teacher or preacher of God's word. You gain much by corporate praise and worship and singing. You gain much by being networked with others for prayer and for needs that may be met or needed

to be met. That happens through a church family. I just encourage you to think long and hard, and don't make Easter that one visit or one of two visits a year. Ten minutes after the hour inside the American Patriots Almanac, tell you about the show next, and this is the Preston Scott Show. Pollard says. Voters say Biden's accomplishments include nothing and not being Trump. Oh candidly, not being Trump is why he's accomplished nothing. Now they've

accomplished actually quite a bit. It It just goes back to most people don't understand that this is all intentional. This this unraveling of our country, the destruction of our economy, the destruction of our natural resources and giving them away. I just the list goes on and on. Anyway, Let's see March twenty eighth, seventeen seventy six, Spanish explorer Juan Batista. The Anza finds

the site where the Presidio of San Francisco's later built. Now, think about that, while the United States is preparing for the declaration of independence just a few months later. I mean this is March twenty eight, so we're talking in April, May, June, and then July, so a little more than three months later we declare independence. Meanwhile, on what is now the Left Coast, ironic Spanish explorers are in essence founding San Francisco. That's crazy,

it really is. Seventeen ninety seven, Nathaniel Briggs of New Hampshire pattents a early washing machine. I'm betting he's the Brigs of Briggs and Stratton, the small motors. I don't know that for certain, simple look up would tell me. Nineteen twenty some three hundred and eighty people killed by thirty eight storms in the Midwest and South and the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of nineteen twenty.

And in nineteen seventy nine America gets a scare three mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania, malfunctions, thousands flee, no one injured, but we did have massive large frogs and lizards and toads, salamanders that came out. Now I'm just kidding. So there you have this date in history. Today on the program Steve Stewart will join us. Doctor David Hart's planning to join us. We've got a road trip idea. And then Jerome Hudson in the third

hour is primed. He's already awake. He's already up and adam and ready to go. So it promises to be a busy day. I was I was just fascinated to see that our free loading guy telling Americans on TikTok with five hundred thousand followers that he's instructing his follow how to how to steal American homes. Oh yeah, I remember him. He's jumped over to uh Instagram horrible physiognomy. By the way, he just looks angry. He looks like

a little troll. He's kind of got this little gargoyleish look to him, something like that. That's nice. You're right, Yeah, you are absolutely right. He's got the old gargoyle thing. Yeah, all he needs is the little hooded thing and hunch over it. All of a sudden, you think if he like sticks out his tongue or something like that, it's gonna be like pointed. You know, maybe I'll just name him screwtape. He's now flashing money and it's it's apparently he's now on the radar of of ice.

We'll see, we'll see. He shouldn't be hard to find. Yeah, he's gonna say. The guy's bragging about his his ability to steal homes, squad and homes, teach others how to do it. He's clearly engaged in drug money. I'd be shocked if he's not part of MS thirteen or something like that. He's a little scumbag. And I will not use his name. I refuse to do that. But here's hoping we catch him and that somebody with some backbone is the one who does it. He's probably smart

enough to be in a state where he knows he'll walk free. But we'll see seventeen past the hour, back with more here as we get started. This has been news in certain places. I think this is really funny. NBC News hires Ronald McDaniel as a new Analyst contributor, and the whiny little whimps at NBC MSNBC just have a hissy fit. Chuck Todd. What a little girl. I mean, Oh my gosh, she shows up for her first assignment. I guess it was Meet the Press or something like that.

Over the weekend. I don't keep those shows straight because I don't watch them, and he just lost it. I think our bosses ou an apology for putting you in this situation because I don't know what to believe. That's what he says to the moderator Kristen Welker. She has credibility issues that she has to deal with. Is she speaking for herself or is she speaking on behalfl

who's paying her? First of all, I don't remember Chuck Todd or anybody at this place coming unglued over, say Al Sharpton, or any of the other people that they've put on the payroll over the years. I don't I don't remember any of that. Well, we know what the real issue is. Ronald McDaniel is the failed leader of the RNC. Now, if i'm them, I am relishing the opportunity to have her sit across from me and say, boy, you really struggled. What went wrong? You guys were

you guys were handed a cakewalk in twenty twenty and twenty twenty two. What happened? But no, no, they they instead through a hissy fit. So the head of NBC Universal's newsgroup says, our Conde there's no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the newsgroup. After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I've decided that Ronald McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor. I want to personally apologize to our team members who

felt we let them down. Well, this was collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team. I approved it and take full responsibility. Now listen, this is where the hypocrisy and see statements like this tell you why these places suck. Listen to the rest of the statement. Our initial decision was made because of our deep commitment to presenting our audiences with a wide diverse set

of viewpoints and experiences, particularly during these consequential times. We continue to be committed to the principle that we must have diverse viewpoints on our program, and to that end, we will redouble our efforts to seek voices that represent different parts of the political spectrum. You just fired a lady that was supposed to represent that. This is so illustrative of what is plaguing the mainstream media.

They cannot abide by anybody other than someone who used to be a Republican is likely sorry, likely was never a Republican, was a rhino at best that has come to their dark side of the force. They don't want diversity of viewpoints. If they did, he would have said, grow up, cupcake and deal with it. And you know what, they would have had to why because there aren't jobs for these people out in the real world. They

got nothing to do. What is Chuck Todd? Seriously, he's a sniveling little guy who just whinds and complains about everything he's Rachel Maddow is better than Chuck Todd. Rachel Maddow is at least articulate and such. I mean, yes, she made fun of all of this as well, but she does it with a little panache, with a little intelligence. Chuck Todd is just a We would have called him a name in high school boys sports, That's

what we would have called him, because that's what he is. But that's the staff, That's all of them, That's Joe Scarborough, That's the whole lot of them. But how funny is it that the group that the head of the news department that says, you know, we need diversity of viewpoints just fired the person they brought in for that diversity. Twenty seven minutes after the hour Big Stories next The Morning Shoe at Preston Scott on News radio one

hundred point seven WFLA. Obviously, I don't have all the information I have, what I know, what I've read, what I intuitively believe, so in some parts of the country to say, you know, we don't think that everything's on the up and up with this particular counting of the election votes. We'd like to know more about what was underneath the table and why poll

observers were ushered out of rooms in a few states. We'd like to know why ballots were brought across state lines according to Swren affidavits of US postal subcontractors that drove ballots across state lines. We'd really like to understand more about why the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court suspended laws of the state in the twenty twenty election. We would welcome the opportunity to inspect what happened when simultaneously counting stopped and

