Live from Hardee's with USA Cares - Hour 2 - podcast episode cover

Live from Hardee's with USA Cares - Hour 2

May 30, 202437 min
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All right, alive on the road with USA Cares. But his time again Thursday, a little after ten am to talk about cops from Dave Jenny. Two easiest things I do all week are finding tools and cops that rock. It's true. On Tuesday, off duty, Metropolis, Illinois police Chief Harry Massey saved a man's life by performing CPR while at a local pool hall.

The man, who'd undergone heart surgery, collapsed during a pool game. Massy called on the training that he received through the police department enacted immediately, performing CPR until paramedics arrived. According to Massey, the man was taken to the nearest hospital before being transferred to another healthcare facility. The chief now stressing the importance of learning CPR well. They later found out that the guy faked it

because he was losing a pool competition or three hundred dollars. He faked a choking thing and got out of pain. Let's go to Florida. Earlier this week, sheriff's deputies responded to a call from a woman who accidentally locked her one year old daughter in her car at a Palm Coast walmart. The father explained that he'd placed the child in the vehicle, but when he tried to get in on the other side, he found the doors were locked with the

keys still in the car. Flagler County Sheriff's Deputy Harrison arrived at the scene and learned from the parents that the child had been in the car for about ten minutes. He noted the kid was sweating and in distress and decided to break the window to rescue her. After breaking the window with a small spiked metal ball, Harrison used his baton to clear the remaining glass and unlock the car and retrieved the crying but unharmed child. Oh, yes, break the

window. Break you can get it the glass window. You can get an on the window, because if the kid stays in there too long that he gets up and then that's what happened to you. So you were a toddler. No, they loosed your brain a little bit, right, Well, that's doctors recommended it. Yeah, we at the time, remember that we had on yesterday with the Anchorage Fire Department in Middletown. He and I did an experiment to show exactly what you did this and we did we did this

with State Trooper Halls as well. And boy, let me tell you. How long did you last in there? It was not long. Yeah. I think we stuck it out for about five minutes. We were dressing to sweat. But here's a scary thing. We were so hot it was. It was a hot August day. Hot and how human it is. When we got out of a car, it felt freezing cold. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Those those poor babies, they have no chance. All right.

It's not just cops that rock firemen. Two earlier this week, two people were rescued after their car plunged three hundred feet off a cliff in Arizona. Superstition firefighter that's right, Superstition Arizona offered, no question. I got questions when they rescue somebody in building from a fire and they got the ladder up, do any of them have the balls to walk under the I doubt

it. They offered details of the rescue in a social media post, writing that one person managed to escape the vehicle, while the other was trapped in the overturned car at the bottom of the canyon until a helicopter arrived. The fire department describes how their crew members were able to extract both men, provide medical care, and prepare them for transport. They were then taken to a local hospital and are reported to be in stable condition. Authority said these roads

are dangerous. It's a beautiful place, easily distracted. Be careful. There's a gauge in De Soto Rescue. All right, it's cop rocks. Stave Jenny, One quick, one more. Yea. The police officer that responded to my fender bender the other day when above and beyond I had a tow truck on the way, he saw that the car was still drivable, got the bumper off. Saved me some money by going above and beyond. Thank you, officer. Wow. Yeah, who's this guy that I have a

badge number? I don't have a Yeah, don't have a name. Robo cop that ripped you? Are fine now, citizen, I am the all hang on I got before we get to mister bratcher. Here, I'm looking at your rolling stones tennis shoes. Okay, these are like the special rolling stone yea, for special leather. Look at them, they're for special people. There's it's signs, signature stitching the rolling stones in the mouth and all that. You have not taken care of them at all. What are you

loading coal with these shoes? I walk around. You have to take care of them, dude, because see this is my hang around or wear everyday shoes. And I got a backup pair the oh you bought two d of course you do. Just like yeah, I'm like Noah, sneakers head would look at your shoes now and just lose their minds. Okay, listen, I want to bring in a friend of mine. Uh. And he's also

