It’s that time of the year again when the few of us who care about horse racing actually discuss it. Essex attorney and former delegate Todd Schuler returns to Koco’s Pub on the Maryland Crab Cake Tour to discuss Preakness ponies not at Pimlico, Triple Crown dreams sold off to the Churchill gypsies and insurance companies ponying up in court when they’re not doing what the TV ads say they will.
Nestor Aparicio and Todd Schuler discussed their upcoming events, including a Preakness crab race and a crab cake event at Koco’s Pub. Todd’s law firm, Blondell Miller Schuler, specializes in injury cases, offering free consultations and contingency fees. They criticized insurance companies for paying out less than they charge in premiums. Todd shared his frustration with AI and his preference for traditional music formats. They also touched on the challenges of the Preakness race, emphasizing the need for a longer turnaround time between the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness. The conversation concluded with a light-hearted discussion about music preferences and local events.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Use the AI “clone” to generate a professional, PG-13 personal commercial spot for the law firm (Blondell Miller Schuler) in Essex, based on the information provided during the conversation.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Pitch the law firm (Blondell Miller Schuler) as a sponsor for the show and secure that sponsorship arrangement.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Invite Marty to visit Koco’s Pub so he can experience the place and the crab cakes.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Invite Todd Schuler to attend the Preakness crawfish boil party at the Essex property, including the smoker setup.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Invite Maggie Phelps to appear on the show to demonstrate how she makes her crab cakes, potentially in a Julia Child-style segment.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Arrange for Todd Schuler to return as a guest on a future episode of the show.
Koco’s Pub and Upcoming Events
- Nestor Aparicio introduces the show, mentioning the Maryland lottery scratch-offs available at Koco’s Pub.
- Nestor discusses upcoming events, including a visit to Pizza John’s in Essex, a fitness event in Timonium, and a Preakness crab race event.
- Nestor highlights Todd Schuler’s involvement in the community and his law firm, Blondell Miller Schuler, in Essex.
- Todd Schuler explains their services, focusing on injury law, including car accidents, construction accidents, and workers’ compensation cases.
Insurance Companies and Legal Representation
- Nestor and Todd discuss the ubiquity of insurance company ads and the challenges of getting fair compensation after an accident.
- Todd explains how insurance companies operate on algorithms, paying out less than they charge in premiums.
- Todd emphasizes the importance of having a lawyer to fight for fair compensation against insurance companies.
- Nestor and Todd discuss the differences between their law firm and larger, more advertised firms, highlighting their hands-on approach and experience.
Music Preferences and Technology Frustrations
- Nestor and Todd share their music preferences, discussing their iPods and playlists.
- Todd expresses frustration with AI and its intrusion into daily life, including Spotify algorithms.
- Nestor talks about his iPod with 15,000 songs and the randomness of his playlists.
- They reminisce about Doug Bennett, a mutual friend who influenced their music tastes.
Live Music Experiences and Family Influences
- Nestor and Todd discuss their experiences with live music, including attending concerts and festivals.
- Todd shares his recent live music experiences with his kids, including attending the Ocean City Music Festival.
- Nestor talks about taking his son to see Springsteen and the generational differences in music appreciation.
- They discuss the communal experience of live music and the challenges of attending concerts in large venues.
Preakness and Horse Racing
- Nestor and Todd discuss the challenges and future of the Preakness race.
- Todd expresses optimism about the Preakness’s future, emphasizing the need for a longer turnaround time between the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness.
- They discuss the importance of the Preakness’s relationship with the Kentucky Derby and the need for significant investment in Pimlico.
- Nestor and Todd express concerns about the state of horse racing in Maryland and the need for a clear vision for the future.
Political and Social Commentary
- Nestor and Todd discuss the current political climate and the impact of social media on public opinion.
- Todd criticizes the fragmented and clickbait nature of modern media, which often leads to misinformation and polarization.
- Nestor shares an anecdote about a right-wing group and the lack of informed opinions on current events.
- They discuss the challenges of consuming meaningful, intellectual media in the age of social media and clickbait.
Community and Local Involvement
- Nestor and Todd emphasize the importance of community involvement and local support.
- Todd shares his experiences with local events and the importance of supporting local businesses and organizations.
- Nestor discusses his involvement with various community causes and events, highlighting the importance of community engagement.
- They discuss the role of local media in fostering community and the challenges of maintaining a balanced and informed public discourse.
Personal Stories and Experiences
- Nestor and Todd share personal stories about their experiences with live music, concerts, and festivals.
- Todd talks about his family’s involvement in live music events and the importance of creating memorable experiences for his kids.
- Nestor shares his experiences attending concerts and the challenges of finding a balance between work and personal life.
- They discuss the impact of live music on their lives and the importance of creating lasting memories with family and friends.
Legal Advice and Consumer Protection
- Nestor and Todd discuss the importance of legal representation and consumer protection.
- Todd emphasizes the need for people to know their rights and seek legal advice when they are injured or mistreated.
- They discuss the challenges of navigating the legal system and the importance of having a knowledgeable and experienced lawyer.
- Nestor shares his personal experiences with legal issues and the importance of seeking professional help.
Future Plans and Final Thoughts
- Nestor and Todd discuss their future plans and upcoming events.
- Todd shares his plans for upcoming legal cases and the importance of staying active in the courtroom.
- Nestor discusses his plans for future shows and events, highlighting the importance of community engagement and support.
- They express their gratitude for the support of their sponsors and the community, and look forward to future collaborations and events.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
Preakness ponies, insurance companies, injury lawyers, workers compensation, construction accidents, Maryland lottery, Koco’s Pub, crab cakes, live music, horse racing, community engagement, legal representation, media consumption, political climate, local events.