then restarted but started without observer. I mean, wow, how crazy that we'd like to know the answers to those things, and that's just scratching the surface. Welcome to the Morning Show Big Stories in the press Box brought to you by Restore Carpet Care and Time. I shared this briefly yesterday, and I think it warrants Big Story status. Two hundred thousand deportation cases deportation. These are people that had been brought before a judge to be kicked out of

the country. Two hundred thousand were dismissed because the Biden administration did not file the paperwork on time for the case for the deportation. Now here's what's interesting. Prior to Biden, it was relatively rare for an immigration court to dismiss a deportation because Department of Homelands Security didn't file the paperwork necessary. Less than four percent of cases were thrown out between twenty fourteen and twenty twenty in certain

cities. Listen, now, certain cities in Texas and Florida had the largest percentage of cases thrown out, roughly fifty percent. Cities in New Jersey, Washington, and California just four percent. Huh, No, way, isn't that interesting The people selected for deportation those cases were dismissed fifty percent of the time because of lack of paperwork. In Florida, and Texas, two of the more red states in the country. Interesting other big stories. Amazon pharmacy.

That's all I'm gonna say. Amazon Pharmacy, starting with same day delivery in New York and LA, plans to expand the service to over a dozen cities by the end of the year. I mean, wow, Okay, they are expanding their footprint. Florida Governor Round de Santa signs HB six twenty one. That is the squatting legislation that does what we've asked to be done. It empowers the owners of the property to have same day service, same

day service. The burden is not placed on the homeowner. The burden is placed on the person who squatted in their own illegally, on their property illegally. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you legislature, Thank you, Governor desantus forty minutes past the hour. More on that issue next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Preston Scott do or do not? There is no

try on News Radio one hundred point seven Double USLA. Here's why the legislation was necessary, and we'll certainly go more into that next month when Salnewso visits. It is something that I I tried to make sure was on the radar of lawmakers in this last legislative session. How about if I put it that way, it was it was one of the Morning Show with Preston Scott's legislative priorities. JMI was the big winner. We'll talk about that with Bob McClure

next month. JMI was the big winner. Florida Chamber always has some wins, but the squatting one. Thank you very much, legislature, and not from anything personally I've had to deal with. I don't plan on dealing with that problem. But now if anyone in Florida deals with that problem, you are going to have a solution real quickly. And like I said, we'll get to all of that. We'll unpack all of that. Here's the headline. Teen squatters taken into custody after woman found dead in duffel bag New York

apartment. Fifty two year old woman went to her late mother's apartment and found them occupying the home. They beat her to death, hit her over the head with something, killed her, put her in a duffel bag. They've been caught and arrested. Died of blunt force trauma, multiple facial fractures, blame breed, brain bleed. They were arrested an eighteen and nineteen year old, an eight nineteen year old girl, an eighteen year old guy arrested in

Pennsylvania in her car, the woman's car who they killed. That's why you have squatter laws. That's why you stop this stuff. That's why you find that little punk online and you don't you don't him, you introduce him to the penal system of the United States. Parkland father Ryan Petty accused Kamala Harris of politicizing events of the tragedy in order to push for more gun regulations social

media posts. Stop using my daughter for your photo op. She was standing next to a memorial of those who were murdered at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in twenty eighteen. Kind of like an AOC photo at the border with the white pants suit. Oh, Kamala Harris, same thing. Family wants none of it. Andrew Pollock, father of another student, made some comments towards Gavin Newsom, My daughter died in the Parkland mass shooting and to satus was

not even governor when it happened. But I'm sure as bleep glad he became governor Shortly thereafter, Pollock said Desat has fired the incompetent people responsible and didn't demonize lawful gun owners. See, that's the thing. All these people want to do is grandstand tragedies for political purposes. And the dollar is down twenty

percent since twenty twenty. Biden is blaming greed. No, this is the greed of the government, because the government's been printing money, and so the dollar drops in value when there's too many of them circulating, and they're circulating because the government's had to print them. It's just there's actually a story out there where Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are calling Donald Trump old, feeble and confused. Forty forty out. Just stop. It's the Morning Show with Preston

Scott. All right, let me see if I have this right. Electric vehicles are sitting on most car lots with a backlog of them. Manufacturers are losing forty to sixty five thousand dollars per unit sold, so even when they move one, they're losing ridiculous sums of money. Some of that is offset by government subsidies, which means what those subsidies are comprised of Your money,

your tax dollars, so you're paying for that no matter what. It's just subdivided among all of us, even those of us who think evs are so limited in their youth. They're to me as useful as a golf cart. I love golf carts. Now I prefer to walk on the golf course with one of those little follow along caddies. But that's a story for another day. That's the usefulness. They're useful for very limited things. They're certainly not

good for traveling distances. They're not good for refueling purpose, they're they're they're not good for resale. Hurts learned that lesson. Everyone's learning that lesson. So I'm pointing out what we all know at this point. You get one and you want it to charge fast, You got to spend quite a bit of money for the charging equipment that is required, the changes to the wiring of your home, and then your electric bill goes up and it just spirals

from there. We don't have the infrastructure to support electric cars. We don't have it. It doesn't exist. It doesn't exist anywhere in the world. The amount of power needed to charge evs, even if you throw away the idea of their of their their depreciation. The cost of replacing the battery. Did you know that the cost of replacing a battery for a hybrid car averages between two and eight thousand dollars? No hybrid hybrid cars? And I love

hybrid cars. I love the theory of them. But the cost of replacing the battery because the battery in those wears out is between two and eight thousand dollars for a gas powered electric powered vehicle a hybrid eight thousand dollars is the cost of an is I mean that's a high that's a high cost engine. I mean, there certainly are souped up engines that are more than that, but you get my point. So now comes this. Eight states are planning

to ban the sale of gas powered vehicles entirely by twenty thirty two. That's that's now less than eight years. I don't know how a almost prim earned civilization is our fate, right, Because you ban gas cars and we're stuck with these electric things that have incredible upkeep cost. People aren't gonna want them. And so what if it's illegal to no longer sell gas powered vehicles? Give it enough time? And what people are walking biking, riding horses like

this is literally on the track to like neo feudalism. I don't know what that means, but wait, I gotta look that up. Which actually sounds kind of based. But in the meantime, it's dreadfully painful and all of it is based on a y global warming people take a take a dip in a cold pool. We gotta wake up. This is this can't happen. Let's go to Steve Stewart. He's on deck next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Good Morning, How worried? It's Thursday? On the Morning