a boy. He's served, He's served the commonwealth Kentucky, got decades and now hopefully he's going to be one of our common sense metro council people. I'm on the needs of my heart. Pray he gets in there. We need some help here. I want to bring in now state former state representativey now you're running for a metro council Thank god. Kevin Bratcher, Kevin, how you doing man? Good? Great? Before we start talking Turkey, I gotta say, wow, you drop some pounds man, You look a

great. Yeah. Yeah, I've lost over thirty three pounds since first week of April. Whoa, And I followed a lot of what you used to tell me. I've been on two years asking you how you lost so much. I remember you back in the day, right, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, And you just you said it's a lot with your nutrition. Yeah, it's ninety percent nutritions you put in your gullet. But you feel better. I'm particular about what I'm putting my body. Oh that's okay.

So so anyway, Kevin Bratcher, you are not just You didn't just serve for how long did you serve in the house. I'm still a state rap until December thirty first years, almost three decades of years. So here he is. He served, he serves comonwell, Kentucky for nearly three decades. First served in the Navy. That's where I was going. But first you served in the navy. How much of your hearts is this great organization USA Cares? How much of your heart does it have? It? It's

wonderful. You know, I had a Navy friend that committed suicide a couple of months ago while we're in session, and uh, I remember that. I know USA Cares does a does a lot to try to prevent that, among many other things they do. USA Cares is amazing. And I know I know that they don't score all the money away. They put the money right into the veterans. No, they absolutely do. And By the way, if you look on charity navigator, who who they kind of look over

all these charities, they are a four out of four. They scored one. Uh. And if you're looking looking for a charity adopt, I'm on the knees of my heart to ask you to please take a look at USA Cares. Uh. Basically, they take care of our veterans that took care of us. And like Kevin said, there's twenty two veterans suicides every single day. Uh. Here's where USA Cares. Just a couple of things they do. They step in when there's gonna be a foreclosure, if there's food

scarcity, LG. And he's getting ready cut him off. It goes on and on and on and on. And the best way you could serve those that served us is to donate. How did you get involved with USA Cares, Kevin, Well, I've known Trace Chester and the CEO pretty much my whole life. Yeah, we've been friends forever. And he has such great integrity. You know, he he won't tell anybody, but he was a he was a hero in the first Iraq War. Now he no, hang on, hang on, he downplays this. And we don't want to get

him pissed off for as they but we'll talk about it. Say what you say, because I know he doesn't he doesn't want any accolades for it. But the guy is a hero, right he is. He's he's a great guy. And I know that if he's at the Helm, it's a good organization. And he's been there for a while. And you know we in

this last budget he worked. It was last year and this year there was some money from the budget that went to USA Cares and as she represents, Susan Whitten, who I think you know, and I'm not just saying that because she's your wife. She worked her rear end off time, no money. Yeah, yeah, And I saw that because you know, you get after she got elected office. I get a peek behind the curtain of what you and men and women do in Frankfurt. And it's not just while you're

in session. I see the long, grueling hours. I see the papers that have to be read. I see the phone calls and everything that goes in to try to get funding for well deserved charities like USA Cares. And it's no joke. What did it mean to you as a veteran when you finally saw Frankfurt, go, you know what, we need to take care of our veterans and we need to help out USA. Well, it means a lot because there's some veterans out there that are struggling. Yeah, a

lot. And and uh, you know there were there's been in my lifetime, there's been two major wars, and there are there are folks my age or younger that are struggling with those PTSD and and whatever. However you diagnose their situations and it's it's uh, they need a helping hand. And the USA cares. Yeah, well we want to be we want to make sure Kentucky's at the forefront of USA cares because let's look at Fort Campbell and Fort