SPEAKERS
Nestor Aparicio, Todd Schuler
Nestor Aparicio 00:00
I welcome home. We are W, N, S, T. Am 1570 Towson, Baltimore. We are Baltimore, positive. We’re positively here at Koco’s Pub in beautiful Laura Ville, just around the corner from Morgan, state, just in the city, and one of our favorite places, we have the Maryland lottery scratch offs four different varieties. I’ve got Bay Bridge. I’ve got black water. I’ve got acidic and horses, and of course, Todd Schuler’s favorite place, the boardwalk, Danny Asian hon, will be doing Mako down there in August. We’re here at Koco’s this week. The next week, we’re going to be pizza John’s in Essex next Friday on the seventh, are going to be a plan of fitness and Timonium have a special crab cake that day. My friend Dennis O’Donovan will be a part of that. The 13th will be at Fayette Lee’s electing the market, doing the Preakness crab races with Ivan Bates. So we will talk law and order that day. And then on the 21st will be in Catonsville at the fishmonger’s daughter the new sensation that damihan and the divine family have put together through long, hard work with Baltimore County and out in Catonsville, the music capital. This guy is the unappointed mayor of sort of Colgate going into Essex. I’ve seen the billboard Todd Schuler, former delegate Shuler, Politico, Guy and attorney is in partnership with my lifelong friend Mark Miller, and they have Blondell Miller Schuler together in Essex, where they help people, right? I mean, that’s what
Todd Schuler 01:32
you do, right? We help people. We are Injury Lawyers. We help you if you get hit by a car or if you’re involved in a construction accident. We do workers compensation cases, people that are injured at work. All our consultations are free, which is an industry standard, and we don’t get paid unless you get paid. So we’re always worth a phone call.
Nestor Aparicio 01:53
Well, I had Steve miles on a couple weeks ago. He was, you know, when we were kids, he was the one doing with us. Yeah, I mean, he was doing the advertising, and we talked about the success of that and what that’s all about. And, you know, ubiquitous now are these insurance companies, right? Like they the geico’s and the, you know, all of these ads. And I, literally, I’m working with my clone on a comedy act that I could put on the internet to honor Louis Anderson, who told me I was funny, and I think there’s a whole thing about insurance companies and like their ads and what they are and what they look like, and then how you get in an accident, and they don’t want to cover your ass in the way that my seat, right? My seat cushions helping me
Todd Schuler 02:34
right now? Well, yeah, I ranted about this plenty of times, but you know how casinos were not built by the winners, right? That’s the general rule of thumb. Is that these beautiful buildings were built because the casino is going to take in more money than it’s going to pay out. Well, insurance is based on the same kind of algorithms. They’re going to charge a monthly premium to everyone. And you know that buys insurance that has to buy insurance by law, they’re going
Nestor Aparicio 03:01
to pay you the bare minimum
Todd Schuler 03:02
period, yeah, and they’re going to pay out less and, and, and over time, they’re just making money on the juice, as it were, so when you are hurt, you are entitled to access that money. And certainly, they have very good lawyers that work for Geico And State Farm and and the insurance companies, and you ought to have a lawyer fighting
03:23
for you, and that’s what you
Todd Schuler 03:25
do, and that’s what I do all day long, all day long. But you know, my the great people, the Steve Miles is of the world. You know, we used to fill the airwaves, and we kind of still do. In my trade, I got the one billboard, so we’re not as advertisey as a lot of law firms, but I’m hitting
Nestor Aparicio 03:42
them up as a sponsor. So that’s gonna happen, right? I never do this. I’m gonna hit you at some point my pitch, right now, yeah, get the pitch out. Tell me what we’re doing. No, but I think it is important that in that moment when it happens to be top of mind, right? I mean, I know all the competitors are, and I hear them advertising and where they you know, the idea is you are different than a lot of these other four letter words, and more than that, in different places around town, in that like, I’ve been to your offices, like you really care about I will call you boutique, because that would put a name on you, but I but you’re not some grinder engine of a law practice. You’re like, dealing with regular people.
Todd Schuler 04:23
We’re the working class of lawyers, right? We are the guys that do the work. Mark has been doing this for over 30 years. I’ve been doing it. I think I calculated for 23 today. I could say
Nestor Aparicio 04:34
I’ve known Mark as long as he’s been doing it, but I’ve known him longer than that. You’ve known him longer than
Todd Schuler 04:39
so that? Yeah, yeah. But we do the grinding, we do the litigating. We’re in the courtroom, we’re doing the depositions, we’re doing the mediations. We’re actually hands on doing it. And some people, when they’re able to reach our station or our experience, do things a little bit differently, and they’re able to get out of the actual handling it, and they why.
Nestor Aparicio 04:59
No. Have other stuff. Younger lawyers do this about you because you hate AI.
Todd Schuler 05:03
We went through this. I It’s the bane of my existence. I want my old Internet back. I want Google back. I want to be able to search things and this AI just wants to put itself right in my damn lap every time I go. I want Spotify to just randomly play the songs on my playlist, instead of trying to anticipate me with its glorious AI algorithm that knows exactly what I want to hear again right now, over and over again.
Nestor Aparicio 05:33
I’m not on any of like the Spotify thing for music at all. I really wonder, what do you do first listen to record. I have an iPod. Man. Oh, nice. I have an iPod with 15,000 songs,
05:43
shuffle shuffles. No, I
Nestor Aparicio 05:44
mean, I have, like, playlists that I’ve made over the last 12 years of my life that have no they’re wildly random. Like, wildly random. I mean, I threw a party at my house two summers ago, and I had all my invite this was for my Dundalk people. Oh, you know, you know a guy who was invited that I thought was coming, that didn’t show up. As a matter of fact, is that the great market, what you know a guy so I know guy from
06:12
dundalkian, the
Nestor Aparicio 06:14
second non tatted docking, and I have my iPod was playing, and my buddy Brian pools, like, he’s like, did you make this for the party? I’m like, yeah, it was inspired by Doug Bennett’s playlist on Kane street back when I had my house. But, like, Lou Rawls was in there. You know what I mean, like, like, king of the road was in there. You know? I mean, because there’s some Sinatra in there, there, you know, there’s a mix of things that I don’t know that Spotify would say, Oh, you just the hipster. You want some REM or you want some, you know, you like Billy Joel, so therefore you want Elton John, or you like Bruce Springsteen. So therefore, here, let me feed you some wallflowers, you know, like, I don’t really want that.
Todd Schuler 06:57
You do. You can make, you can make playlists on Spotify, and I do the same kind of thing. Like, you know, a certain time and place, like, you know, this is bull on the beach in the 90s, you know. And it’s just the stuff that was playing on the bull in the beach.
Nestor Aparicio 07:10
It’s got these mix tapes. Papa got no time for mix trade.
Todd Schuler 07:15
Mix tapes. I can’t trade them with scalps. What all that is, my product
Nestor Aparicio 07:18
got a playlist? Well, you get two ways. I run it random or straight through.
Todd Schuler 07:23
No, no, you get your your playlist. You just condense it to mix tape size, right? It’s the format that’s back so you can’t just, you know, the mix tape notion of the playlist just limits your I have my old mix by the way, yeah, that doesn’t surprise that. Were they numbered in any way I used to number mine.