Show with Preston Scott. I'm a jerk. He's not Grant Allen over there in Studio one A. I'm here in Studio one B. You thought I was talking about you, ladies and gentlemen. He is Steve Stewart. He's not a jerk either. Okay. He is the executive editor of Tellassi Reports website talents your Reports dot com. How ready to get me? Oh my gosh, looking forward to the week. I got family coming in. Yes,

easters, come on? Yes? He has Risen Yes, hey, school board, Yes, so Agender review meeting, which is one of the meetings. They have to prepare for the agenda meeting on Tuesday and a lot of information and we've got we'll wait agenda review, right, and then the first second there, I thought it was gender review and I was like, well, that kind of fits in a way, but I thought, okay, so they're taking meetings to another level. Here a couple of things with

the school board, just to look, they've been in the news. They settled the you know, the salaries for teachers, which all organizations that relied on a lot of federal money post COVID is starting to have to make some adjustments. If you saw it in the news. One of the nonprofits, I think, Second Harvest had to cut employees because some of the money that

was given there because of COVID is going away. I think is important thing to note is if you look at the Second Harvest story before COVID, they had twenty five employees. After COVID when they started getting the federal money, they had sixty employees. Now they're cutting it. Wait how many sixty? Now they're back to thirty five employees, so they are still over the number of employees they had pre COVID. So the same thing is happening in government

here with the Leon County School Board. They're going to have to cut some of the employees that were hired with federal money to sort of address some of the quote learning loss some of the education issues they had. Did they address the learning loss? I'm saying they. I'm not saying no, but i't hired people. They're extra people. But I'm just wondering if they've ever audited and found out did it make a difference whatever they did to hire two different

stories here. What I'm here to talk about today is the people they hired to try to address it. Okay, So what's happening now is that money is starting to go away, and so they're going to have to start cutting employees, and that's going to be an ongoing process of you know, what to do there. Now, one of the things I did that came out of these two meetings is that because of the teacher shortages and trying to find people to teach, that a lot of these positions may be the people that

are in those positions could be rolled over to teaching positions. So it's going to take a little while for this to unfold and see exactly what happens, but the headlines and you know, do we know if they're qualified for those

positions? You don't know any of that. Okay, okay. But one of the things, and this is one of these issues along with this firefighter issue that we're starting to see is unfortunately, this national narrative or this national approach to news, which is the clickbait stuff, is the you know, the headlines that aren't completely accurate are really starting to hit local media outlets here, and you know, so it's something you've got to really pay attention to.

For example, I just told you about them cutting employees at Second Harvest. If you didn't read the details and understand that, will wait a minute. They're just cutting positions that were quote extra positions. There's still got more positions than they had before COVID. Same thing with the school board. You know a lot of headlines. You know, they're cutting the budget, they're cutting employees, they're cutting teachers. You got to go back and look at

what this context is. And again it seems to be this is what we're after now in the you know, the news cycle is getting these headlines out there that are not are very misleading because people don't they don't read as much into these stories. And that's that people have figured that out shallow information I call them shallow information voters. They don't they don't dig any deeper than the

headline and maybe one or two sentences, right. And so when you when you see a story and we're we're getting off topic here a little bit, and I get back. But when you see a story that says eleven firefighters left because of UH pay, that's in a headline, well, that's coming from the firefighters union. The reporter never talked to those eleven people to verify if it was pay. I mean, that's that that's not good reporting.

School board. The other thing that was reported in this generview is they're up to now a thousand UH students that have homelessness issues, in other words, their families in transition. And they're challenged by where they thousand students. That's what they're saying. It was eight hundred before the beginning of the year, and they say now it's up to a thousand. And how do they verify

that? I guess they have a department that tracks students where they live, and you know, if they're having to if they're transient in the sense moving from so but we do have a children's services counsel that has about ten or eleven million dollars in the bank. I'm not sure why they can't get together sort of have a little wow wow, have a lunch chat about some of this stuff. Ten minutes after the hour more, Steve Stewart, I have

to ask one more question. Did did the school board meeting address the issue of overnight stays and all that stuff? Or are they doing the workshop in April? Is that what I I think? Yeah, and we're going to have we do the meeting briefs. That takes a day or two to get those trip together. So I know that was on the on the agenda. Well I heard that was moving in a more positive direction. So that's good news. Uh. City of Tallahassee had a City Commission meeting last night.

A couple of things that wanted just to get you up to date on. First of all, Uh, the up here in the northeast, the intersection at Velda Dairy and ox Bottom. You know they're going to connect Velda Dairy to ox Bottoms. Put a light there. Just I guess it's just south of Kerry Forest because we all need more stoplakes. Well, you know, if you read, if you read into the item, it's it's it's interesting of why they're doing this, and this is supported by f d O T

because of the transportation benefits. The problem is at five o'clock in the afternoon, people going home, they've got that left hand turn to Ox Bottom Road is a big issue. You can't take uh in the afternoon or in the morning when you're coming down Velda if you come down Velda Dairy Road, you can't take a left to get on Thomasville Road without you know, crossing traffic. And so so that's f DOOT. They're looking at moving cars right and

people are moving to the northeast. And if you remember a couple years ago, they were trying to get people to go down Valddairri and go through Clara States, Claria States stop at and so this is a little bit of a you know, it's part of that issue, trying to get another road that's parallel to Thomasville Road because we can't widen Meridian to move some traffic. Also, the Leon County School Board is supporting this because of the access to DeSoto

Trail on Velddairy Road. And so anyway, the City Commission basically took this up last night for to you know, to deal with some of the transportation issues and say listen, we're moving forward with this. FDOT is going to fund it. Five oh vote. Now, this doesn't have anything to do with the development that is going to happen at that intersection with that property there. That's going to be in another meeting. And so anyway, that was

taken up. Another thing was addressed at the City Commission meeting was there was a Council Men and Boys, which was a program nonprofit started by Walkman Neil, which had its beginnings with this anatomy of a homicide report that showed that and one of the more honest portrayals of what's going on. It has showed that gun violence is being you know, is being caused or is involving young black African American males. And so this group has raised has gone around,

raised money and they're trying to mentor black youth. And so they got an update on this. I'd like to say the news is positive. The guy that's running this is very engaging and sounds very good, and they are actually getting their hands on some of these people in the sense of trying to talk to them, keep them in school. But until we see some reduction in these shootings. I mean, we just had a shooting between teenagers and one

kid is dead. Until we see a reduction in that, there's these programs just seem like people trying to do things, but we don't see a move in the needle pressing, right. So they got an update on that, and then the last issue on the city commission that I wanted to bring up with the firefighters issue again last week they had a quote Commissioner Proctor had a town hall in the Northeast Library. Unfortunately, you know, I went to that. I stayed for a five about five minutes. It looked more like

a campaign rally, and so it wasn't really a back and forth. One of the issues as a reporter that I'm having a problem with is the city is putting out exactly what they're offering the firefighters, and you can disagree with what that is, but they're actually putting it out there. I can't seem to get what the firefighters are asking for. There's not like a comparable thing to say. This is the the union's not telling you very broad terms they're

not giving the specifics that I would like to have as a require. I mean, I mean it's a public paid for position that should be public. And the negotiations on this, obviously from a nuts and bolt standpoint, is driven by state law, and they talked about that last night. They're now in what they call impact. So there's an independent arbitrator that is setting down the two sides looking at the numbers. So that's where we are now.