Knox. If you want to talk about the bourbon industry and what they bring to Kentucky. Okay, it's cute horse racing, that's cute, But what Fort Campbell and for Knox bring in are like, it's it's twelve fourteen billion dollars a year. It's important we have we are they are generating a lot of money for the state. We should get back to the veterans, and especially the ones that are active duty. Now they can't pay for food when

they're out deployed, their families back home. Can they're on food stamps. You're back home? That is crazy if you're not. If you're an officers get paid on a different level. But some of these guys that are boots on the ground in the army, they can't pay for food. We got to change that. Yeah, it's something in USA Cares and other organizations come in and fill those holes, and they were't grateful for them. Now, we were talking earlier Bill Robie, he was the former chairman of USA Cares,

talking about how many calls they get. They get it around one hundred and fifty two hundred calls for assistance from veterans. That's weekly weekly. So there is a financial need maybe if you're a business owner, or maybe you're in a CFO CEO situation, any like that. We have a lot of big companies that are corporate citizens here in Louisville and the state of Kentucky. You're hearing this. A partnership with USA Cares is something you won't regret.

I promise. They have a four out of four star rating on Charity Navigator. They have one hundred score with Charity Navigator, and they look into these charities with a fine tooth calm. All of the money goes to help your veterans. If you want to donate, please do so. Go to USA Cares dot org or you can they have an office. Oh, I can't remember the road. It's off of Plant Side Drive. You can google your

address. So you're going from Frankfort to hopefully Metro Council. Yeah, you go from being part of the majority over there to get into a knife fight at Louisville Metro Council. Now when is the Frankfurt has passed it? So there's no no DNRS anymore? Right, So you're just running? Right?

Is that for this election or the next one? This election in November will be the last time that the Metro Louisville Metro mayor and City Council run as a artisan, meaning an R or a D or an independent or something behind their name. Okay, starting next the following twenty twenty five, that all

goes away, That all goes away. Okay, I gotta say, let's start with State Representative Kevin Bratch or hopefully soon to be Councilman Bratch or after November at least, I hope you got a heart of a servant, don't you, Because not just with USA Cares, but your your career. You've been serving the public and you're looking to serve more. But I've seen you out with people and you're just a genuine servant. What puts that in your

personality? What do you think makes it makes you want to serve others so much? Because it's I could tell when we're out and I see you do something that most people won't do, like know, it's genuine. What makes you like that? Man? Well, you know, let me start with

this first. You've heard how and I can't think of one now, but how rock stars or movie like they like to say, well, what what what is your motivation motivation behind this movie or this song this part, and they say it's something that I would like to see I would like to hear. So as I was growing up, you know, there were situations where,

uh, you know, government needed to help us. Now you know, I'm a I'm a conservative Republican. I don't think believe in the nanny state, right, but there are times when the government needs to step in. So many times I say, whether it's the state rep role or hopefully Metro Council, I'll say, what would if I was that ten year old kid and needed something from the government, What would I want my counselman or state rep to do? And I you know a lot of that comes from

that. Well, let me tell you it shows. It shows how I don't want to apologize to you, probably for one of the most busiest days of your life. So I grew up. One of my best friends growing up, God Rest. His soul was Kevin Bratcher, not this Kevin brad but another Kevin Bratcher. And when he died, I gave him a farewell, a tearful for where Oh yes, not knowing, not knowing that I should preference. Yes, everyone's like Kevin. People are posting God rest the

soul of State represented Ken? What was he? What was like some people saying good? What was What was it like to find out you were dead on that day? Were the first voice smell I got? I just like, gosh, this guy's crazy. And then after about the tenth and twelfth I started thinking something's going on here. And it didn't take me long to figure out that Kevin Bratcher And there's like four four or five in this general yea, that's funny. Well, the thing is before Facebook and and social

media. I didn't think there was another Kevin Bratcher in the United States, did we we growing up? But now I put it in the Facebook and they'll be well listen Kevin bratch Er aka Last. But it's really good to see you, my friend, and best of luck in November because this the city and these representation like you give us. God love it. Kevin Bratcher. All right, all right, Vision Works got my glasses of Vision First. Vision First. Vision First is right here on my face right now.

Vision First has offices all over city of Louisville, southern Indiana, and they have the car wash. I call it the car wash. You get in there, what I gotta get You gotta get a pair forget buying the readers, yes, stop it just don't so I don't have to take them off. I would lose my readers all the time because I would take them off and uh and I would lose them or I'd break them. These have the uh the top part where I could see ten or fifteen feet away clear as

day and then up close to what I'm reading. And they're called Progressives. So you could get that pair at Vision First. Go to Vision firstiicare dot com. Uh. Vision first is whether you're six months old or you're sixty, doesn't matter. They'll take care of you. You get your eyes tested.