Nestor Aparicio 07:41
Well, I mean Brian Edwards, who my Berkshire friend, and Doug Bennett, who was a big part of all of our musical lives. We lost Doug about 15 years ago to Parkinson’s disease and But Doug was our musical friend. We all admired his taste in music, even all these years I met John Allen, Rock Star for Life. Tell me about the first time Doug gave him a Metallica tape, you know, like, like music you’re gonna love, you know, like Doug would give you the music you would love. So, like, the tapes that I would have from him would be more along the lines of the new order Depeche Mode. That was the lane he wanted to put me in. So probably like a Yaz, move out. Don’t mess around. Move out. You bring me down. So it would be more like, you know, new order. I feel so extraordinary, you know what I mean? Pesh, Mo, like a strange love, or, you know, something like that Pet Shop Boys, you know, I’m
Todd Schuler 08:38
just a new wave zone, like the pre the pre erasure
Nestor Aparicio 08:44
in that very good place Smiths are in there, right, yeah, panic on the streets of London, right? Like that kind of thing. So, but it would peg me as, like, wanting more echo in the bunny man, or more, you know. And I don’t necessarily wait. I cannot be pigeonholed other than I’m not too country, but I do like some country. I’m certainly not to rap, although I like some rap, I need some rap there, you know, but you’re a little younger than me, right? Yeah. But, I mean, I,
Todd Schuler 09:17
I don’t like to be pigeon holed either, like I might have a playlist, good time summer country is just that, you
Nestor Aparicio 09:23
know, it might even have kid rocking or something.
Todd Schuler 09:25
Yeah, the Jimmy Buffett inspired country music era that,
Nestor Aparicio 09:28
as you know, so it’d be so Kenny Chesney, yeah. See, I’m much worried you that one, but you could give me a Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton, but you lose me right around Garth Brooks, so around there
Todd Schuler 09:43
you don’t need 90s, alternative deep cuts like that could be a genre, right? I mean, that could be a playlist, but like you said, you could also have, this is music for sitting on the beach, and that might get into the Motown, and it might borrow a little reggae, and it might take some of that good time
Nestor Aparicio 09:59
summer country pub. For this. I don’t need to pay the man, you know what I mean. I don’t need Wi Fi to listen to my music. That’s another thing like kids. This is not an iPod. This is for I work on this thing too much, in my damn neck. And I talked to Steve Elliott about this earlier. This is not for music, even like when I watch a I want to see Springsteen the other night New York. There’s some video on here. Him to love it or land open dreams. I mix it up with love and hope and sex and dreams, right? Sure, sure. Land of hope and dreams. Gotcha. But even watching it on my phone, I wind up watching it on my big screen at home, because that’s where I want to view even a concert that I would shoot a piece of, because I don’t feel like this is a music device for me. This is a communication device for me more than it’s your i pod. And I don’t have a little I don’t have the little buds I stick in my ears.
Speaker 1 10:57
I don’t do that. I always avoided speakers in every room I would
Nestor Aparicio 11:02
Viviana on or like I invited Marty, bastardy, Marty. Marty’s never been to Koco’s, and he wants to come to Koco’s with me. Oh, man, so Marty about Koco’s. So I got to get Marty to Koco’s, great place. But Marty, if he were here right now and see you have that wet little thing in your ear all those mornings. And whenever I would sit in and do channel 13, they would give me one of the little up with a little thing, and I’d have the little earbud my like these are. These remind me of being a kid listening to Boston on eight track in 1976 so I like the feeling of full headsets over my ears and locking out whatever they might be talking about over there. I don’t want to hear it, but the people that run around 24 hours a day with the little white things in their ears that are my kids or their
Todd Schuler 11:49
Wi Fi, my kids like that. But no speaker guy, I like music is a communal experience, right? Like we should all be jamming, like we should all be listening to our own stuff, like kids, you’re riding in my car. This is what we’re listening to, baby. We’re not just all plopping our ear buds. Take them out, not really. I’m pretty easy going to these kids. Now, Liam is just about to be 16, and CC is 13.
Nestor Aparicio 12:13
What have you subjected them to in the last 48 hours? Musically, 13 year
Todd Schuler 12:19
old, the 16 year old. So I just my new favorite song. Well, I got two favorite songs in the world right now and then the one song is called sway, and it’s by Bic Runa. Could that be your name? It’s in the American Pie soundtrack. Okay? It’s like, kind of like Mazzy star, okay? Kind of hypnotic, female
Nestor Aparicio 12:40
stereo, stereo emcees kind of thing,
Todd Schuler 12:42
yeah, yeah, yeah. And then I just, there was a, there was a song that I thought was Nestor,
Nestor Aparicio 12:51
yeah, I can max mix and match music for you. Okay, good.
Todd Schuler 12:54
There’s a song that I thought this is more fun.
Nestor Aparicio 12:57
I should get my own serious channel. I thought
Todd Schuler 12:59
was my only Morgan Wallens song that I not
Nestor Aparicio 13:02
already don’t like it.
Todd Schuler 13:03
Well, yeah, I always the only thing I know about that guy is, like, bad
Nestor Aparicio 13:06
vibes, right? Like it’s country. I’m not gonna dig it.
Todd Schuler 13:09
Well, yeah, you can’t shut yourself down to entire genres.
Nestor Aparicio 13:16
I go to Nashville and I just don’t it’s not my thing. Well, it hasn’t grown on me. It’s grown away from me.
Speaker 1 13:23
Certainly turns out that this, like that
Nestor Aparicio 13:28
has grown on me. Oh yeah, I hear like something that’s got some movement. I’m way more open to that in any genre of rap, Reg, a dance hall, any of that, I’m way more open to that than I am to that could like it just not my. It’s like when I go to Nashville I want to close
Todd Schuler 13:47
my the alternative 90s are my my deep vein, like my poor kids, way when they put a
Nestor Aparicio 13:53
lot younger than me, when they put my deep vein. Zeppelin, now we’re 25 years apart, right?
Todd Schuler 13:57
20? Well, music my less than a decade apart, and impending death wise, we’re not that far apart, but, uh, but, yeah, they put that, that pixie song, in Stranger Things. And then everybody I got a I’m emailing my nephews and nieces. I’m like, Alright, here’s the whole do little album. You got to start. Oh, you got to take the whole thing. You can’t just take the one you know.