Obviously there's political ramifications for this, and we could talk about that some other time, maybe in just about five minutes. Yeah, we could do that. We didn't. We got more to talk about with Steve Stewart of Tallassi Reports subscribe Tellassi Reports dot com. Twenty one minutes after the hour, Steve Sewart and I a solving all things local in the commercial breaks. Of course, we have to just keep that to ourselves. Just go to Talas Reports

dot com subscribe, get the paper real estate. What's going on here locally? We follow in national trends. Well. Every year, the one of the local commercial real estate groups, n AI taub Or, has this annual real estate market update. It's a big deal. Ed Murray is the principal there, he's the see of the event. They do it at the Turnbull Center. Great turnout, three four hundred people and it really they all realtors, real real estate, prossion, bankers, politicians, leaders, you know.

So it gives an update on and it gives an update on the commercial side, which you got different you've got a student housing, you've got office, you've got you know, retail. And it's really informant because they give a they look at some of the things that you don't see in the news that are you know, things that are planned for the next ten years. And I think I want to start with this downtown the next ten to fifteen

years. Uh, the state government is moving. They're you know, basically or declaring some of those older buildings that were built in the fifties, sixties, Holland Building, Fletcher Building, They're decommissioning some of those buildings. A couple of them are being demolished. And so what's going to happen is there's going to be this void to be filled by the extension of Cascades Park, maybe some more downtown. Where are these state offices going? Are they downsizing?

They track some of it is downsizing, others are moving out to Southwood where that you know, they've got that State office complex there, and so anyway, downtown is going to be quote freed up for this sort of next iteration of what it's going to look like. Now you say, well, what is it going to look like? Well, if you just look to the to the west, you'll start seeing FSU is moving closer to downtown. And I don't know if you've been downtown lately, but was just there the

other night. So across the the Civic Center you saw the big crane for the business school and the business school there. One of the stats that I caught that sort of was I think interesting, is that something like twenty percent of all students are going to have at least one class in this business school. So in other words, that's going to be a lot of students moving up. And that's right next to downtown. So across from that there's plans

for another student of housing development. So my point is, over the next ten to fifteen years, I think you're going to see FSU moving closer to downtown. You got the Moran Center already downtown, and you're going to see state government moving out. You're always going to have the Capital Complex there obviously, but it's you know, the whole idea with Cascades Park there, with

the downtown apartment living, you're going to see some more of that. And so some people were excited about that because a lot of the state workers are not that are there aren't what they I think businesses want. In other words, these people there to come in, they find their parking place, they go to work, they don't leave, and they go back home at the end of the day. It's not as does not promote a vibrant in downtown. So they're thinking that over the next ten to fifteen years this is going

to transition. The downtown is going to look different. Well, they certainly have a grocery store, though it's a boutique publix. There is a Publix down there now right off of Gain Street. And so anyway, it's changing slowly but surely. And this gives you a little bit of an insight of what's going on. I think the biggest thing again is these older buildings are they're going to be decommissioned and we'll see what happens. How many of them

get demolished. And when you say decommission, wh owns the land. That's the thing. It's it's the state. So they'll be selling them to somebody. And so when you they may when you quote decommission, they may sell to somebody that would tear then that would tear it down. And so this is going to be a major transition of the next ten years, so it's worth worth looking at. The other thing is Tennessee Street's changing big time. If you go down there, you'll see a big plot of land and hopefully

it'll get narrower because we really need that to be narrowed again. There's more student housing being built there, uh, things being torn down and upgraded, a new hotel down near the university, and so that again changing. The one thing that doesn't make sense to me is the numbers they showed us at this conference is the number of students that are going to school is relatively flat over the last ten years. FAMU, tcc FSU it's about sixty five thousand,

actually has cane down over the last few years. The number of student how student housing beds, is going up. The ones that are being built and so are prices. That doesn't make sense, and so people were sort of looking at that where the thing that I concluded is there are a lot of student housing that has become obsolete, that is older, that is not as usable. You know, stuff that was over on a cal on High Street because now FSHU is becoming more compact, things have been moved over to

Gain Street. So a lot of stuff going on there. One of the terms that was used in the meeting that or the conference, one of the commercial realtors said that he'd heard someone describe an area as under demolished, and he says that he was joking that the city of Tallahassee might fit into that category of being under demolished. Another example is are you familiar with the wine Wood offices over across some Highlem golf course. It's been there since the seventies,

completely vacant, no power to the building. Someone that bought it had the power turned off. That's going to have to be demolished at some point. That's about twenty five acres which will probably become again multi family driving range. So a lot going on. The old talasse Mall is just hanging on. They're trying to, uh, you know, they're trying to get some

government offices in there. You've seen the out parcels with fast food that it looks better, but right now is in I think it's in bankruptcy receivership, and so that's going to be it. That's a big piece of land. It is obviously in the urban area. So we'll see what happens with that. How soon before the tcc FSU squeeze on the homeless center area becomes an issue, it is, you know, we didn't talk about that, but

we're continuing real quick. They've gotten their liability insurance bills for the year. I got a couple of phone calls. They're doubled. So the homelessness issue, which is mental health, criminals and homeless people, the businesses are paying for that, and local government does not yet soon have a plan. They don't have a plan. All right, thank you, thank you, Pressing twenty eight past the hour, Steve Stewart Tallashi reports dot com. Buddy just

sent me a meme that is now on our Twitter page. Democrats are requesting fifty million dollars for convention security. I suggest we send a couple of gun free zone signs and call it good. That's brilliant. Thank you to ever whoever created that morning show with Preston Scott Big Stories of the press Box brought to you by Restore carpetkar and Tyle. The Governor signs legislation ending squatting in houses. Sorry, I need to qualify that at all places you can no