It takes like four minutes where they take this unbelievable MRI type vision of your eyes and behind your eyes they can tell you because you look right through to your brain stem or not your brainstam, but your brain you can see back there. Well, they're gonna look at all that. You'll see a

doctor five minutes after that. Then you'll meet the person. They have about a dozen people out there that will walk you through the types of glasses that you want that will fit your head and say no, you have a round head like Dwight and I or a long head like Dave. Either way either well it's a long end up round, but it's either way, it'll fit your head. Vision first, Vision FIRSTI care dot com. All right,

we are back here at partisan Ye. Before we get into the reeling in the years of Courtney Donahoe, we'll pull her in to talk about when she gets there. Dave, lots of pasta. We send Courtney a basket and by the way, they can now ship frozen things at lots of pasta. They couldn't when we hooked up Courtney, but now you can send the meatballs to you. Yep, so I try. I talked about the Michaels of Brooklyn. They have their gravy, which few normal people would call spaghetti sauce.

Yeah, but it is. We tried it last night. Oh my gosh, dude. Yes, the pasta's imported from Italy and it's a little more expensive. But as Dave has always said, we ate it last night and I did not feel bloated. I could sleep an hour later. It was fantastic. So the Michaels of Brooklyn checked that out. It's in the back towards the right, and they have fetuccini sauces, the gravy and all

of that. So check that out. I love the Micaels, but my two favorite are the Lots of Pasta brand sausa is made right here in Kentucky, the regular and the spicy Marenera. They have sausa just to throw on the grill. Tony, you can grill. It's not just saying Italian at Lots of Pasta Mexican on raised two. Uh. And then they have the artists and waters. I don't know if you saw that one. I did a twenty four dollars bottle of water. If you are one of those people

I like, I like to take that and make tea with it. So how much did you love? Lots of pasta? Courtney? The spicy sauce is delicious. You guys have to send me more, send me more? What are you? Well? Well, well hang on that cordet now you can earn more. All right, we are now what are we? U? Thirty? We are thirteen? Thirteen and oh there were twelve and oh no, so today's well, you're right twelve. Oh we're twelve, and oh there's thirteen. There's no way we can lose now. Yeah. Well,

the good thing is it's because I'm back. That's the reason you're doing so well. You're terrible until I showed down. Yeah that's the ticket. All right, What decade, Dave Jenny's what decade? All of these songs were in the top twenty somewhere in the seventies, okay, song sung Blue Neil Diamond speaking of New York song song You Were the Sun and the Moon of Nothing, it's early seventies. I got like seventy four on this one. I have no idea. Let's hear another one. Okay, song song

Blue, that's go to the Carpenters. Karen Carpenter did not like lots of pasta. One are the few seventy four that's still You can't get over that too soon. You know that was like forty five years ago. It's gonna take some time. But the voice of a name, awesome voice. It really does the opposite of me. When my wife sings, she sounds exactly like Karen Carpenter. She got a voicebox. Ah, Okay, seventy three, seventy four, I'm thinking seventy two. Now I'm earlier seventies, maybe

seventy one. Hot Rodley Commander Cody and his Lost Planet air Man seventy one. What it's about Lincoln again? If you don't start driving that hot rod Lincoln at the end? Ah, dude, it sounds like something that should be at the end of a Burt Reynolds movie, right. Cannon Ball Run four exactly? Okay, And I'm on early seventy I like seventy two. R it's doctor Hook Sylvia as his mother's I turned to my wife and look at her. She's she's the number one. Oh somebody got a Lawrence Taylor