Nestor Aparicio 14:20
Like, the weirdest part for me is, like, your music and my son’s music are not that far out. And, like, I love that Fall Out Boy song, right, right, like that. You know, it’s 25 years old now, or whatever. And I’m like, Why didn’t I love it then, when my kid had it downloading from that, which blew up my computer by the way back in the day, but this is 25 years ago, and it’s now like some level of classic rock, where it’s taken over the bay, where you never hear Boston or foreigner or sticks on the bay. Now it’s that music. It’s the music that band plays, the local band that it’s all the music it was on 98 rock, 20. Five years ago.
Todd Schuler 15:00
That’s yeah. So here’s what happens, I believe is when music comes out, you’re like, oh stuff, oh no, this is gonna take over forever. Like, the only thing we’re gonna be listening to is Dave Matthews. Now, this is what it became.
Nestor Aparicio 15:15
Dave Matthews, push your Creator, 25 years old now, and I know all the words of those songs, probably were never my fate. That was never my favorite
Todd Schuler 15:22
music, because when it came out, it felt like this is the takeover, and if I buy in, yeah, right now, it’s just a little sliver of the big pie that is music, and you can just take it for what it is. And Sugar Ray say, oh, right, see, yeah, remember that one? I love Sugar Ray, yeah, but,
Nestor Aparicio 15:43
but that wasn’t my music,
Todd Schuler 15:44
yeah, but, yeah. It was, like, this was the poppy stuff and
Nestor Aparicio 15:49
day and, you know that era, right? Music. And it’s not that it escaped me. It just doesn’t get me to Hershey Park on a summer night, 25 bucks to see Dookie, even though I probably should have, because, like, I probably should have experienced that, even though it wouldn’t get my rocks off, even as much as, like, a journey cover band, well,
Todd Schuler 16:09
I’m having a live music rebirth for probably a decade. I decided I was over live music. I was just pretty sure, like, I had seen you two at the Redskin stadium or whatever, and I was in the upper deck, and it was just such a huge production. And it was like, and I could acoustics were kind of like, what am I doing here? Like, checking a box to see you too. Like, who cares, right? And then just recently with my kids, like, they want to go see stuff. And like, I’m really excited. Like, I was always like, bar bands were always great. I could always, like, go to a place where watching the music was not the primary objective, but the idea of everybody standing there and looking in the same direction was goofy to me.
Nestor Aparicio 16:52
I’ll be honest, like the club experience has left me a little bit like, I’ve been to the 930 club. I like, every year or two, I go to the 930 club, and every time I go, I never see the band. I’m never comfortable. I’m never I’m all like, it’s a push up thing that I just don’t want to do anymore. But I’m also not bougie that I need to be in the first row. I mean, I saw Springsteen the other night. Interesting. You’d say that through the eyes of young people, I think of my son as being young. My son’s 42 right? So, like, my son went to see the Eagles, and I asked him to have you seen springs? He’s like, Yeah, Dad, you took me an Oh, nine. I’m like, you too. My wife’s like, do you ever sit front row and you too? I’m like, Yeah, I took my kid in Philly on the the the my son remembered, he said, right after 911 Bono had the flag inside. We were three feet from Bono, so like my son’s had all these weird experiential things with me that were 25 years ago that he doesn’t want to get on a bus and go see Springsteen in Newark on a Monday night with me at this point, even though he should have gone. And I told him that the other night when I saw him, but I took a kid to see Springsteen on Monday night. My friend Leslie Ann’s son is 22 years old drummer in like an Iron Maiden kind of way. And I met him at the venue, and I hung out with this 22 year old kid at a Springsteen show. That’s great. And it was his dream to see Springsteen. He had never seen Springsteen. And of course, Leslie had seen him, you know, for over 30 years. She’s a jersey person, but this is her kid. So I took her kid who bought me beer because he’s 22 right? So he can hang around, he’s all right, I took him to the lounge, and like I hung out with this 22 year old kid for a night amusing young again. That’s I had when Bruce came on and did bond in the USA. This kid is like, and I’ve seen Bruce do it 100 times. Bruce doing hungry, hard. This kid singing, hey, you’re from Baltimore. Man, got a wife and kid in Baltimore, Jack, yeah. And I’m like, yeah. Man, seeing this through the eyes of a 22 year old kid was like, something I
Todd Schuler 18:59
did it with my daughter with we’ve done a few of them, but Ocean’s calling. I’d not been to that. I had not been to it until last I see.
Nestor Aparicio 19:06
My kids have never missed it by
Todd Schuler 19:09
Well, my daughter wanted to see Noah Khan, so it was literally staying for the weekend. It was me and my 13 year old and her father,
Nestor Aparicio 19:17
my son. They we talked about it last night at dinner, like it’s a it’s like going to Preakness was
Todd Schuler 19:23
for us, the kids, literally, the kids want to ride rides, and I want to go see we just, I go see weed us, and they ride rides, and then the kids want to go see somebody else, and I want to go to the purple moose. And, you know, re up my vodka. Then I go to the purple moose. And then we all, they the way to get in and out.
Nestor Aparicio 19:39
Promote the Maryland treasures, boardwalk tickets. This is
Todd Schuler 19:42
everything happens on Fourth Street. They turn around the parking lot. There’s a big Uber turn around. You can get a $12 Uber from anywhere in town and and just get dropped off on Fourth Street. Walk your way. I don’t think I’ll miss it again. I really, really like loved it. Yeah, it was awesome. This. Eyes opened.
Nestor Aparicio 20:02
Lenny Kravitz, I wanted to see Sheryl Crow, the black crows. Let me listen, man, I’m, I’m an advocate. It’s just that’s a that’s a tough setting for me, because you enjoy the music the way I want
Todd Schuler 20:15
to join see, because you’re, you are like a sit forward kind of guy. I’m like a free flower, like I don’t mind, I don’t mind hopping over in here,
Nestor Aparicio 20:22
dancer at every concert. I don’t like to be in a seat. Oh yeah, you did. I like to move around. I don’t like to be crowded in you’d
20:29
be like a twirler, like my
Nestor Aparicio 20:32
people in Santiago three weeks ago, right? But, but like, I had room to dance around. And if I showed you the video, I mean, it was crazy. It’s Chile with AC DC. It was crazy. Yeah, horns. I have a little red Horns up and all that. Take $3 for that and but I had room to dance as long as I but my wife would tell you, I’m a dancer at shows. All right, I want to move around in the show. So, yes, I’m a beer drinker.