longer do squats at the gym, So sorry, Jim rats. Squatting is banned HP six. One property owner can call law enforcement immediately to remove a squatter from their property if the individual is unlawfully entered and remains on the property. Individual has been directed to leave by the owner but has not done so. Individual is not a current or former tenant in a legal dispute. It also creates harsh penalties for those engaged in squatting and for those who encourage squatting

and teach others. The scam makes it a first degree misdemeanor for making false statements in writing to obtain real property or for knowingly willingly presenting a falsified document conveying property rights. Second degree felony for any person who unlawfully occupies or trespasses

and who intentionally causes one thousand dollars or more in damages. I think it ought to be a buck one dollar in damages and first degree felony for knowingly advertising the sale or ran of a residential property without legal authority or ownership. So there you go, h it's a start. Disney and the State of Florida have reached a settlement on the lawsuit brought by Disney Disney's Disney has has ended its court battle. They were going to lose. They knew that they

could not win. The back room deals were not going to be allowed. Businesses should not be their own government. It's just that simple. Disney lived for decades with a deal that it should not have ever had, and now they'll learned to act like a corporate citizen of the state, which is good. Amazon speeding up prescription delivery in New York City and LA expanding same day

delivered in more than a dozen cities by the end of the year. It's interesting Amazon has has expanded its pharmacy footprint and to me, the biggest of the big stories. Between twenty fourteen and twenty twenty, less than four percent of deportation cases were thrown out because paperwork was missing. That number has tripled and we have had two hundred thousand deportation cases dismissed people were not deported.

That should have been because the Biden administration didn't put in the paperwork. However, interestingly, the dismissal rate was only four percent in cities in New Jersey, Washington, California. It was fifty percent in Texas and Florida. That says a lot. Forty minutes after the hour, you're caught up on the big stories in the press box. Doctor David Harts's next, Let's get you feeling a little bit better naturally. Doctor David Hartz joins US for Optimum Health

Naturally Purposes. Hello sir, good morning press. I am fascinated by this topic because I'm an expert in it. Good sleep. A lot of people don't really understand the importance of sleep, So let's first talk about the importance of it before talking about how important and how to achieve it. Well, it really really is, and we're talking about stuff that can we can do

naturally. This is right up high in the list because it can affect how our heart and blood vessels heal and repair, can effect hormones and insulin in the body, and supports healthy growth and development and children as well as you know, young adults. Flexibility for to fight germs in our overall immune system

and affects high blood pressure and obesity and stroke. I mean, it's just there's research that it really connects this to multiple different things that can affect us also, just as far as sleep efficiency can affect our learning and focus, even our emotions and my memory definitely. And there's something that's interesting. There's a sleep state called microsleep, which we're still awake, but we're in a light sleep mode, and this can affect all kinds of different things, you

know, and you can't control micro sleep. You might not even be aware of it. For example, you might you drive in a car and not remember part of the trip, or you don't understand the point, or you sleep through part of a lecture and you're wide awake but you're not sleeping, but then you just can't remember anything that was said. Many times this happens to people and it's a sleep efficiency and they think they're just not concentrating,

but actually they're going into a small sleep phase. Actually, they've researched this and they believe it's actually causes about one hundred thousand car accidents and about fifteen hundred deaths, and they say it's actually sometimes even more destructive than being drunk. It has worse effect upon you than being drunk and the influence of alcohol.

So this is something that we kind of, I think, are dealing with sometimes don't even know that it's sleep related, because we could be into bed for seven hours and think we've slept well and not going into the right room sleep and not getting exactly everything we need out of our sleep. So I was going to talk about just a few things that maybe could help us here. They're basic things, but sometimes they can make a big difference.

Ones blocking out light in your bedroom. Sometimes you can have even those little LEDs or little lights on in your bedroom, or even you know, having light coming through a window, and it really affects you tremendously. Just get used to sleepy that way, but you really don't going into deep sleep to minimize noise. Sometimes small noises can try to get nuts, and sometimes you don't even know it, it's still disaffecting you subconsciously. Temperature of the room

can make a difference. You know, a cult sometimes sixty five to sixty eight that seems to help get it. You want to get at least seven hours to eight hours, but you don't want too much. Sometimes when you sleep in later you go into another sleep cycle, and when and we don't complete that sleep cycle, then you stay tired all day long, so you

don't get too much. Also, if you're doing work where you're not getting any natural light, you need to get out get into sunshine, because they find that just being in the sunshine, even for thirty minutes, seems to reset your sort dating a clock a little bit and does help. So sometimes when we're really isolated inside doing work all day long, maybe especially now we're doing home, you know, even homework and we're working at home, exercise

and also seems to really really help. Just getting exercise seems to help sleep cycles and getting in deeper, r inch sleep and also limiting caffeine after two pm. That's kind of classic, but we forget about it. Sometimes we'll eat it oil accumulate over a period of days in our liver because we're not detoxifying it and then eating before you you know, too close to going to

bed as classic, but this is a new twist. They finally from research that if you do eat, use complex carbohydrates and not refined ones like sugar or really you know, sugary stuff like you know, sugary yogurt or something like that, which it's refined carbright and you know, the complex would be more like whole grains and breadst whole grain, prostas of lagoons, starchy vegetables, things like that. They actually seem to produce trip to fane and melatonin

and actually help people a little bit, which is weird. Not the refined ones, but the complex ones. Good stuff. Last yeah, go ahead, and last one supplements melatonin, valarian sham o' neil, and glycine have the four things. Any of those do seem to help. Also, do naps make a difference real quickly? Yeah, naps do, but you don't want to do it anymore. About twenty minutes. Keep it about twenty minutes. All right, fair enough, Doctor Hart's thanks very much, appreciate the

time. Okay, have a great day. President, Thank you, sir. Doctor David Hart's with us Morning Show with Preston Scott The Morning Show with Preston Scott on news Radio one hundred point seven WFLA. What if I told you you may have the opportunity in the next few years. I'll add if Biden gets out of the way to fly on a supersonic jetliner and the tickets

are one hundred bucks? Would you do it? Boom superson flew the XP one jet demonstrator last Friday in the Mojave Desert at the Mojave Air and Spaceport in California. Concord, of course, the only successful supersonic airliner. It was retired more than two decades ago. Cool airplane. Never been on one, but a cool airplane to be sure. This one will carry sixty four to eighty people at twice the speed of a subsonic airliner, and we're talking

about a speed of about thirteen hundred miles per hour. Mock one point seven. Concord went to mock two, but this is running on a different fuel. The CEO told The New York Times. The goal is to fly passengers anywhere in the world within four hours for one hundred bucks. That's the goal. I don't know how you make money doing that, but that's the goal. They have one hundred and thirty orders and pre orders, fifteen for American