Jersey. Thanks for being distracted your focus. It's elsy okay, seventy two or seventy three. Sylvia is very apparently Yeah this song Sylvie gets around each car, the doorknob, the one guy in the one guy in doctor Hook got a BB gun for Christmas. Dude that that is the funniest looking band in the band. And you know they're all on coke. They're all on drugs, and you get every gig none of them are straight. And if you interview them, they say it. They're like, we were just a

garage band. We had no idea we'd have hit songs. The kids know him as Yusef Islim. It's Cat Stevens to the adults. Morning. Oh can I tell you this is I have a quick story about this. This was the first song my mother heard when I was born. Wow, No, no way, Morning the first song. So my mom always talks about this. After Courtney was born, my mom, my mom, that's when I was born. My mom said, water has broke. That's what you beat me to it. That's not true. He's got some think seventy two,

but now I want to go to seventy one. Really? Yeah? What's number one? All right? The number one song? May the thirtieth, nineteen seventy something, Oh girl, it's the Highlights. Girl, I like seventy one or seventy two. Now, I'll be in trouble if you left. Now I'm kind of out on this. I don't I couldn't tell you forty I'll like seventy one or seventy two. What do you want to

go with? What do you want to go with? I think I'm I think I'll go with seventy two because more of you have been saying I don't know half of these songs, but okay, all right, say I go with seventy two. No, go with your gut as you said, seventy two, all right, Dave Jennings. According to Courtney Donaho and the record to be thirteen and oh is nineteen seventy two, the Shylights, Oh girl, seventy one, but quiet it was number one, May the thirtieth, Yes, yes, May the thirtieth, Yeah, yes, yes, yes,

yes, yeah, yes, yes yes. We are officially the seventy two Dolphins. We are, yes, seventy two Dophins. We got more day to go. Wow, I thought we were isolate that sound. David said it to me. I'm gonna need a party. Were way late. Please give us the numbers for the stock market's definitely under pressure for a second day. Taking a look at the Dow right now, which I'm trying to

bring up again, don't isolate that sound either. Uh. It's down three hundred and ninety points, the S and P five hundred, falling four tenths percent. Not that bad. There are concerns and interest rates will remain higher for longer as inflationary pressure's way on Americans With the news radio eight forty W h Ayes Bloomberg Money Report, I'm Courtney Donahoe. Please be the clean version I know. All right, welcome back. We are live at Hearty's on

Dixie Highway. Dwight's coming home home to the highway for today maybe uh. And we're with USA Cares, a organization and its close to our hearts. It's a nonprofit UH that dedicates to providing financial and their advocates for active duty military personnel, veterans and their families. I do want to say this before come by, By the way, donate from at least a little as a dollar to whatever you want to donate, especially you want to come by and

have lunch. But the news department was asking us because we have our connections with LMPD. Yeah, so that they're like, hey, dude, there's a large police presidence from the courthouse. What's going on. So we go, okay, well we'll ask about it. And you never know these days with the dismissal the charges yesterday Brianna Taylor riot anniversary was the other day.

Listen, you don't know, listen with with with Michael O'Connell and his little look at me press conference, I thought for sure they were going to lock him up, all kinds of golfers, We're going to protest and tear up Louisville. So they started, they started to board up buildings. Yes, that's not the case. No, so our guys said, well wait, let me check. So our guy said, oh no, that is the Special Olympics torch run and a lot of their candidates are are running with the

Special Olympians. So that's why there's a big police president. Hey, look, finally a good large president. Hey, folks, let me never know in Louisville, Kentucky anymore. Hey, folks, men and women out there, if you're hanging out with us right now. I got to tell you if you don't have a charity that yet you've adopted to get to. I can't say enough good things about USA Cares. Go to USA Cares dot o

rg Uh. Here's just one thing about them. Charity Navigator. It's it's a it's a organization that looks into charities with a fine tooth called with a microscope. They're rated four out of four. Did you hear that? Four out of four on Charity Navigator they scored one hundred and all they do is help out the men and women that served and helped us out. And we're

talking in a big way. If there's a foreclosure, they help them make the know why it's getting returned off there, stepping in food scarcity, you name it. It goes on and on and on and on. I'm on the knees of my heart begging you check out USA Cares. As I bring in the national spokesperson, Brian Anderson. First of all, good morning, Brian, it's good to it's good to see you man. Good morning.