Todd Schuler 20:59
I mean, I don’t need to dance, but I need, I don’t again. I don’t like to be pinned in I don’t I don’t care to be close enough to like I need to
Nestor Aparicio 21:06
shut up if you go to a concert with me, that’s first role. I’m all right. We’re not going to talk. When Springsteen singing 41 shots, we’re not going to talk.
Todd Schuler 21:14
I’m not gonna bother you, because I’m not gonna be close enough to
Nestor Aparicio 21:19
be way louder after
Speaker 1 21:21
I’ll be back here. Tom you’re gonna be, I’ll be back in the back. Don’t be that guy.
Nestor Aparicio 21:24
You know what? John and I were, those guys last summer at Merriweather, we went to see Simple Minds. And I think we just, I don’t think I love Simple Minds as much as I thought I love simple mind. Yeah, just
21:37
terrible. I mean, hard realization.
Nestor Aparicio 21:39
We went and it was fine, but we wind up doing what you and I are doing, right, right. Todd shoulders here. Blondell Miller, Schuler, damn good lawyers, this is the point in the show where we need to take a breather from crab cakes. And I know you had lunch here at Koco’s, and I appreciate you supporting.
21:55
I even got my to go cakes. I do
Nestor Aparicio 21:57
not invited you to Essex and pizza John’s. You’re like, No, I’m coming over to Koco’s. I need to get
Todd Schuler 22:01
the Koco’s of all the places, and I love pizza, John’s, I love Koco’s, but there’s nothing in the world like Koco’s. When people put on Reddit, I’m coming in, I’m a White Sox fan, and I’m going to the Oreo game. What should I do? Get in an Uber and go out to Koco’s. You can do all this stuff around the ballpark. Go get yourself the best crab cake. I’m gonna tell
Nestor Aparicio 22:22
Marcella this last Tuesday night, I snuck in. I came in on a Friday, and I took some ribs and coleslaw home. And this is my secret thing I do at Koco’s secret anymore, but get the ribs. They’re sticky and they’re sweet. Sounds like a Def Leppard song. Yeah, yeah, so the Def Leppard ribs, they’re hot, sticky and sweet from their head. That’s good. I’m gonna use that. And then I get the coleslaw, and then I go, and I get, like, a Hawaiian roll, yeah. And I cut the ribs off a mince it, and put it on with the coleslaw. That’s perfect. And then I grill the roll a little bit to get it a little
23:05
bit right. Make a little Sammy out. And I make
Nestor Aparicio 23:07
a Sammy out of her ribs with her. I do love that’s what I do. And then I’m taking one of the crab cakes home tonight, and I get a Bayes English muffin, and I get extra sharp cheddar cheese, not extra sharp cheddar cheese. And I top that, and I grill that, and I get the cheese pub milk. Yeah, I do a crab melt, and then I do her coleslaw and french fries, given the opportunity. So that’s more my jam here. Well, Colleen,
Todd Schuler 23:33
my wife, will only eat Koco’s crab cakes, and my friend Maggie Phelps is crab cakes. Those are the two best crab cakes that
Nestor Aparicio 23:39
I’m aware of. How does Maggie make her crab cake? Do we need to get Maggie on the show? You’re gonna need blonde l Miller Schuler, and we could do it like,
Todd Schuler 23:47
like Julia Child style, she could be whipping up those crab cakes.
Nestor Aparicio 23:51
Idea. Well, this Preakness thing is disconcerting to you. I know, and
23:57
I’m not disconcerted. I’m gonna fire it up. All right. Let’s talk to me.
Nestor Aparicio 24:01
We didn’t really get the Preakness back to like, full tests.
Todd Schuler 24:06
I’m optimistic. By the purchase of the Preakness right, stronic got out in favor of somebody else. Happy. Jeremy people, okay, but I’ve read about the purchase of the TV rights to Preakness, and what really needs to happen is the Preakness needs to move back a week into Memorial Day, minimum a week, a minimum a week. But we’re not, we’re not currently going to get a lot of Derby winners or high qualifiers turning around in two weeks. Anymore, the sport has changed. And so to preserve I always say
Nestor Aparicio 24:43
it’s like when Jim Palmer’s talking about the four man rotation, right? Everybody pitches 320, innings. Same thing. We don’t do that. We’re special at the horses in the same way that pitchers arms break very clear on Tommy John surge 100% all right? And. So when you have an animal that’s this beautiful, that’s a $20 million you know, animal, right? Don’t want to be abusing this animal in that way. And you don’t want to make it a start on two days rest. And what?
Todd Schuler 25:12
Yes, you don’t want to make a start on two days rest. What has happened, right, since the last Preakness is they have moved the Preakness down temporarily to Laurel while they’re investing a significant chunk of money in the north end. And I
Nestor Aparicio 25:30
want them to not boo job me. I want them to sit here and explain to me what they’re doing to this race, that what it’s going to look like five or 10 years from now, where that crystal ball is, where that money is, where that audience is, where those sponsors are, and what the state of horse racing would be in our state, and Kentucky and Florida and California and all these places that would want to come in and swoop and take the Preakness away, instead of build the Preakness back up.
Todd Schuler 25:57
The key to our race is its relationship with the Kentucky Derby and the purchase by the Kentucky Derby people proves that the Kentucky Derby proves to me, and I don’t really
Nestor Aparicio 26:07
know England,
26:08
dude, I don’t want it moving the key thing,
Nestor Aparicio 26:10
right, or whatever, wherever they want to put it, but I said the gypsies, that’s what I’m going to call them, until they sit down with me and prove that they’re not gypsies. That’s all. That’s all.
Todd Schuler 26:18
I believe that they’re invested in our race. And I don’t think, given what the state has done to that track, or is doing to that track right now, truly investing in Pimlico as the center jewel of horse racing in Maryland. I think, I think the horse
Nestor Aparicio 26:38
racing in Maryland could be on the SN and the only way it’s going to go on the ascent is for people to fall in love with it, have a relationship with it, be a part of it. And I’m I’ve watched, I’ve witnessed this for 35 years, like literally, the decay of it and the Stronach and Belinda and whatever their role, Bruno Mars, whatever the deterioration of the track, slots gambling on your phone incessantly, like all of this, right? I mean, I’m at the OTB at Costas and timmonium and Nick’s before that, like, I went to the track with Charlie Eckman a buoy and Laurel and like, I’m down the tube TVs at Pimlico were heartbreaking. People. Where are the ideas? Same thing I got for Katie Griggs, same thing I would have for Sashi Brown. Where’s the idea? Where’s the plan? Bring it to me. Let me scratch my head and poke at it a little bit right, right? And then I’m happy to go out into this microphone in my audience and everybody here at Koco’s today, and bring it to Essex to you and say, This is great. This is a great idea for the Preakness. This is a great idea for your crawfish boil, which I’m, I want to largest crawfish boil, and I’m going to Preakness this year.