Airlines, twenty for United, twenty for japan Air. I got a sixty million dollar US Air Force contract and are working with Northrop Grumming on a special mission variant for potential military apps. Would you get on one? Did you do it? I'm not the first. I'm at the end of the bell curve of adoption. I'm the last to adopt something, So I'd do it if there's been like ten years of successful runs something like that. I don't

know. See, you know my mind works. After ten years of successful runs, I'm thinking something's to go wrong, possible, so I might say, eww. All right, let's stay on the subject of travel. Huh travel boldly going where lots of people have gone. Inside the Unique America book, Strange, unusual and just playing fun a trip through America road trip idea. We were in Nevada last week. Remember Las Vegas the Pinball Museum. Come on, that was incredible, twenty five cents to fifty cents and the

money goes to charity. Are you kidding me? No admission while you're in Vegas? I've got another one, the Neon Museum. It's a thing and it's on Las Vegas Boulevard. I've got the website pulled up Neon Museum dot org. Uh. It is an admission thing. You buy tickets and due to frequence sellouts. They suggest advanced ticket purchases. But if you go to the website you'll see all you need. They've got guided tours and more. But it is like it is a complete museum that chronicles the life of Neon

signs. I think it's awesome. Enormous signs listed from classic Vegas hotels, the Golden Nugget, Silver Slipper, as well as other things. So now you've got two stops in Vegas that doesn't require any gaming, no gambling necessary. All right, we come back. Jerome Hudson always a great radio visit. He's the entertainment editor of Breitbart dot Com. He's the author of the Fifty Things books, and he is my guest next on The Morning Show with

Preston Scott. All Right, it's the third and final hour, at least for today of The Morning Show with Preston Scott. March twenty eighth is the date show. Fifty one twenty five is the day of the show, and day eleven sixty three of America held hostage Grant Allen over they running the radio program. I'm Preston Scott, and this, my friends, is Jerome Hudson. He's the entertainment editor of Brightbart dot Com, the author of the Fifty

Things books. Fifty Things they don't want you to know and they don't want you to know about Trump should be spiking online, Jerome. It should be spiking. It should be a return to the best seller list. You would think, you would think, I mean, Trump has got to be trending right everywhere. Yeah, yeah, it'll be good. It'll be good. I don't know. I've often thought, I mean, I don't know. People basically almost every day send me a DM or an email or something talking

about the book. How a relatives got it or they, you know, came across it and just can't believe how good it is. It's a good thing, you know. Maybe I'll maybe I'll get to do another one if he if he rises to the Oval office again, tell me this, What is the most important of the fifty things that people ought to know about Trump? How have you not asked me this question before? I feel like you asked me this question before and I couldn't come to a decision. Yeah,

yeah, I don't know. I talk about it in a chapter that relates to the economy, and I went and looked in February. In March, Pew Research and Gallup respectfully basically asked Americans the same question in February twenty twenty in March twenty twenty, and both questions, I think Gallup's been asking the same question for fifty years. Are you satisfied with your place in life right now? And ninety percent of respondents said yes. It was the highest that

Gallup had ever actually reported. And then two weeks later, you know,

China released a virus and the rest is history. And I always thought that that was you know, you know, we covered it at Breitbart, the Gallop in the Pew findings, but I just always thought that there was there was really no way to overstate just how monumental and fascinating and what a backhanded pin will three sixty slam duck that was on the on the media that had drummed up twenty four hour hysteria around Trump, the establishment Republicans or whatever who

didn't do everything that they could to defend him and his policies, and of course the Democrats and the leftists on campus, in the media in Hollywood who basically compared him to Hitler every day, I mean three years if you count, you know, all three years he was in office before that question was asked to people who nine and ten said they were satisfied with their economic standings,

with their life in general overall, historically high number. And then you know, three years as president in two years running, by half decade of the media slinging mud at this man, and he produced results that again nine and ten people walking on the streets were happy with. And you know, I don't know what happens if the pandemic never happens, but I do believe

that that Donald Trump would be president today. But instead, I mean, the funny thing is that, you know, the country is in a weird way getting a second chance, you know, at Trump, and he's a known commodity, as those polls reflect, and as current polls reflect, there's a lot of buyer's remorse for Joe Biden. Joe Mudson with us this morning. We're going to kind of pick up there because I want to tag onto the topic of Trump, but merge it with the world where Jerome is the

entertainment editor at Breitbart dot Com. That's next on the Morning Show. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Right, Jerome, I'm gonna make a comparison here when I when I consider Donald Trump and his run for a second term. It seems as though appears that more and more of the Hollywood kind of connected people are splitting off from that monolithic mindset and are slowly kind of getting away from the plantation. Is that fair? That's absolutely fair.

And you know, Donald Trump in many ways sort of broke a lot of paradigms. And you know, he allowed people, He sort of gave some people the green light to challenge orthodoxy, if you will. And again, in a weird way, the pandemic did the same thing it hit Hollywood, It hit the entertainment industry and much of the same debilitating ways that it hit a lot of industries. If you were a comedian, you couldn't play shows.

If you were an actor, or a director, or a producer, scriptwriter, or the other hundreds of ways of life and labor in entertainment, you know, even the below the line work, the people who set up the sound stages and the costume designers. You were all out of work because you weren't filming. And you know, some people took that time, like Josh Gadd to cry into a camera because he was no longer relevant. But other people did a lot of soul searching, and we came out of it.

And as we came out of it, you know, there were the George Floyd riots. I mean, you look at no matter what your bubble is, you know. I mean, if you're the A list celebrity that just backs whatever Democrat your publicist tells you to back, I mean, you do you know you are grounded in reality at some point, and you just can't see the world that we've seen, I guess in the last three and a half four years. But the awful examples of leftism, the horrific,

objectively bad job that Joe Biden has done on every level. I mean, you have people splintering, and so you have people like Michael Rappaport, who's lived in New York City is an entire life. He sees what with no cash Bell Reform has done. And he not only does he see it, he's basically like Andrew Breitbart. He takes his phone out. Michael Rappaport films the thief putting everything that he or she can in their bag and CBS and

walking right out the door. And the police are overwhelmed and they can't do anything, and the prosecutors are tearing their hands behind their back because they can make arrest, build good cases, but charges will never be brought. And the Israel war with this evil, sadistic organization Hamas has opened a lot of eyes with a lot of people who are liberals in Hollywood. You know, the Jewish people in America, whether they be Orthodox or not, always thought