It's good. It's big responsibility, uh, national spokesperson right a little bit, Yeah, but I started a long time ago, back when this company was you know, an office in Radcliffe, Kentucky. And I've been able to watch it grow, help it grow. Yeah, and it's kind of been amazing and we're still going strong. I gotta tell you this later. It's a wonderful organization and God bless the men and women to work there. Like I said, scored four out of four with charity Navigator and that's no

baloney. And I want to talk more about that, but first I want to talk about the movie star. Okay, here's a by the way, let's Brian, what is your story. Let's hear your You are a veteran and you are in a wheelchair. Tell us your story. Yeah. So, you know, I joined the Army in two thousand and one and I actually went to basic training on September eleventhought, Oh, you gotta be kidding.

I'm not joking. Your first day crazy. I mean, technically it was one o'clock in the morning, September twelfth, now, but we got on some buses and drove seven hours Fort Lenderwood, Missouri. I became a military police officer. I was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas. And you know, after September eleventh, you know, we all kind of knew that we were going to go somewhere at some point. Yeah, and we were

kind of proud of that. We were happy to be able to be the ones to get to do something about it, right, and it made us feel good. Two thousand and three, you know, I went in for

the invasion in Iraq. It was by the way, they probably makes Basic a little bit more intense knowing that you're going, you know that that's happened, right, that Basic probably was like, hey, this isn't just I'm going to be deployed to Georgia. I know at the end of this whatever eighteen weeks whatever it was, that you were going to go overseas, right, Yeah. I mean I think I was so young. I was nineteen twenty years old, so like, I knew I was going somewhere, and

I'm sure that was in the back of my mind. Yeah, And I did tend to pay attention. I was really, you know, a pretty good soldiery. Things just seemed to make sense to me. I didn't even realize I had a brain in my head until I got into the military. Awesome, that's crazy. So you found your place, you found your people, you found your trust good. I knew I wasn't going to stay in the whole time, but I wanted to do my part. I wanted to

help the little guy. And so what happened, You get deployed. Yeah, So the first year was interesting and they were really scared of us, and I had a lot of you know, interesting experiences, and there are times in that part of the year that some of us could say we actually

had some fun. The second year to thousand and five, so we went home for eight months, go back in two thousand and five January two thousand and five, and they tell us strictly in Bagdad, we're helping the Iraqi police do what they need to do, teaching them how to police their own country and everything like that. And so we were going outside the wire every day and we had sixty IEDs going off every day, sixty IEDs every single

day, just in a six mile radius southeast, by god. So it kind of became like, you know, it used to be like if we get hit, Now the question, kay, all right, when we get hit, wow, is it gonna be one of those stories where I watched trapmanna gole right by my face. But I didn't come out with a scratch. Is the armor gonna hold up? Or is it gonna kill us? All I tell you soldiers, don't think about coming back halfway. You either think you're gonna make it or not right, And and then you know.

October twenty third, two thousand and five is the date that I got blown up. And I didn't even realize, you know, I was hurt yet, Like my first reaction is to looked to my right to where everybody was in the truck. To me, I'd be like, hey, you guys are right, you guys are right, and you know I didn't hear anything. WHOA. Luckily they had, you know, minor wounds compared to me. They jumped out of the truck before it even stopped moving. Meanwhile,

I'm inside, my legs in my hand like were cut off instantly. My legs were laying on the floorboard. My hand was in the passenger seat, and it kind of spun me sideways be where I was like laying on my back with my head towards the door. And when I looked to the right, I was seeing green, And I'm like, why am I seeing green? Well? I thought I was sitting up looking to my right in the passenger seat. Well, because I was laying in the driver's seat and I

was looking to the right. God, I was actually looking at the back of my seat, which is street. And when I told myself, all right, get out, and I don't know what I did to try to get out. I just realized after a few seconds I couldn't get out, still not realizing that I was injured. I didn't know anything. It didn't cry out the I D It takes your legs, it takes and you still don't know that you're injured. No, Wow, you're just in shock.