27:55
I got my slept all the way down. I’m, I’m right up the hill, dude.
Nestor Aparicio 27:58
I got credentials. I want to see I want to support the race. It’s too
Todd Schuler 28:01
far away for you. You go, go in a couple years when it’s back at Pimlico.
Nestor Aparicio 28:05
Come on to the party. Invite. It doesn’t start till three o’clock. What are you doing? Or 10 in the morning. I stopped by. Well, come on by.
Todd Schuler 28:13
We got my man. Alex on a smoker. Now we’ll be having breakfast out there. You pop by on your way.
Nestor Aparicio 28:18
Alex on the smoke. Oh, man, Alex, the kind of smoke are we talking about?
Todd Schuler 28:22
Alex is a body man by training and trade. Okay, no, but he’s got a, you know, like the home heating oil in your basement. Does anybody have home eating oil, like the 200 gallon home heating oil behemoth? He’s got flipped on its side as the furnace of this thing, and it’s got, what do you know we’re doing. We do pork butts and Turkey and, you know, Sally, know you about the crawfish.
Nestor Aparicio 28:45
No, you can’t just party. You don’t have any crab cakes like, what do
Todd Schuler 28:49
you That’s true. That’s true. We did, but maybe we’ll do Friday night crab cakes. The setup crew, I got out of towners coming in.
Nestor Aparicio 28:56
You did because you, you, you went to college in New Orleans.
Todd Schuler 29:00
I College, yep, Tulane, University, School, law, closest law school to Bourbon Street.
Nestor Aparicio 29:04
Where do you get these crawfish?
Todd Schuler 29:06
So my man Phelps of Maggie Phelps crab cake fame, works for a seafood distributor, and then he gets them, and then he special orders them, and then we ship them up to my man, Billy Paul shock and Bill seafood and Perry Hall and Bill steam them up for us, and then Phelps usually makes the run, bring
Nestor Aparicio 29:26
them out to the party. You improve the seasoning on there, because there is some controversy about the seasoning, right? I mean, it’s kind of like crab cakes or like crabs, all the seasonings, everything’s different, slurries, everything’s different. Yeah, you have, is there a Schuler blend
Todd Schuler 29:41
the seasoning. Yeah, if they do it down there, I mean, they’re doing with, like, it’s called, It’s crab boil. It’s a liquid boil. It’s bizarre, like, if you ever, if you ever get it done
Nestor Aparicio 29:48
in these places that open around here, that they tell me they’re gonna boil their crabs they like, but, I mean,
Todd Schuler 29:54
not even, like an old bay, powdery stuff. I’m talking like this gross bottle that, right? They dump in the boiling water, and so, yeah, we have a with a Maryland bent on ours. We I’m sure, I’m sure they come out just like Bill’s crab never,
Nestor Aparicio 30:09
ever eaten crawfish the way I’ve I’ve been to an oyster bake, I’ve been to an oyster feast. I’ve been to clam this and crab this, where you sit at tables, like we do here, and eat things. I’ve never participated. I’ve seen it in videos. I’ve seen it, you know, on movies. You know that the crawfish thing you pop the head off or whatever. Now, I have had crawfish a tofu, sure, many, many times in Dallas, Houston, at the Pappas restaurants down there are a little so I do like me a crawfish a to Fe. I love Sure. I had a Cajun girlfriend a long time ago, and I got turned on to a little bit, but I’ve never been to a what you do, right?
Todd Schuler 30:53
You, yeah, crabs, right. Okay, everybody’s standing around, and you put them out on paper, and you kind of cool up like you’re having a horse trough, you know. And you what’s the first time
Nestor Aparicio 31:03
you did this in college that you
Todd Schuler 31:05
the first time I eat crawfish was in college in mobile, yeah, but the first time you’ve seen this is the 20th anniversary of my party. What’s that got down to college? And that was all they, you know,
Nestor Aparicio 31:17
New Hampshire, the first time she ever went to a craft feast was over in Dundalk at the friend of ours house, and they put the paper out. And she’s like, What the hell is it? You know, right, right, right? The crawfish thing is very much that way, right, right?
Todd Schuler 31:30
And then you get to, like, a cost us, where they bust out that paper right up on your
Nestor Aparicio 31:36
stool night, because they had the paper, they were coming out with the pan?
31:40
Yeah, you had to slide. They’re like, slide down right in
Nestor Aparicio 31:43
front of Mr. Koco’s office. We’re your Koco’s Pub. We are in beautiful laurelville. Todd Schiller came all the way from Essex because he swears by the Koco’s crab cake, right?
31:53
Swears by the Koco’s crab cake. I love it.
Nestor Aparicio 31:55
How many got in that bag? She asked me for one. You got Marcellus Wallace’s soul in that bag. Yes.
Todd Schuler 32:03
Marcellus, sorry, I can’t start quoting Pulp
Speaker 2 32:07
Fiction, but my language has already gotten a little questionable.
Nestor Aparicio 32:10
So, you know, I brought that up for to take you into politics if you want to go down that lane the head Seth, quoting Pulp Fiction as though it was a real
Todd Schuler 32:19
Oh, yes. So classic, right? How good is this? How stupid are these? That guy is the biggest nerd I like. He’s so funny to me, like of this whole era that hegseth character, Department of War, you fall just a nerd.
Nestor Aparicio 32:37
Man and Vince McMahon are no longer married. I didn’t know that
Todd Schuler 32:41
they both have cabinet spots, though, or no, just her, Well,
Nestor Aparicio 32:45he’s Department of Transportation. Based on that video, I saw him be the guy calling you trying to get him off, right? Yeah, there’s video of you doing 110 Vince and running from the cops and looking inebriated the minute they pulled you over on all the web, I didn’t see that. That’s rough, dude. Go take a look at that, man. It’s crazy, but I’m thinking, like, What a freak show of the whole I’ve never been drunk while he’s drunk on video, oh yeah, yeah.