that they had a safe home in the Democratic Party. It's always been a lie. I think President just got in trouble for saying it a little and artfully, but out loud. It's always been a live it's been a live for anybody. I mean, I love it Democrat in my life, but I do not understand why they are Democrats or ever could support that terrorist organization. And you know, it's dangerous, it's dangerous to your way of life if you are a successful actor or a producer or director or screenwriter. To

say the things that I'm saying. You don't even really want to think the things that I'm saying, because you might find yourself pressed in at a cocktail party two cocktails up, and you might let the wrong thing slip, and that could be your career. But things are so bad, I think that people are are less afraid. I mean, you have people like Dave Chappelle saying no, there are two sexes, a boy and a girl and everything else. You can have it. It's fine, but let's just be real

for a moment and recognize its science is science. People who constantly preach follow the science, Well, the science is pretty direct on X and Y chromosome. Hold on, yeah, Jero Mudson with us another segment to come here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. I am the batting practice pitcher to a world class slugger. Jerome Hudson with me from brightbart dot com. He's entertainment editor, and I told him I want to talk Disney, DeSantis and

the white flag that Disney just tossed. But I want to set it up this way, Jerome, I want to broaden it a little bit. Disney has now said they're going to reboot Pirates of the Caribbean franchise. They're going to do it without Johnny Depp, which to me means there is no rebooting. But broadly speaking, is this a hail Mary to try to get some

cash flow back into Disney because their movie ops stink so badly? And does this in any way shape or form connect to Disney surrendering to Governor de Santis in the state of Florida. The latter Disney surrendering to Governor DeSantis. They were just never actually going to win legally like that anyway. You know that the fair application of law does I think extend to tax law and property and all that. You know. About a year ago, Bob Iger basically said

that Disney would stay out of politics. Now all of this happened the Reedy Creek, Florida battled with DeSantis and Iiger and Disney happened because Disney decided in a very weird way that it would inject itself into politics, and not just any type of politics, to politics of sexualized conversations between adult teachers and third and fourth grader, seven and eight year olds or however old you are in school. And that was a horrific business decision, and that opened the Pandora's

box to videos of Disney executives saying, my child is pan sexual. I want pan sexual characters in fairy tales about princesses and princes. And you know that didn't help a corporation that had already been called out on as hypocrisy about being a pride pro pride corporation in Disney while it was expanding its operations in China, where you are either killed, disappeared, or abused for being gay and ten majority Muslims were even worse things happened to you if you were on

the LGBTQ plus pregnant man emoji spectrum. So Bob Iger has always been in a very very savvy executive And you know when Disney in twenty eighteen became the first corporation to weigh in on the Georgia Heartbeat bill, we're now almost a decade removed from that. Yeah, I mean, I'm not saying that Disney won't continue to write big checkster Republicans and Democrats, but the loud overtures weighing in, and they've had presson plenty of opportunity to do it on one political

issue or another. I think those days are gone as long as Bob Iger is there, which will not be for too many more years. I think he just extended himself to twenty twenty six, Disney jumped into the streaming game. That is a net loser for just about every corporation that does it. And yes, you're right, fewer people are going to the movie theater, but that is because of COVID slightly. Yes, there are options, but the movies are not that good. Certainly aren't good compared to what they used

to be. We just asked ras Mussen exclusively one question. Do people enjoy watching movies today compared to twenty thirty and fifty years ago. I'm probably breaking some sort of journalistic rule, but I'll just say an overwhelming majority of people enjoyed movies made two three and five decades ago than they do today. That hurts you if you're Disney, because for years now you've been dredging up old ip very popular franchises and just remaking them. You've swapped races, you've swapped

genders. You've put in pan sexual Lando Kallisian, who was always a swave could looking. You know, at the time it mattered that he was a black character of note in the Star Wars franchise. I will say it again, no one asked for fifth Indiana Jones, but Disney did it. Anyway. That hurts your brand over time, a brand that was already becoming toxic because of your crazy sexualization policies. But Bob Iger again savvy. He's largely

publicly shifted away from making political overtures. He's making massive, multi billion dollar deals in India, He's expanding in Southern California and Disneyland. He's trying to set up a great golden exit ramp for himself. I don't know what he's going to do with Disney. The saying's never going to make any money. I don't know what. I don't even want to acknowledge Preston that this new

Pirates of the Caribbean thing is happening. It's just no way it's going to be successful unless they bring back Johnny Depp, which they probably won't because Jerry Bruckheimer has said that he's not coming back. It could be a feminist disaster. I don't know. I just I feel like, you know, they get a few things right at Disney, and didn't they announce this. But

Disney has announced Star Wars movies that will never happen either. So we could be talking a month from now in the new Pirates of Caribbean franchise isn't happening again. I don't know. Well, we'll talk a month from now and we'll see about that prediction. Jerome thanks has always been the time brother. I love you lovely too. Thank you. Bye. Jerome Hudson with us. He's the entertainment editor at Brightbarton dot com. He's the author of the

Fifty Things books. Yes you can order them online. But more importantly, he's our friend here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Jerome Hudson makes my job so easy. Three segments, three questions. I mean, you talk about a guy that you can set and forget. Jerre talk about Disney col done segment over. Joe talk about Donald Trump, done segment over. I mean, it's awesome.

I love that guy to spend I need to do like an un interrupted sit down with him and we just see where it goes, unabridged, unedited, raw and put it on the Conversations podcast. That might be a lot of fun. Drome's a deep thinker, and UH love him and I I when I say I love you to him, I my wife and I earnestly adore and love Jerome. He's a dear brother in Christ and uh yeah, so

I just so look forward to having him on the program. All right, Big stories in the press box brought to you by Restore Carpet Care and Tyle. We've talked about a lot of different stories here. We'll get into some of these a little deeper later. The the the squatters law signed by Governor DeSantis, Florida now is positioned when this I'm guessing this law takes effect July one. I'll find out for sure with UH with sal Newso next hour or

not next hour, next month, we'll we'll we'll talk about this. Squatters are circle X over them. Look there, these are people that are criminals, squatters. You don't feel sorry for squatters. And so anyway, we'll get to that. I want to focus on this story about immigration judges throwing out two hundred thousand deportation cases. Who gets deported of the illegals that have

broken into this country the worst of the worst when you face deportation. Now, unless they're in prison, that I mean, you could argue that's the worst of the worst. They're in prison. Two hundred thousand have been turned loose because Biden's crew Homeland Security did not do the paperwork. That is absolutely intentional. And oh, by the way, of the cases for deportation,

fifty percent. Roughly fifty percent of the cases of deportation in Florida and Texas were tossed, whereas states like California, Washington, New Jersey four percent, which is a traditional historic average. H huh. That's one of those statistics anomalies that speaks to intentionality. That is an intentional decision by Homeland Security to try to endanger the people of Florida and Texas with these people, to burden the residents, the taxpayers of Florida and Texas with these people. This is,