I was adrenaline. One of the reasons that I didn't bleed out, though, is because of the type of IED's and e FP and you know they top those off with copper plates and it gets so hot that copper liquifies. That's what goes through the truck. It's not piercing the truck, it's melting through the truck. And that's what went through me. And it cauterized everything. Oh my god, it was crazy. That is crazy. So they EVACU out. Yeah, so they get me under the sidewalk. Yeah,

calling the nine line. The helicopter pilot was told not to land lands an impossible spot because he's like, if I don't land, this kid's dead. And he just did it. Those guys are awesome, They're crazy, They're amazing. I tell you, USA cares dot Org couldn't pick a better spokesperson. All right, I'm getting emotionally here thinking about that guy landing on a helicopter. All right, so your recovery time, right? How long was that? Well? When I woke up, I was like, I just

want to go home and get better. How long do I have to be here? They're like, well, the average stay of a soldiers eighteen to thirty six months. I'm just like what what? Okay? So I just put my head down and did what I needed to do and I was a triple amputee and I made it out of there in thirteen months. All right, live man. I was one of the really lucky ones. So I had a really good attitude, you know, kind of like how I am today. I've always been this way. And I got noticed in the media

a lot. And as I'm leaving Walter Reed, I came out on the cover of Syre magazine. They did a huge spread, ten page spread on me, and in there it said I wanted to be an actor and maybe stunk man, And from that article I became, you know, the spokesperson of a wheelchair company, Quantum Rehab. I was looking for a foundation to work for. I found USA Cares. They seem to really like me too,

and so we all met up. It seemed like fate. This is the way it's supposed to be. And I've been on board ever since. Hey, Dave, I'm gonna take us a little bit long on this, and I'll take the heat from the balls on it. But I got to bring that up. You say on the article that you want to be an actor, you want to be a st man, and you did. Here's

some of the movies you read. An American Sniper, Batman, The Dark Night, The Week Of with Adam Sandler, Chris Rock and then what I want to talk to you about particularly is The Wrestler is a small indie film. While it's underrated, I just told you it's underrated. Mickey Rourke as a wrestler. So part of the scene you take your prosthetic leg off and you give it to Mickey Rourke to beat somebody up with. Yes that scripted

or is that something you throw in there? So me, the stunt coordinator, Darren Aronofsky, the director, Mickey Rourke, We're all standing there figuring out, hey, what can we do? And it was like, what if we come out of the ring and we we wrestle into him and I roll back and fall out of the chair or something like that, Like no, no, what could be funny? And it was actually Mickey that was like those legs come off, and I was like, well, yes,

actually, and it's kind of funny because of the hotel. We filmed from four pm to four am in South Philly, and the wrestler that Mickey was wrestling in that scene was staying across the hall from me, and we both walk up to our rooms. I turn right, he turns left. The doors are right across the hall from each other, and it was like,

you want to out for a minute and he's like yeah, sure. And what he told me is like, out of everything I did that day, he had fluorescent tubes on his back, he had stable dollar bills to his

forehead, landed on barbed wire and nils and all kinds of stuff. He said, the thing that hurt the most was getting hit by my He is and he's the national spokesperson USA Cares dot O RG folks donate his wonderful organization four out of four stars and Charity Navigator plus one hundred percent, scoring only three percent of the charities can claim that God bless you and thank you so much for all that I got to buy this guy Baronel's pizza before he leaves

town. Barono's Pizza. That baby, It's a Louisville style pizza and the pizza that constantly gives back. Or you'll be out in about on the town tonight. I want you to go by Baronols on Third and Market. A dear friend of mine and the hell of a blues player, well he plays everything. Jeremy Sharf will be performing there. Jeremy Sharf is amazing to see live. Catch him tonight only starting at nine thirty at Baronols Third in Market.

Hey, listen, is this Who's next on the show? Some State Susan Susan Tyler with Hey, come on by Hardy's Weird Hardy's Dixie Highway of Blatt and Wayne, come on by us Acres dot O r G. Morrow on the Way News Runaway forty w h A s

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