Todd Schuler 33:14
Like, but HEG Seth is, he’s next level. It’s just that cringe factor. It’s just, well, the McMahon
Nestor Aparicio 33:21
thing came up to me because I had Patrick Dyer on, who’s running for Republican Baltimore County Executive, and said that he liked what Trump has done with education. And I just said, Linda McMahon, she like she famously
Todd Schuler 33:35
said, a one, she called AI, a one. Make that up. That’s pure. We gotta get rid of people now, whatever. Yes, I don’t even, yes, but I don’t know where to start. I’m just like, nihilistic Lee, watching it all and giggling at this point, you know,
Nestor Aparicio 33:56
chopping bombs like on a radio Yeah,
Todd Schuler 33:59
here’s, I mean, now we’re getting way political, but yes, no, we
Nestor Aparicio 34:03
have an election coming up in eight weeks. This is
Todd Schuler 34:04
your opportunity. We just had Earth Day. Earth Day used to mean something because we were the biggest problem facing us was the fact that we are heating the globe and causing weather phenomenon that we have never seen in our lifetimes, and they’re only accelerating. And just maybe 10 years ago, we were having that fight and working
Nestor Aparicio 34:23
on it. I saw a story where polar bears are having to adjust to not having poles to go to.
Todd Schuler 34:27
Nobody even cares like now we’re fighting the civil rights movement and world war two again, we folded up the fight to go reshore Our games against fascism and the culture war and everything else there’s spun 10 years. And by the way, it’s the 10 years that my kids are like formative. They think that this is normal. They’re living in a world where this, this clown show, is a
Nestor Aparicio 34:57
plain as the kids I. I had a kid with me last year. I was with a right wing group, and I’ll be with this person again soon, who definitely lives on that side of the fence. And I was with his son, who was, you know, 1716, you know, like a high school kid. And I said to him, like, you’re living through this fascist thing that, like, I don’t know how your father explained it to you, or how your peer group at school would react to this happening in real time every day, because, like, I lived through the 70s with Nixon in the very early part and all of the comedy of Saturday Night Live in the late 70s that was around Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford, and then the, you know, Mommy Dearest era of say no to drugs and Nancy Reagan and, you know, banning metal songs in Russia like so, I mean, I all of this stuff came to me as a 12 year old too, yeah, and I guess I processed it through the Vietnam War and through my dad’s love of John Kennedy, he wouldn’t think much of this Kennedy. But, you know, I didn’t think much of Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, which got me involved with Bob Ehrlich. So like, along all of this political scale, I have supported Republicans. I’ve just named one of them that I voted for, right? So I don’t recognize this as being sane dude. This isn’t even about politics. This is about like here, here’s what’s true and what’s not true. That’s all our parents.
Todd Schuler 36:28
You know, the generations before us consumed intellectual media. They read and they watch television, and you can’t read the Atlantic because it’s pay walled. You can’t read the New York Times because it’s paywalled. What you can do is pop open Reddit and pop open Facebook and have farm bot generated click bait that is meaningless and designed to enrage us, right? So everything that every real journalism is behind 599, a month, or whatever it is, and nobody outside of the intellectually curious. Are gonna spend their money on that? They’re spending it elsewhere. I saw this
Nestor Aparicio 37:07
local Italian associated and I had a pat Dyer on Republican candidate for county executive, and I referenced him. I had him at CASAS last week. I spoke it. The reason I know him, he’s involved with the Italian associated charities. I spoke to them at Pappas about six months ago, and I was in front of 100 mainly, you know, Italian men. There were no women in the room, incidentally, but I spoke to them about sports and politics and this and that, and the Ravens, and my press credentials, just all sorts of things. But it was a very Trump led crowd, very right side crowd, and I joked it on the it was the only Democrat there. Pat said, No, you weren’t. I’m like, I think I might have been. I’m not sure,
37:49
putting those crowds for
Nestor Aparicio 37:50
whatever reason. At that point that Justin Tucker topic came up, and this was an interesting thought for me. A I’m 57 and I was among the younger people in the room. There were some people younger than me there, but by and large was my age and into the 60s. These are all old newspaper readers that would have read the sun 3040, years ago, at least. I perceive them to be somebody that would have read the sun. I don’t know what they read now, or where they get their news, or where their bubble is, but the Justin Tucker thing came up, and it was kind of, you know, hot and discussing it at this time. It was October last year. He was getting reinstated. And that was time was like, maybe early November and and it came up, and I had grumbling in the room, in a general sense that I would expect being the Democrat in the Republican room, but the Tucker thing came up, and everybody had an opinion on it. I asked a few leading questions, like a lawyer, and I had hands up and opinions. And then I asked, how many people actually read the story about Justin Tucker?
38:54
Nobody, right. Three people, yeah.
Nestor Aparicio 38:57
And I’m like, so every one of you had an opinion on Justin Tucker. You were grumbling about it, yelling at me, whatever. And only three of you even read the journalism regarding what he actually did and what he’d been accused of doing. I read a
Todd Schuler 39:10
headline and I read two paragraphs, and then a click here for more and bunch of advertisements, and all of a sudden the CHERRY POP game is up on my thing because I can’t get rid of it. That’s how we’re consuming media. Now.
Nestor Aparicio 39:24
It’s bizarre. So I just thought, like, Here I am, like, even if I were taking phone calls for a living from people who have an opinion on Justin Tucker, who didn’t even read the journalism, like, at that point, the baseline for taking phone calls as nasty Nestor, 20 years ago, was you at least read the paper this morning and you watch the game last night. Right, right. Like, in a general sense, unless you’re blind, you listen to the game on the radio, but like you were calling me to react to something you saw and then something you read about what you saw, or you thought or heard about what you saw. I. You did bear witness, and we all saw it on home team sports the same way, or the Sony guy. Hey, nasty. I was at the game last night, and this is what I saw. You know, whatever your witness to, it would be,
Todd Schuler 40:11
my son knows the plot of the matrix. Basically knows who Morpheus is, and has never seen the movie because enough tick tock shorts, enough 32nd spots of the matrix have been in his life. Same with basketball like he he could tell you, everybody in the NBA is he doesn’t sit down and watch a basketball game. He gets a highlight 30 seconds, and then a highlight 30 seconds of another game, and, you know, an interview highlight 30 seconds
Nestor Aparicio 40:42
we’re consuming fragmented media, and why he likes it is why he doesn’t. He’s not in love with the Denver Nuggets or the Golden State
Todd Schuler 40:51
again, like not sitting down to watch the
Nestor Aparicio 40:54
reason you and I would like it is said Baltimore, and it’s at Baltimore bullets, and we would be, yeah, not you, but me, ingratiated with they’re the local team, and the wizards are trying hard. Sure, I can be a fan of the Knicks or whatever, fan for life to my team, right? That young people don’t associate the Orioles that way as much as they care about a bobble head or a ball cap or whatever it would be. But you and I love the orders because it said Baltimore. It was our hometown team, yeah, not because we were betting
Todd Schuler 41:23
on it, right, right? No, no, no, absolutely. You, you that fandom was very grounded and rooted and important, right? In community, really?