this is so beyond what we should be allowing. But it also illustrates It's just another little illustration of the intentions and how when I say, if this isn't intentional, what is it. It's just another example that you can hold on to and share with your liberal friends or your fence sitters when it comes to the next election. Forty minutes after the hour, come back with him not so shocking story, Preston Scott Boy, that escalated quickly. I

mean that really got out of hand fast. On WFLA opening day in baseball, Do you think the season's too long? Yeah? Me too. How many games did they play? Like, you know, like back in the day, Well, it went from one fifty four to one sixty two. So the one sixty two has been there for a while, but it went one fifty four I want to say. I want to say it was in the sixties or seventies. So they've been playing at least one hundred and fifty games for a while, for a long long time. Yep, yep,

yep, yep. For a good bit. I want to say, here, let's let's let's google it. When did baseball go to Well, I'll just start with the one sixty two because they'll have it nineteen sixty one, so I was right there. When did baseball go to one fifty four? Nineteen twenty? Wow, so they've been playing one hundred and fifty four games. Okay, I take it back. Don't shorten the season, keep it good. Then you know that actually does impact my view on this, why

totally. I if it's if we've been in tradition. Yeah, honestly, tradition. Don't change something that has been you know, remove not the ancient landmark of your forefathers, as the Bible says. You know, the thing about about baseball is I do think the season's too long. But that said, it is a game that revolves around statistics, and I think for any

level of comparison, now you know, the argument was made. You know, Babe Ruth didn't play under the lights, right, and he didn't have to endure back to back doubleheaders, and you know, I mean there were all kinds of things, travel as much, but then again travel was very difficult, so it was even more cumbersome. So I mean there are a lot of back and forth on all of this. I think our lack of attentiveness for a one hundred and sixty game season is in due part of the

modern era we're in football. Basketball is highly highly you know that was Rob Manford by the way, Yeah was that it yea highly highly just in your face getting that dopamine hit, you know, like all the time. And baseball is slow. It's a different game. It's a different draw of a fan. Though they're trying to speed it up. They are, and I'm

okay with those attempts. I'm only okay with it in a doubleheader. I still like the leisurely pace of baseball, but I do like the quicker pitch and you can't get out of the batter's box just x number of times. Yeah, I'm good with that because the old guys back in the day didn't do that. No, like Babe Ruth in the batter's box just stood there and he wasn't putting in elbow pads and all that stuff after every swing whatever.

Yeah, right, none of that happened. You know, the old the old joke about he's throwing a spitball, and you know, and the guy guy says, uh, what do you mean he's throwing a spitball? He said, uh, he said, you don't understand when when he spits he covers the whole ball. Anyway, there, here's the thing. Baseball

is an American sport. It is a quint essentially American sport. And as a result, that's why things like steroids and the steroid era and Barry Bonds and those guys that cheated need to be kept out of Baseball's Hall of Fame. They need to be kept off the record books. I still believe that until Aaron Judge did it the other what last year, year before or whatever

couple of years, Roger Marris was the record holder. Roger Marris to me was the record holder and home runs in a single season hit sixty one, and oh, by the way, he did that in one hundred and fifty four games, and they were complaining that unless he broke the record in the number of games that Babe Ruth had, it wasn't a record, and even the Commissioner Baseball was advocating for that at the time. Anyway, I just it was not the story schedule for this segment, but it'll do. Baseball

is opening day to day and that's something worth talking about here. On the Pointing Show with President Scott by Ball correction, heer from Larry said, Mares actually hit sixty one in one hundred and sixty two game schedule. Think you're right, Yeah, I think you're right. They switched the schedule. I guess it was that year or the year before, But Roger Merris was still the record holder to me, not Barry Bonds. And Barry Bonds is not

the record holder. It would be Aaron Judge, which works. That's fine. We dropped this on you, and I'm sorry for doing it this way. With Jerome Hudson that Disney is planning to do a spin up of the Pirates of the Caribbean again, we need to have a longer form discussion about the state of reboots because Hollywood is out of ideas. It's so bad out there. They're taking all of our characters and ruining them in the reboots, no doubt. I mean this is this is absolutely unnecessary, but it's a

desperation played by Disney. Yeah, Leo writes in on Twitter, he said, let me guess Jack Sparrow is going to be a lesbian handicap vertically challenge a little person of color, Yes, and whatever other woke category they can mix in every time. Probably, so I know I mentioned this to you before too, But you know when you turn on the TV and you just scroll through the channels and it's like, why are we Why is the only thing on television like reruns of Seinfeld and Friends. It's like our our our

collective creativity is stunted. Hollywood can't do anything but reboots. Channels are doing nothing but Friends reruns. It's like, there's land. Just watch the old shows. There you go, Bonanza, Andy Griffith, Dick Van Dykes Show, All in the Family, anything you can get your hands on that's old from back in the day. I mean, heck, bring me a McMillan

and wife. And some of you are like huh yeah, Colombo. How about Kojack Mannix, The Rockford Files, Rockford Files, amazing television, James Garner, funny crime drama kind of thing, but funny, yeah, epic stuff. But you're right, there's I again. Disney's. Disney's desperate and they're going to what they think will work. The problem is they've Jerry Bruckheimer said, Johnny Depp will not be part of it. If he's not part of it, it doesn't have a chance. If he is, it's still

a stretch, right, It's still a stretch. Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA. All right at Verse today was one Timothy two five and six, or, as former President Trump would say, one Timothy, No, never mind, I'm not I'm not doing that. Sorry. Sorry. Speaking of Disney, Disney and the Governor Florida and the State of Florida, they have they have reached the settlement. Disney's quit. They were not going to win the lawsuit. It was

going to go very poorly. And so that's a win because Disney is slowly having to turn its ship. Now, whether it's enough to save it, I don't know. I don't know if they can get the ship back to save Harbor before it sinks, but there are I have heard that some of the large individual shareholders of Disney have gone to Bob Eiger and said, you better turn this around or you're out. We'll pull our money. So we'll see. Speaking of Governor to Santa signed House Bill six twenty one that ends

squatters in Florida. For the most part, it gives property right owners their appropriate rights and immediately, not through any legal battle. Love it. Amazon expanding prescription drug operations. Immigration judge is have tossed two hundred thousand deportation cases because the Biden administration didn't do paperwork in time. The dollars down twenty percent since Joe took over. In eight states are planning to ban gas powered cars by twenty thirty two. Back tomorrow

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