Nestor Aparicio 41:30
Yeah. And so, like, probably why I do Baltimore positive, honestly, yeah.
Todd Schuler 41:34
And community, it was part of the community, but, um, now it’s more like consuming the horse racing, where you see this, this crop coming up, and maybe you like a trainer, and maybe you like this, or maybe you like silver horses.
Nestor Aparicio 41:47
Your horse racing thing is not based on Star fame or loving a horse or loving a jockey or loving a trainer. It’s you love the ritual of reading the form and betting on a race. I love it. I love i.
Todd Schuler 41:58
We used to go to the Preakness room, you know, when we were in high school, college era, right, like,
Nestor Aparicio 42:02
and it was, it never saw a horse if you went in.
Todd Schuler 42:04
Now, of course, we were, but, but, but, I mean, again. I mean, I don’t need to hear the band. I can, I can be talking in the back row. I’m all right.
Nestor Aparicio 42:12
Social Butterfly is here. Blonde Miller should let you do in the Lost base and get my best to Mark Miller, who hopefully he’s winning some more cases. For some regular people who are getting screwed in Essex, Mark base
Todd Schuler 42:25
mark is absolutely killing it, yep, and yeah, absolutely again. Car crashes, workers comp injuries, construction accidents, boating accidents, if you’re hurt, if you’re getting on the job, or if you’re getting screwed, yeah, screwed. You need time to suppose we need, like, one of those fun little jingle type things, but we’ll get it damn good, lawyer.com though you can reach us there. Come on by and see us. And I’m
Nestor Aparicio 42:48
gonna put that into my clone and have it write some commercials for us, all right? And to say, you know, right? Write me. Oh, man, this would be it like, and this would do it pretty quick if I ask it to, and I don’t want to do deep research here on you, but let’s see it like. Let me just put it in here. Write me. Write me a personal commercial pimping, blonde pimping, pimping, pimping, blonde del Miller Schuler in Essex, one spot, one spot about not getting screwed, and let’s see what it comes up with, because it might get salty, but it knows what I do for a living, right? So it knows it has to kind of keep it.
43:49
PG, 13,
Nestor Aparicio 43:50
well, somewhat professional, right? What would you say if you were doing a professional commercial right now, and our with Todd shoulder, blonde Elmo shoulder, what would you
Todd Schuler 43:59
say you do? Well, I would be one of those very serious guys. It looks into the camera, right, like you can do it a lot of different ways. And some people in my industry have done it very goofy with okay, but the reality is, Mark, and I pick up the phone, Mark, and I handle your case from start to finish, Mark, and I go to court with you. You know, it’s our law firm, and we do it and and we put the work. I can
Nestor Aparicio 44:23
honestly say, if I got rear ended on Harford road on the way out of Koco’s Today, I would call you, and then I wouldn’t like it. My car be banged up. I’d be like, dude, finally, I’m about to get screwed. What do I do? Many, many
Todd Schuler 44:36
lawyers call us right. Many, many lawyers send their cases that way because we’re in the courtroom.
Nestor Aparicio 44:43
You’re gonna read the spot. Quick, ready? All right, let me look into the camera here. Ready? You work too hard to get screwed when life goes sideways. I’m Nestor, and when you’re hurt in an accident, the last thing you need is some insurance company treating you like a number. Slow. Walking your claim or trying to pay you pennies on the dollar. That’s why I tell people to call blonde l Miller Schuler in Essex. They know the game. They know the law, and most importantly, they’re not a stand up for people who need somebody in their corner when the bills are piling up and excuses start flying. So if you’ve been injured and you don’t want to get pushed around ignored or flat out screwed. Make that call that could protect you. Blonde l Miller Schuler in Essex, don’t get screwed. Get represented. Is that good?
Todd Schuler 45:30
I can already hear that costing me money.
Nestor Aparicio 45:33
Nestor, that sounds good. Damn good, lawyer. It’s all brought to you by friends at the Maryland lot. I do that professionally.
45:41
That was excellent. I’ve noticed
Nestor Aparicio 45:44
consummate Pro. I think your board walk, because you’ve already referenced Where do you get your drinks? Down there.
Todd Schuler 45:50
On, on, you know, well, I can’t give away my my super secret spot. You want the best spot? Can I give it to you? Go ahead. Have you been I’m gonna blow it up. I can’t just do yourself a favor and walk all the way to the end of the boardwalk. All right. Do that? You want
Nestor Aparicio 46:07
to be looking at this boardwalk right here? So I brought you by the Maryland lottery. I have my first real medical appointment next week at GBMC, where they very well may have saved my life, my colonoscopy. Last year, we did a walk a mile in their shoes last week was like, if I could have ordered I always blame Marty bass. When the weather goes bad, I blame Marty now when the weather is good. We had perfect weather last week at GBMC, so thanks to them, they’re going to be seeing me. I have my first doctor’s appointment. I’m going to get needles, and I’m such a sissy dude about all of this, you know? Yeah, GBMC, thank you for keeping me alive, but I’m not why do we avoid doctors as men?
46:49
Doctors only bad news, right?
Nestor Aparicio 46:50
Right? It’s why I’m gonna get good news from GBMC next week, also foreign and Dermer, they gave me good news when I had a leak, because they came and fixed it, and my wife was very appreciative. It’s the part where I say they take Lake seriously, but they also take your HVAC and your AC Seriously, just like blonde del Miller Schuler takes law seriously. My thanks to all of our sponsors, River at Koco’s Pub. I have other guests coming by. We have other causes. We have people running for really cool awards and doing cool stuff happening. And I’m gonna have a crab cake and some coconut shrimp. And I do miss my co host rasig Not being here. He is on artistic assignment, so he’ll be here next, and he has a lot on his mind about this ravens rebranding thing, because he’s an artist as well. So gonna get Todd back to his law firm in Essex, back for more. Koco’s Stay with us.



















